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Entertainment

Paige DeSorbo & Joe Jonas Swear by These Eye Masks To Look More Awake

Paige DeSorbo & Joe Jonas Swear by These Eye Masks To Look More AwakeCelebrities revealed to E! that the key to smoother, brighter under eyes is waiting for you on Amazon. Paige DeSorbo, Joe Jonas, Lala Kent, Kyle Richards, Gia Giudice and more all rely on Amazon’s…
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Food

Cabernet Sauvignon Vs Merlot: How These Wines Differ

While cabernet sauvignon and merlot are often are often lumped into the same category by casual drinkers, the two red wines are actually quite distinct.

​Food Republic – Restaurants, Reviews, Recipes, Cooking Tips

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Entertainment

Matthew Perry’s Assistant Sentenced to 41 Months In Prison In Connection With …

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Back in October of 2023, beloved Friends star Matthew Perry drowned in his hot tub while under the influence of ketamine.

In the years since, several people close to the actor have been arrested and charged in connection with Perry’s death.

Today, saw yet another conviction, as Kenneth Iwamasa, Perry’s longtime live-in assistant, was sentenced to 41 months in prison for his role in the conspiracy tied to the actor’s fatal overdose.

Actor Matthew Perry  arrives at the premiere of Warner Bros. "The Invention of Lying" on September 21, 2009 in Los Angeles, California.
Actor Matthew Perry arrives at the premiere of Warner Bros. “The Invention of Lying” on September 21, 2009 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)

According to People, Iwamasa was sentenced to prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy charges connected to Perry’s death at age 54.

Prosecutors alleged that the assistant helped obtain ketamine for the iconic actor during the final weeks of his life and even administered injections despite having no medical training.

The sentencing marks another painful chapter in the legal fallout surrounding Perry’s sudden passing.

Perry was found unresponsive in the hot tub of his Los Angeles home on Oct. 28, 2023.

His death was later ruled an accident caused by the acute effects of ketamine, with drowning, coronary artery disease, and the effects of buprenorphine listed as contributing factors.

According to investigators, Iwamasa admitted to repeatedly injecting Perry with ketamine after helping facilitate access to the drug through a network of suppliers.

Court filings alleged that Perry had become increasingly dependent on ketamine treatments, which were designed to help curtail the substance abuse issues that had plagued him throughout his adult life.

Authorities claim that on the day Perry died, Iwamasa administered multiple injections to the actor, including one shortly before Perry was found dead.

The assistant later cooperated with investigators as prosecutors widened the case to include multiple defendants accused of profiting from Perry’s addiction struggles.

Perry had long been candid about his substance abuse struggles, famously detailing his years of addiction and recovery efforts in interviews and in his memoir, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing.

For millions of fans, he will forever be remembered as lovable fan favorite Chandler Bing, but behind the scenes, Perry was fighting battles far more painful than many realized.

Now, with another sentencing complete, the legal reckoning surrounding the actor’s death continues.

Matthew Perry’s Assistant Sentenced to 41 Months In Prison In Connection With … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Politics

Joe Biden’s disastrous debate with Trump ‘frightened’ Jill Biden

Former first lady Jill Biden said then-President Joe Biden’s catastrophic debate performance against Donald Trump in 2024 “frightened” her because she thought he might be experiencing a medical episode.

Jill Biden said in a CBS News “Sunday Morning” interview, a clip of which was released on Wednesday, that the former president “scared me to death” in his June 2024 debate against Trump, which prompted Democrats to begin pressuring Joe Biden to drop out of the race weeks before he ultimately suspended his campaign.

“I was frightened,” Jill Biden said of watching her husband debate Trump. “Because I had never, ever seen Joe like that before or since.”

“I don’t know what happened,” she continued. “As I watched it, I thought ‘Oh my God, he’s having a stroke.’ And it scared me to death.”

Joe Biden’s bumbling, unintelligible answers and sickly appearance in the debate reignited concerns about his age and capacity to carry out the responsibilities of the presidency. The moment triggered an avalanche of calls for the president to drop out of the race despite reassurances from Biden allies in the White House and the campaign, including Jill Biden.

In a post-debate campaign event, Jill Biden told supporters at the time that her husband “did such a great job.”

Joe Biden ended his presidential campaign less than a month after his debate with Trump.

Since Trump’s victory, several former Biden allies, administration officials and campaign staff have criticized how Biden’s age was handled by top officials in the White House and the campaign.

