"Naked Gun" Director Limited Reboot to Only 1 O.J. Simpson Joke to Be 'Respectful': 'The Elephant in the Room' Charna FlamAugust 2, 2025 at 12:42 PM Paramount Pictures (2) Liam Neeson and O. J.

- - "Naked Gun" Director Limited Reboot to Only 1 O.J. Simpson Joke to Be 'Respectful': 'The Elephant in the Room'

Charna FlamAugust 2, 2025 at 12:42 PM

Paramount Pictures (2)

Liam Neeson and O. J. Simpson in "The Naked Gun"

Akiva Schaffer is directing the latest iteration of the popular police movie, The Naked Gun

The comedy creator was tasked with following the franchise's storied legacy, while still acknowledging the fresh cast

To do so, Schaffer said the new film needed to acknowledge O.J. Simpson's previous role in the original films

The Naked Gun is making a comedic reference to all of its previous stars, including controversial athlete O.J. Simpson

Director Akiva Schaffer confessed to The Hollywood Reporter that when people learned he was taking on the newest iteration of the spoof franchise, he was immediately asked about what he would do about Simpson's Naked Gun character, Detective Nordberg. The late athlete starred in the 1988 original, plus the sequels in 1991 and 1994.

"When I first told friends, 'Hey, I'm actually about to write a Naked Gun,' they'd go, 'What are you going to do about O.J?' So, right away, I was like, 'Oh, right. That's the elephant in the room that has to be addressed,' " he recalled for the outlet. But he confessed they only needed one joke to address audience questions.

Paramount Pictures

O.J. Simpson, The Naked Gun

Schaffer, 47, admitted that after writing the initial joke acknowledging Simpson's character, he and the writers "never wrote another O.J. joke."

The sole Simpson joke appears in the film's trailer, as stars Liam Neeson Frank Drebin Jr. and Paul Walter Hauser pay tribute to framed photos of their late parents in a police Hall of Legends. It then transitions to a framed portrait of Nordberg (Simpson), before cutting to his son Nordberg Jr. (Moses Jones) breaking the fourth wall and shaking his head in appallment.

"We just went, 'Yep, that takes care of that,' " Schaffer said. "I didn't know that the joke would kill as hard as it did at our first test screening. If I had known that, then maybe I would've written other jokes," he continued.

"But you want to be respectful of everything that revolves around him, so it's not something I really took glee in. We just had to acknowledge it in a way we thought was not dancing on anybody's misfortunes," he said, seemingly referencing Simpson's infamous 1995 murder trial for the homicides of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend, Ron Goldman.

Unique Nicole/Getty for Paramount Pictures

He also explained that he and the team "didn't get pushback or anything."

"On the edgy jokes, people would go, 'Ooh, I don't know.' And I'd be like, 'Don't worry. The movie is going to be 85 minutes. A fourth of the script is getting cut. Anything that doesn't work is going to be cut,' " he explained. "So that's the way I made everyone relax all the time." (The film was intended to be 85 minutes long to mirror the original two films' runtimes, but is ultimately 83 minutes.)

The movie, produced by Seth MacFarlane, is based on the Jim Abrahams and David Zucker and Jerry Zucker franchiseThe Naked Gun, which originally starred Leslie Nielsen as self-serious detective Frank Drebin, who managed to rise through the ranks of the police squad.

In the new film, Neeson stars as Lt. Frank Drebin Jr., son of Nielsen's character, as he follows in his father's footsteps. The cast includes Hauser, Pamela Anderson, CCH Pounder, Kevin Durand, Cody Rhodes, Liza Koshy, Eddie Yu and Danny Huston.

Frank Masi/Paramount Pictures

Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson in The Naked Gun

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The Naked Gun premiered in theaters on Friday, Aug. 1.

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“Naked Gun” Director Limited Reboot to Only 1 O.J. Simpson Joke to Be 'Respectful': 'The Elephant in the Room'

"Naked Gun" Director Limited Reboot to Only 1 O.J. Simpson Joke to Be 'Respectful': 'The Elephan...
New Photo - Antonio Brown, at court-mandated appearance for bankruptcy case, downplays rich lifestyle

Antonio Brown, at courtmandated appearance for bankruptcy case, downplays rich lifestyle Tom Schad, USA TODAY August 2, 2025 at 4:34 AM In social media posts, Antonio Brown has appeared to be living a life of luxury in the United Arab Emirates.