Among those critics was former Vice President Kamala Harris, who wrote in her book that Jill Biden pressured her husband Doug Emhoff to continue backing Biden after the debate in a manner that angered Emhoff. Harris also wrote that she harbored concerns about Biden’s ability to beat Trump.

​Politics

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Sports Fox

Lamar Jackson ‘Absolutely’ Wants To Be On Ravens, ‘Shocked’ By John Harbaugh Axe

It’s been a while since we’ve heard from Baltimore Ravens star quarterback Lamar Jackson. On that note, what were Jackson’s initial thoughts when the franchise fired head coach of 18 years John Harbaugh — and Harbaugh then going on to become the next head coach of the New York Giants? “I got a lot of respect for Coach [Harbaugh]. I was shocked [by him being fired] in a way,” Jackson said about Harbaugh at the Ravens’ OTAs on Wednesday, according to The Baltimore Sun. “I feel like Mr. [owner] Steve [Bisciotti] did what was best for the team. I hope Coach has a great, great time in New York. “Hats off to Coach because we did so much for the city, for the team, for this organization. Hats off to him in New York, and we built a lot. We did a lot here.” Jackson also said that he “messaged” with Harbaugh when he got the Giants’ job. Since becoming the team’s starting quarterback during his 2018 rookie campaign, Jackson, who had been coached by Harbaugh his entire NFL career, boasts a 76-31 regular-season record, a 3-5 postseason record and the Ravens have won the NFC North four times. Over Harbaugh’s 18 years on the job (2008-25), Baltimore went 180-113 in the regular season and 13-11 in the postseason, highlighted by winning Super Bowl XLVII. Jackson was limited to 13 games last season (2025) due to hamstring and back injuries, respectively, totaling 2,549 passing yards, 21 passing touchdowns, seven interceptions and a 103.8 passer rating over that span, while completing 63.6% of his passes. He also rushed for 349 yards and two touchdowns. The 30-year-old Jackson is entering the fourth season of a five-year, $260 million deal, with the $52 million average annual value putting the two-time NFL MVP ninth among quarterbacks. Baltimore restructured Jackson’s contract in March, lowering his 2026 cap hit from $74.5 million to $34.54 million, increasing his 2027 cap hit from $74.5 million to $84.49 million and adding a void year in 2030. Is Jackson’s future in Baltimore? “Absolutely,” says the three-time All-Pro. “I love the Ravens,” Jackson expressed. “I love this organization. I love this city. This is the team that drafted me. They got a lot of love for me. I got a lot of love for the city and this team, as well. The reconstruction is done; [I’m] cool with that. But I love Baltimore. Everybody should know that by now.” Jackson’s new head coach is Jesse Minter, who coached under Harbaugh on the Ravens from 2017-20. Baltimore is coming off a 2025 season that saw it miss the playoffs and post a losing record for the first time since 2021.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

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Politics

Goldman and Lander spar hard over Israel

Former city comptroller Brad Lander (left) and Rep. Dan Goldman clash over Israel as Manhattan primary spotlights Democratic divide.

DAYS THE BUDGET IS LATE: 57

BRIDGING THE GAP: The debate over Israel is proving to be a wedge issue in the competitive primary between Rep. Dan Goldman and former city Comptroller Brad Lander. But the incumbent, who’s fighting for his political life, is making the argument that he and his challenger aren’t so different on the issue after all.

“We are both progressive Zionists who believe in Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state, and we both support a two-state solution to bring peace to the region,” Goldman said earlier today on a WNYC candidate forum. “It’s disappointing to me that he’s using this dog whistle attack, when in reality we really do share the same core principles.”

Lander — who, like Goldman, is Jewish and a Democrat — has positioned himself as more critical of Israel than the incumbent, and some in the party’s progressive wing have sided with him because of it. Lander and his supporters have repeatedly criticized Goldman for his ties to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the pro-Israel group that has become a major player in elections on both sides of the aisle — and a subject of intense debate — especially as the public has an increasingly negative view of Israel.

Progressives have targeted AIPAC in their messaging, a strategy Lander has also embraced. Goldman “can’t unrig the system because he’s part of this system, he takes money from Wall Street, from private equity, from crypto, from AIPAC,” Lander argued at the forum.

Like Goldman, some have raised concerns about the criticism of AIPAC, which has a mixed record in races it gets involved in. In an interview with POLITICO, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, one of a handful of Jewish governors, said he thinks the arguments against AIPAC spending have “been used cynically by some to try and silence certain voices, to try and say that certain people participating in politics shouldn’t count or should be viewed in a toxic way.”

Goldman, who is endorsed by AIPAC, has said he returned the money from the organization. And four weeks out from the primary, there’s no indication that AIPAC’s affiliated super PAC is going to spend in it.

Still, Israel remains a prominent issue in the race — no matter how much Goldman attempts to neutralize it. Last month, the incumbent rolled out an ad denouncing President Donald Trump and Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the war in Iran.

Public polling in the district, which covers parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn, has been scarce. But a recent Emerson College survey found Lander leading Goldman by more than 30 points. Lander is endorsed by Mayor Zohran Mamdani — whom Goldman did not support during the mayoral election — the Working Families Party and a slew of progressive officials and organizations. Goldman has the backing of Gov. Kathy Hochul and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, along with more than a dozen unions. Goldman also recently received the support of Hasidic leaders from Brooklyn’s Borough Park enclave.

As for Goldman and Lander’s similarities on Israel, the challenger pushed back, pointing to Goldman having “voted for every single U.S. military aid package to Israel.” In a back-and forth during the forum about the boycott, divest and sanctions movement — which both Goldman and Lander said they do not support — Goldman said he agrees with Lander that “Israelis aren’t going to be safe until Palestinians are free,” to which the challenger retorted: “You don’t do anything to make it happen.”

“I believe in the vision of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state, but it’s not acting consistently with Jewish or democratic values right now, and it can’t while it keeps occupying the West Bank and Gaza, and imposing apartheid on Palestinians,” Lander said. “The differences here are strong. If people want someone who is really going to fight to end Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, to make it so that Jewish New Yorkers and Muslim New Yorkers can work together instead of be divided from each other, and try to address the failures of U.S. foreign policy, the choice is clear.”

Much of the forum focused on Israel. When asked if he would vote for the “Block the Bombs Act,” which would prohibit the sale or transfer of military equipment to Israel until the country guarantees compliance with international law, Goldman said it is “not going to come to a vote, because it was written last summer as an effort to support a ceasefire, which was reached in October, and our laws enforce international human rights law already.” When pressed again, he said the legislation has “been overtaken by events, and I think there are other issues with ‘Block the Bombs’” but also that we need to “aggressively enforce international law against Bibi Netanyahu.”

Lander has called Israel’s actions in Gaza a “genocide.” Goldman said today it’s “really important that we move away from labels and terminology, especially for legal terms, and focus on how we can arrive at a two-state peaceful solution.”

The incumbent also expressed regret for voting to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) in 2023 over her criticism of Israel, saying “there are better ways of dealing with that that I wish I had pursued” and “it was a very emotional time and sometimes emotion gets the best of you.”

“This is an incredibly, incredibly emotional issue right now for very, very many people, and what I’m worried about is that it is dividing all of us; it is dividing Muslims and Jews, it is dividing Jews,” Goldman said. “This is part of the reason why I disagree a little bit about what the critical issues are in this race. The critical issues are the ones facing the voters, and those are not necessarily what’s going on 6,000 miles away, it’s what’s going on at their kitchen tables.” Madison Fernandez

From the Capitol

New York’s status as a blue state that includes several swing seats has made it a fulcrum for the national fight over redistricting.

REDISTRICTING REDUX: New York Democrats are expected to introduce bills by Friday to pave the way for new congressional lines in 2028, according to four people familiar with the talks.

Officials are weighing two constitutional amendments — one that would allow some minor tweaks, and another that would permit an aggressive Democratic gerrymander, according to the people, who were granted anonymity to discuss the closed-door conversations.

New York’s cumbersome process to change the state constitution restricts Democrats from redrawing House boundaries in time for the 2026 midterm elections. But House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a Brooklyn Democrat, has made his home state’s House lines part of a broader, longer-term strategy to pick up seats in the closely divided chamber.

“This is a potentially existential matter for our democracy in the ‘28 elections,” said Assemblymember Micah Lasher, a Democratic House candidate who previously proposed an amendment to allow for mid-decade redistricting. “There’s a broad understanding that in the redistricting arms race New York can’t be on the sidelines.”

Read more from POLITICO Bill Mahoney and Nick Reisman. 

HOCHUL BACKS ALT ROCK BAND: The governor’s press shop sent out a release today that heaped effusive and exuberant praise on a ‘90s rock band.