- - Antonio Brown, at court-mandated appearance for bankruptcy case, downplays rich lifestyle

Tom Schad, USA TODAY August 2, 2025 at 4:34 AM

In social media posts, Antonio Brown has appeared to be living a life of luxury in the United Arab Emirates.

In a court-mandated appearance as part of his bankruptcy case, however, he said the reality is different.

Brown fielded questions about his finances and social media activity during an Aug. 1 meeting of creditors in his Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, downplaying the lavish lifestyle that he has appeared to be living in Dubai over the past seven weeks. The former NFL wide receiver said he does not have any cryptocurrency accounts, does not own any jewelry, does not own any of the expensive sports cars that he has been seen driving in social media posts and is not paying rent in the United Arab Emirates.

"I'm actually staying out here with some people, brother," Brown said when asked about his living arrangements.

The 37-year-old declined to specify who owns the property at which he has been staying or who is paying the rent, but he said the person is not an American citizen.

Attempted murder charge. Bankruptcy. Music. The bizarre post-NFL life of Antonio Brown

Brown also indicated that he could soon return to the United States, where he has a warrant out for his arrest after being charged with attempted second-degree murder on June 11. The charge stems from an alleged altercation outside an amateur boxing event on May 16 in Miami.

"Hopefully, yes," Brown said, when asked if he planned to return to the U.S. at some point in the near future.

The question came in the context of scheduling, as Brown will be asked to sit for a deposition in the bankruptcy case. Because he has an active warrant out for his arrest, he likely would be detained by Customs and Border Protection upon returning to the U.S.

A State Department spokesperson declined comment earlier this week when asked by USA TODAY Sports if Brown could be extradited from the United Arab Emirates. The spokesperson cited the department's longstanding policy to not comment on the possible existence of extradition requests.

Brown filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in May 2024, according to court records, and his case has since been converted to Chapter 7 − a form of bankruptcy in which the court can seize assets and garnish wages to repay creditors. The longtime Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver, who publicly estimated that he made more than $100 million during his NFL career, now owes more than $3.5 million to a handful of creditors.

Brown was ordered to appear at Friday's meeting of creditors, which is also known as a 341 meeting, after previously failing to provide the necessary financial documents to the U.S. trustee overseeing his case, Leslie Osborne. Brown joined the meeting several minutes late from what appeared to be a Dubai hotel room.

Former Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown in 2018.

Meetings of creditors are not court hearings and they are not overseen by a judge. But they nevertheless play an important role in the early stages of the bankruptcy process, requiring debtors to answer questions about their finances under penalty of perjury. Friday's meeting was open to members of the public.

Osborne's attorney, D. Brett Marks, asked Brown several questions about his life in Dubai and some of his activity on social media, including a June 26 post on X in which the former NFL wideout posted a screenshot of an account balance exceeding $24 million with the caption "bankrupt over." Brown replied that it was an old post and he does not have an account with $24 million.

Brown also offered unclear answers when asked about how he is making money and paying for his current lifestyle. When asked about video clips of himself driving luxurious sports cars that he has posted on social media, he denied owning any cars in the United Arab Emirates, then suggested that such clips might have been manufactured by artificial intelligence. Upon further questioning, Brown said he sometimes has access to sports cars as part of a promotional arrangement with a rental car company.

Report: Former NFL WR Antonio Brown facing attempted murder charge in Florida

Osborne, the trustee tasked with helping Brown pay off his debts, said at the start of the meeting that he had received only two of the requested bank statements from the seven-time Pro Bowler. Brown told Osborne that he would work with his attorney to provide the requested documents − including the original deed of one of the houses he owns in Florida, which could be put up for sale to pay off some of Brown's debts.

At the most recent court hearing in Brown's bankruptcy case, on July 24, judge Peter Russin said Brown's case would be "hanging in the balance" if he did not provide financial documents and follow the court's rules.

"I really want to explain to him that he's got his future in his own hands," Russin said during the hearing. "He can resolve all these things very simply just by doing what he's obligated to do anyway, and leave here with his financial situation generally intact."

Contact Tom Schad at [email protected] or on social media @tomschad.bsky.social.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Antonio Brown downplays lavish lifestyle during bankruptcy case

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Antonio Brown, at court-mandated appearance for bankruptcy case, downplays rich lifestyle

Antonio Brown, at courtmandated appearance for bankruptcy case, downplays rich lifestyle Tom Schad, USA TODAY August 2...
New Photo - Judge allows the National Science Foundation to withhold hundreds of millions of research dollars

Judge allows the National Science Foundation to withhold hundreds of millions of research dollars ADITHI RAMAKRISHNAN August 2, 2025 at 5:00 AM The headquarters of the National Science Foundation is photographed May 29, 2025, in Alexandria, Va.