The missive — uncharacteristic of the staid memos typically dispatched by the gov’s press shop — was sent to promote a state-sponsored watch party on Long Island for the U.S. vs. Paraguay World Cup match on June 12, which will feature a pregame concert from Third Eye Blind, or 3EB.

“Participation in the older, untouchable realm of nervous star-making could color a band’s identity,” the governor’s office said. “In the case of 3EB, it often blurred the perception of their brilliant musical creations.”

It’s unclear if the band behind hits like “Semi-Charmed Life” and “Jumper,” which formed in San Francisco, feel the same way about the governor. In 2016, 3EB made headlines when their lead singer said he “repudiates” the Republican party and called Donald Trump’s then-presidential campaign deplorable. But there’s no record of him expressing similar passion — either in support or opposition — for New York’s 57th governor.

“3EB won wide success during a tumultuous group of years when the major-label recording industry was finally losing its grip on an enterprise that for decades it had dominated with steely efficiency,” Hochul’s office also said. “3EB now write, tour, record, and communicate in a fluid new world where their music continues to evolve naturally. Their exchange with their audience is unfiltered and being from the hub of tech, they are using it to develop a closer connection with their audience.”

Perhaps 3EB can release an updated version of its 2000 single “10 Days Late” to inspire lawmakers as they scramble to wrap up the nearly two-month late state budget. — Jason Beeferman

SHARPE SUBMITS: Libertarian Larry Sharpe has filed to run for the “Coalition Party” in this year’s gubernatorial campaign, making him the only candidate seeking to run without major party support.

The odds are long he’ll actually make the ballot — a reality he’s more than willing to concede.

“It doesn’t matter, we’re never going to make it. We’re going to be in lawsuits,” Sharpe said when asked how many signatures he submitted.

One individual familiar with the filing said he believes Sharpe submitted 1,600 of the required 45,000 signatures.

Third parties have become all but extinct in major races in New York since former Gov. Andrew Cuomo hiked the signature threshold from 15,000 in 2019. “Bobby Kennedy Jr. spent a million dollars,” Sharpe said of the now-health secretary’s 2024 presidential campaign. “He’s a fucking Kennedy and he couldn’t get on.”

The only other candidate to file for an additional ballot line in November was Bruce Blakeman, who submitted to add the “Vote Affordable” line to the Republican and Conservative ones he’s already running under. His campaign told the New York Post he submitted 66,345 signatures — not quite the number most experts say is needed to make a candidate immune from challenges. — Bill Mahoney

FROM CITY HALL

City Council member Shahana Hanif criticized two woman for attending a protest outside Gracie Mansion.

RAISING HELL: City Council member Shahana Hanif is under fire from critics for declaring on social media last night that two fellow Muslim women critical of Mayor Zohran Mamdani should be “condemned to Jahannam,” the Islamic concept of hell.

But Hanif, the first Muslim woman elected to the Council, says the criticism against her is overblown — and potentially bigoted.

“Let’s be serious: ‘Go to hell’ is a pretty common expression of frustration or disappointment … but the moment Arabic enters the conversation, suddenly people will act like I said something far more sinister,” Hanif told Playbook today.

Hanif delivered the broadside in an X post last night criticizing the two women, Anila Ali and Zeba Zebunnesa, for participating in a protest held outside Gracie Mansion to call on Gov. Kathy Hochul to remove Mamdani from office over the claim that he’s not doing enough to combat antisemitism.

“May Allah condemn you to Jahannam,” Hanif wrote in the post, which was responding to a message from Ali saying she and Zebunnesa were on their way to the Gracie demonstration.

Ali and Zebunnesa are organizers with a group called American Muslim & Multifaith Women’s Empowerment Council.

In the Quran, Jahannam is portrayed as a place of divine justice where sinners are sent to face punishment in the afterlife. Broken into seven descending levels reserved for different groups of sinners, Jahannam is considered the Islamic equivalent of hell, with punishments becoming more extreme the deeper one goes.

Elchanan Poupko, a rabbi and social media commentator, said Hanif crossed “a red line” with her tweet.

“Why is @ShahanaFromBK, an elected official, using religion for targeted harassment against a Muslim woman @anilaali, for exercising her constitutional rights protesting @ZohranKMamdani????” Poupko wrote on X. “This is unacceptable.”

A few hundred people participated in the protest outside Gracie Mansion last night, though no elected officials or mainstream Jewish groups were billed as being in attendance.

The event featured people brandishing Israeli flags and demanding that Mamdani, a vocal supporter of Palestinian rights, do more to combat antisemitism in New York. The event also featured more extreme, bigoted elements, including people shouting that Mamdani, an American citizen born in Uganda, should be deported.

Hanif pointed to the fact that rhetoric like that played out at the protest in justifying her Jahannam jab.

“I can and will criticize MAGA influencers joining a MAGA hate rally full of conspiratorial rhetoric and f-bombs,” Hanif said. — Chris Sommerfeldt 

IN OTHER NEWS

TARGETING GAP: A database of more than 1,200 lawsuits shows more than 93 percent of immigration enforcement arrests in New York and New Jersey targeted Latinos, despite the fact that they make up only 66 percent of immigrants without legal status. (THE CITY)

NO PLAYING AROUND: New Jersey Attorney General Jennifer Davenport and New York Attorney General Letitia James announced a joint investigation into FIFA’s ticket selling practices. (POLITICO)

‘I WAS HURT’: New York’s Legislature is considering bills to amend policies for imprisoned pregnant women after one gave birth while handcuffed in a Brooklyn courtroom. (Gothamist)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.

​Politics

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Music

‘Dutton Ranch’ Ratings Revealed – Ep. 1 and 2 Were Record-Setters

Ratings for Episodes 1 and 2 of ‘Dutton Ranch’ are finally in. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

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‘Dutton Ranch’ Ratings Revealed – Ep. 1 and 2 Were Record-Setters

Ratings for Episodes 1 and 2 of ‘Dutton Ranch’ are finally in. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

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Alaska News

New Trump administration proposal aims to accelerate drilling amid Alaska oil industry’s revival

A new regulatory proposal could accelerate development of oil fields on federal land in the western Arctic. (ConocoPhillips)

As major oil companies eye new drilling on Alaska’s North Slope, the Trump administration is now working to accelerate their projects by streamlining environmental reviews on federal land.

It’s a move that could boost production amid what leaders describe as a “renaissance” of North Slope oil. But opponents call it an alarming escalation of the administration’s push to open new areas of Alaska to oil and gas development.

The new proposal was announced May 15 by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum on a visit to Alaska.

It would change how regulators review and approve new oil projects in the National Petroleum Reserve – Alaska, a federally managed area that’s roughly the size of the state of Indiana and encompasses tundra, wetlands and expansive caribou and bird habitat.

Historically, federal land managers have required companies to go through lengthy environmental reviews each time they propose a new project. The Trump administration now aims to create a blanket environmental approval to expedite projects.

The proposal comes at a time when the Trump administration is under pressure from spiking fuel prices and looking for ways to boost U.S. energy production.

But it’s drawing sharp criticism from environmental advocates who fear that it would fast-track projects without adequate assessments of their impacts, imperiling Arctic ecosystems home to caribou, migratory birds and other wildlife.

“It’s pretty extreme,” said Erik Grafe, a longtime Anchorage-based lawyer with Earthjustice, a national environmental law firm that regularly sues to block Arctic oil development.

Another attorney who’s fought new development on the North Slope, Suzanne Bostrom with the firm Trustees for Alaska, said in a prepared statement that the proposal appears to set up a new system where projects could be “rubber stamped.”

“The Arctic isn’t meant for cookie cutter exploitation,” she added. “These are treasured public lands that people depend on and that should be given the highest level of care and protection — the complete opposite of what’s proposed.”

The proposed change comes as the North Slope’s oil industry is picking up steam.

The state’s biggest new oil field in years — located on state and Alaska Native corporation land to the east of the federal petroleum reserve — just started commercial production. Another major project, ConocoPhillips’ Willow development, is set to come online in a few years.

And the industry is poised to expand west: Several of the world’s largest oil corporations, including ConocoPhillips, Shell and ExxonMobil, bid on new territory in the federal reserve in a huge lease sale earlier this year.

Oil fields currently occupy only the reserve’s northeastern corner. But experts say billions of barrels of oil remain in the ground, potentially in areas far from existing infrastructure.

The Trump administration’s permitting proposal came in response to a petition by the Alaska Oil and Gas Association, a trade group known as AOGA. The group, whose members include the major companies operating in Alaska, submitted the request a few days before Burgum’s announcement.

“It’s about building a more stable, durable and predictable permitting framework,” said Steve Wackowski, AOGA’s president.

A decades-old law, the National Environmental Policy Act, requires federal regulators to assess the environmental impacts of large development proposals before taking action on them.