- - Judge allows the National Science Foundation to withhold hundreds of millions of research dollars

ADITHI RAMAKRISHNAN August 2, 2025 at 5:00 AM

The headquarters of the National Science Foundation is photographed May 29, 2025, in Alexandria, Va. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

NEW YORK (AP) — The National Science Foundation can continue to withhold hundreds of millions of dollars from researchers in several states until litigation aimed at restoring it plays out, a federal court ruled Friday.

U.S. District Judge John Cronan in New York declined to force the NSF to restart payments immediately, while the case is still being decided, as requested by the sixteen Democrat-led states who brought the suit, including New York, Hawaii, California, Colorado and Connecticut.

In his ruling, Cronan said he would not grant the preliminary injunction in part because it may be that another court, the Court of Federal Claims, has jurisdiction over what is essentially a case about money. He also said the states failed to show that NSF's actions were counter to the agency's mandate.

The lawsuit filed in May alleges that the National Science Foundation's new grant-funding priorities as well as a cap on what's known as indirect research expenses "violate the law and jeopardize America's longstanding global leadership in STEM."

Another district court had already blocked the the cap on indirect costs — administrative expenses that allow research to get done like paying support staff and maintaining equipment. This injunction had been requested to restore funding to the grants that were cut.

In April, the NSF announced a new set of priorities and began axing hundreds of grants for research focused on things like misinformation and diversity, equity and inclusion. Researchers who lost funding also were studying artificial intelligence, post-traumatic stress disorder in veterans, STEM education for K-12 students and more.

Researchers were not given a specific explanation for why their grants were canceled, attorney Colleen Faherty, representing the state of New York, said during last month's hearing. Instead, they received boilerplate language stating that their work "no longer effectuates the program goals or agency priorities."

NSF has long been directed by Congress to encourage underrepresented groups like women and people with disabilities to participate in STEM. According to the lawsuit, the science foundation's funding cuts already halted efforts to train the next generation of scientists in fields like computer science, math and environmental science.

A lawyer for the NSF said at the hearing that the agency has the authority to fund whatever research it deems necessary — and has since its inception in 1950. In the court filing, the government also argued that its current priorities were to "create opportunities for all Americans everywhere" and "not preference some groups at the expense of others, or directly/indirectly exclude individuals or groups."

The plaintiff states are trying to "substitute their own judgement for the judgement of the agency," Adam Gitlin, an attorney for the NSF, said during the hearing.

The science foundation is still funding some projects related to expanding representation in STEM, Cronan wrote in his ruling. Per the lawsuit filed in May, for example, the University of Northern Colorado lost funding for only one of its nine programs focused on increasing participation of underrepresented groups in STEM fields.

The states are reviewing the decision, according to spokespeople from the New York and Hawaii attorney general offices. The National Science Foundation declined to comment.

___

The Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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Judge allows the National Science Foundation to withhold hundreds of millions of research dollars

Judge allows the National Science Foundation to withhold hundreds of millions of research dollars ADITHI RAMAKRISHNAN ...
New Photo - The Manhattan shooter had a previous arrest and 2 psychiatric holds, sources say. How was he able to own a gun?

The Manhattan shooter had a previous arrest and 2 psychiatric holds, sources say. How was he able to own a gun? Emma Tucker, Josh Campbell, CNNAugust 2, 2025 at 5:22 PM In an image obtained by CNN, Shane Devon Tamura is seen outside the 345 Park Avenue office building carrying a rifle.

- - The Manhattan shooter had a previous arrest and 2 psychiatric holds, sources say. How was he able to own a gun?

Emma Tucker, Josh Campbell, CNNAugust 2, 2025 at 5:22 PM

In an image obtained by CNN, Shane Devon Tamura is seen outside the 345 Park Avenue office building carrying a rifle. - Obtained by CNN

New York City's deadliest shooting in 25 years – in a state with some of the toughest gun laws in the nation – is raising questions about how a gunman with a history of mental health issues was able to obtain multiple firearms and drive undetected across several states to carry out the attack.

The gunman who walked into a Midtown Manhattan office building on Monday, M4 assault-style rifle in hand, and sprayed it with gunfire, had a license to carry a concealed weapon in his home state of Nevada, officials said.

He also had been placed on psychiatric hold in 2022 and 2024, law enforcement sources told CNN. But that may not have necessarily prohibited him from obtaining his license in 2022 or buying firearms – depending on the circumstances of the holds, according to gun law experts.

Shane Devon Tamura, 27, of Las Vegas, killed four people at the 345 Park Avenue office building and injured another before he died by suicide, police said.

While public health experts continue to stress that the vast majority of people experiencing mental health challenges are not violent, questions remain about the details of Tamura's psychiatric holds and if they would have shown up in a background check.

The case underscores the wide gap in sharing mental health data with the federal government – an issue that can be attributed to inadequate funding to manage or require the data, as well as privacy issues, according to Thomas Chittum, former associate deputy director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Tamura had "a documented mental health history," according to New York Police Department Commissioner Jessica Tisch, and a previous run-in with law enforcement.

Tamura was arrested and charged with misdemeanor trespassing in 2023 in Clark County, Nevada, after he refused to leave a Las Vegas casino after attempting to cash out about $5,000, according to a police incident report. A court database suggests a district attorney declined to pursue the case, meaning the incident wouldn't have prevented him from obtaining a gun.

The case also throws private gun sales under the microscope.

The AR-15 style weapon used in the shooting was legally purchased last year by the gunman's supervisor at the Vegas casino where he worked, two law enforcement officials told CNN. The supervisor then assembled it and sold it to Tamura for $1,400, the officials said, citing an interview with the supervisor who is cooperating with authorities.

An image of a weapon reportedly used by Shane Devon Tamura. - NYPD

It's not yet clear whether the private sale between Tamura and the supervisor involved a background check.

But the supervisor, who has not been named by authorities, could face legal jeopardy if the investigation reveals the firearm transfer took place in Nevada and the private sale didn't follow a state law requiring background checks for private sales, according to Warren Eller, gun violence expert and associate professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

As police work to uncover a motive behind the shooting, investigators are digging into Tamura's history and examining are how he obtained multiple firearms and made his way from Las Vegas to New York City with the assault rifle.

Most mental health data isn't accessible for firearm background checks

A search of the gunman's car turned up a host of items, including additional ammunition, another loaded weapon, headphones potentially used for target practice, two cell phones, the antidepressant Zoloft and cannabis, a law enforcement source told CNN.

A note found in the gunman's pocket claimed he had CTE, a disease linked to head trauma, one that's often associated with football players, a source told CNN. New York City's chief medical examiner's office will test Tamura's remains for CTE, an office spokesperson told CNN Tuesday. The only way to diagnose the disease is through an autopsy of the brain.

As for the psychiatric holds, it's difficult to say without knowing the details whether they would have shown up in a background check or prevented Tamura from purchasing weapons, experts say.

"If you were on a 48-hour hold, if you were released at the end of that, it would not affect your ability to possess firearms under federal law," Chittum said.

Most states barely touch on the area of mental health when a person applies for a gun license due to concerns over privacy issues and stigmatizing people who have mental health issues, according to Eller. One concern, for example, is soldiers who struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, might be reluctant to seek help because they fear their treatment history would deprive them of possessing firearms.

"Between the lack of funding to make sure the background check system is effective for those problems and the legal hang ups with advocacy groups who will challenge this, that's a long road ahead," Eller said.

An image of a revolver reportedly used by Shane Devon Tamura. - NYPD

There's a concerted effort by veterans' groups and advocacy organizations like the American Civil Liberties Union to fight against the sharing of mental health records with the National Crime Information Center and local law enforcement, which most states rely on for background checks, according to Eller.

"Groups have been combating that because simply being mentally ill doesn't mean you're mentally incompetent, nor does it mean you're a danger," he added.

However, in cases where a person was declared incompetent by a court, faced a restraining order, involuntarily committed or deemed a danger to themselves or others due to a mental illness, the federal government restricts firearm ownership and states largely follow federal law with some variations, according to Chittum.

"Even when we have someone who has a mental health issue that prohibits them under the law, the next question is whether the background check identifies that. Historically, mental health records have been some of the hardest for FBI to obtain when doing background checks," Chittum said, adding there have been efforts to improve the availability of those records in some legislation.

Can the supervisor be prosecuted for selling Tamura the firearm?

As New York homicide detectives work to piece together a timeline of events leading up to the deadly Manhattan attack, the way Tamura obtained the high-powered M4 rifle from an associate and whether Nevada's background check laws were violated will likely come under scrutiny.

In Nevada, the private sale of a firearm between two parties requires a federal background check before the transfer is complete. Both individuals must go to a federally licensed firearm dealer, which conducts the background check on their behalf. There are limited exceptions, including firearm transfers between immediate family members, which do not require this process.

If the private sale between Tamura and the supervisor did abide by the law and the facts can't prove the supervisor had any knowledge of possible disqualifiers in Tamura's history, including intended use of the firearm, then the seller likely won't be prosecuted, according to Eller and Chittum.

Federal law doesn't impose any obligation on private gun sellers to identify the buyer, conduct a background check or keep any record of the sale, Chittum said.

The Nevada law enforcing background checks for private sales was implemented in January 2020, closing the so-called "gun show loophole" that gun safety advocates have long criticized as a means for bypassing records checks that can flag past criminal history.

Approved by Hartfield Image shows the suspected New York shooting Shane Devon Tamura's firearms permit. - Obtained by CNNWhat does federal and Nevada state law say about background checks?

Most states conduct background checks through federally licensed dealers relying on the FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), while some states like Nevada have a designated "point of contact" system that offers access to state criminal history records.

Under federal law, an unlicensed person buying a firearm directly from a gun dealer must also undergo a background check, however, those who already have a concealed carry permit – like Tamura had – may be exempt because they would have already undergone a background check to get the permit.

Hours after the shooting in Manhattan, Las Vegas Police Crimestoppers received a tip from a licensed firearms dealer saying he remembered Tamura sought to buy an aftermarket trigger assembly for an M4 rifle at a Las Vegas gun show in June, a senior law enforcement official told CNN.

Tamura returned the trigger assembly the next day, saying he needed the money back to buy 500 rounds of .223 ammunition – the same kind of ammunition used in the New York shooting, according to the official. The gun dealer told police Tamura came back the next day with additional funds and re-purchased the trigger assembly, the official said.

Tamura's case calls attention to the "gray area" in the federal regulation and enforcement of private sales that exists when people buy firearms for cash in a private sale, according to Eller.

People exit the building to reunite with loved ones following a shooting at 345 Park Avenue in New York City on July 28. - Kyle Mazza/NURPHO/AP

Because a concealed carry permit would exempt an individual for five years from a background check when buying a firearm from a licensed dealer, it creates a "nuanced area" where a person could obtain a license to carry and then subsequently be convicted or have a mental health prohibitor and might still be able to use their card to purchase a firearm and avoid the background check, Chittum said.

Some states recognize this issue and routinely run background checks on licensed holders to determine if their license is still valid, Chittum said. Red flag laws, including the one in Nevada, aim to keep guns out of the hands of those who pose a threat to themselves or others.

But such laws are only effective if the individual demonstrated warning signs so that others can alert law enforcement and initiate the process of revoking the person's firearm, Chittum said. It's not clear if Tamura demonstrated any warning signs that would trigger the state's red flag law.

New York governor calls for assault weapon ban

The style of weapon Tamura used to slaughter four people has commonly been seen in some of the nation's deadliest mass shootings and has prompted renewed calls by progressive lawmakers for increased regulation.

"In the State of New York, you cannot buy one of these," Gov. Kathy Hochul told CNN on Tuesday, criticizing what she said were "much looser laws in the State of Nevada than we have here."

Hochul called on federal lawmakers to pass a national assault weapon ban that would limit access to high-powered guns like the AR-15 style rifle used in Monday's massacre and slammed GOP counterparts whom she accused of being "intimidated by the gun lobby."

"We need a national awakening here, people need to be talked about this once again and it shouldn't just happen in the wake of a tragedy like this," said Hochul.

CNN's Mark Morales contributed to this report.

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The Manhattan shooter had a previous arrest and 2 psychiatric holds, sources say. How was he able to own a gun?

The Manhattan shooter had a previous arrest and 2 psychiatric holds, sources say. How was he able to own a gun? Emma T...
New Photo - Key takeaways from 3-day hearing on deadly D.C. midair collision

Key takeaways from 3day hearing on deadly D.C. midair collision Kathryn Krupnik August 2, 2025 at 10:21 AM Kayla Bartkowski / Getty Images Over the course of three days of investigative hearings, the National Transportation and Safety Board sought to gather more information about the factors that le...

- - Key takeaways from 3-day hearing on deadly D.C. midair collision

Kathryn Krupnik August 2, 2025 at 10:21 AM

Kayla Bartkowski / Getty Images

Over the course of three days of investigative hearings, the National Transportation and Safety Board sought to gather more information about the factors that lead to the deadly midair collision over Washington, D.C., in January between an Army helicopter and a passenger plane.

The NTSB heard testimony from air traffic controllers, the Federal Aviation Administration and the Army, and the families of several of the victims were in attendance. At one point on the first day of the hearings, NTSB Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy said of the circumstances leading up to the crash, "Every sign was there that there was a safety risk." Addressing the families, she said the hearings would be "a critical part of our ongoing investigation."

On Jan. 29, a Black Hawk helicopter struck an American Airlines flight from Wichita, Kansas, as it was coming in for a landing at Ronald Reagan National Airport, killing all 67 people aboard both aircraft.

The NTSB will continue its fact finding and will compile a final report with determinations about the probable cause, likely within the next year.

Here are the top takeaways from the hearings:

Helicopter's altitude measurements showed significant discrepancies

The barometric altimeter the Black Hawk crew members were relying on may have given them incorrect information, according to NTSB investigators, because the crew was calling out altitudes that were lower than the actual height at which the helicopter was flying.

The helicopter and commercial airliner collided approximately 300 feet above the Potomac River, and the maximum altitude for helicopters at that part of the route near D.C.'s Reagan Airport is 200 feet.

The NTSB, as part of its investigation, tested three helicopters that are in the same battalion as the one that crashed and found that the barometric altimeter for all three was off by 80 to 130 feet. Army representatives on Wednesday told investigators that discrepancy is within the accepted variability because pilots are trained to maintain their altitude at plus or minus 100 feet.

NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy told CBS News' senior transportation correspondent Kris Van Cleave the NTSB calculated the margin of error on Route Four in that area of the Potomac to be 75 feet.

The Army said it is conducting additional reviews to determine how to proceed, frustrating investigators who asked why it would not make changes to the equipment, based on the findings of the NTSB tests.

In 2022, an FAA working group considered moving helicopter traffic away from the airport, but ultimately did not.

Airplane pilots knew they were going to be hit

Transcripts from the airplane's cockpit voice recorder show the pilots received an automated verbal warning about traffic in the vicinity approximately 20 seconds before the collision. Less than two seconds before impact, the pilots shouted in alarm. Flight data indicates the plane's pilots attempted to climb to avoid the helicopter just before impact.

The transcripts also reveal the pilots of the American Airlines flight questioned the move to Runway 33. The plane was originally supposed to land on Runway 1 but was redirected by air traffic controllers to Runway 33. As it was trying to land on that runway, the helicopter and plane collided.

Black Hawk pilots missed key command from air traffic controller

The pilots of the Black Hawk missed a key word when communicating with the air traffic control tower, according to a transcript released during the hearings of the conversation between the helicopter crew and the control tower.

Fifteen seconds before the collision, DCA Tower asked the helicopter if it had the regional jet in sight. Four seconds later, the DCA Tower instructed the helicopter to pass behind the plane. The Black Hawk's cockpit voice recorder indicated that the phrase "pass behind" was rendered inaudible because a helicopter crew member pressed the microphone key.

FAA acknowledged air traffic controller did not warn airliner that the helicopter might cross its path

Although it was already known — based on control tower audio from that night — that the controller did not warn the American Airlines plane that the Black Hawk might cross its path, the FAA only openly acknowledged this for the first time during this week's hearings.

In a key moment from the second day, Homendy asked FAA Air Traffic Oversight Service executive director Nick Fuller if any traffic advisories or alerts were issued to the plane. He responded, "No safety alerts."

Homendy then asked, "Should the local controller have let the [plane] crew know that there was a helicopter there?"

"Yes," Fuller responded.

Medivac pilot said presence of military helicopters in National Airport airspace makes him "uncomfortable"

Rick Dressler, of Metro Aviation – which operates medical helicopters — was asked if there are units flying in the National Airport airspace that make him uncomfortable.

"I don't like saying that first heli of [U.S. Air Force] from Andrews (Air Base) and I don't like saying that 12th Aviation Battalion gives us all pause in the community…," Dressler said, but "we are all very uncomfortable when those two units are operating."

During the hearing, the Army admitted helicopters regularly flew below flights that land at Reagan National Airport.

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Key takeaways from 3-day hearing on deadly D.C. midair collision

Key takeaways from 3day hearing on deadly D.C. midair collision Kathryn Krupnik August 2, 2025 at 10:21 AM Kayla Bartk...
New Photo - Machine Gun Kelly Claims He Refused 'Sinners' Audition Offer Because 'I Wouldn't Say' the N-Word'

Machine Gun Kelly Claims He Refused 'Sinners' Audition Offer Because 'I Wouldn't