Currently, any oil project proposed on Alaska’s federal lands must undergo its own distinct environmental review.

Industry leaders have long argued that the process is too slow and repetitive — since oil projects often have similar designs and potential impacts. They say streamlining reviews could accelerate oil extraction and job creation without sacrificing environmental protections.

Under the new regulation, federal land managers would have two months to approve any proposed development in the petroleum reserve that meets specific standards.

AOGA’s petition lists more than 50 possible conditions, including consultation with local and regional Indigenous communities and accounting for wildlife habitat when designing infrastructure.

Opponents argue that a blanket analysis wouldn’t be able to account for the particulars of any one project and minimize impacts accordingly.

Wackowski disputed the idea that the proposal would amount to “rubber stamping.”

The impacts of development in the reserve have already been studied in an array of environmental assessments over the past 30 years, he said.

AOGA’s petition, he added, is the first step in a public process that “would evaluate what types of activities could appropriately fit within any streamlined framework and under what conditions.”

The regulatory change would apply only to projects in the petroleum reserve and to one federal agency, the Bureau of Land Management. Projects would still be subject to additional permitting requirements from other agencies like the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which reviews permit applications under the federal Clean Water Act.

The proposal is still in a preliminary review period and could change as the Trump administration studies it. Public comments are due by July 6.

Northern Journal contributor Max Graham can be reached at max@northernjournal.com. He’s interested in any and all mining related stories, as well as introductory meetings with people in and around the industry.

This article was originally published in Northern Journal, a newsletter from Nathaniel Herz. Subscribe at this link.

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Entertainment

Anna Kepner: Stepbrother Accused of Rape & Murder Aboard Cruise Ship Won’t Be …

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Back in November of 2025, the world was shocked by the brutal murder of Anna Kepner, the 18-year-old who was found dead in her cabin aboard a Carnival cruise ship.

In February, Kepner’s stepbrother, 16-year-old Timothy Hudson, was charged with her murder.

Prosecutors allege that Hudson raped Kepner before killing her and attempting to hide her body under a bed — circumstances that make today’s decision all the more surprising.

In an aerial view, Royal Caribbean's Icon of the Seas, billed as the world's largest cruise ship, heads out to sea for its second voyage from PortMiami on February 03, 2024, in Miami, Florida.
In an aerial view, Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas, billed as the world’s largest cruise ship, heads out to sea for its second voyage from PortMiami on February 03, 2024, in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that Hudson will not be jailed while awaiting trial and will instead remain in the custody of a family member under strict conditions as his case moves forward.

Hudson has been free since the death of his stepsister after initially being charged as a juvenile and released to live with his uncle because of his age.

The situation changed dramatically in April, when a federal grand jury indicted Hudson as an adult, raising the possibility that he could be detained behind bars before trial.

U.S. District Judge Edwin Torres acknowledged the gravity of the allegations but ultimately decided against jailing the teen ahead of his trial.

“If it were a 20-year-old under the exact circumstances I probably would have detained,” Torres said during Wednesday’s hearing, according to NBC News.

“The presumption would be we were just not going to take that chance. This is a different animal,” he added.

The judge explained that he considered the practical realities of detention, including the fact that Hudson’s family lives several hundred miles away in Hernando County, making visitation difficult if he were held in Miami-Dade County.

Federal prosecutors strongly objected to today’s decision.

Government attorney Alejandra Lopez argued that Hudson represents “a danger to the community,” especially considering that two minors reportedly live in the uncle’s home where he is currently staying.

“What is needed to prove a danger? A second dead body?” Lopez asked in court.

Hudson’s attorney, public defender Evan Kuhl, pushed back, arguing that the teen has followed every condition of his release for months and has shown no indication he poses a flight risk or danger to others.

Hudson is only allowed to leave the house while accompanied by his aunt or uncle and is being electronically monitored by authorities.

Anna and Hudson — whose parents married in December 2024 — had reportedly been sharing a cabin during the family vacation.

Her body was discovered bruised, wrapped in a blanket and hidden beneath a bed behind life vests. The Miami-Dade medical examiner ruled her death a homicide caused by “mechanical asphyxiation.”

On the day Hudson was indicted as an adult, Anna’s father, Chris Kepner, made his feelings painfully clear.

“Justice needs to be served,” he said.

Hudson’s trial could begin as early as September. We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available,

Anna Kepner: Stepbrother Accused of Rape & Murder Aboard Cruise Ship Won’t Be … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip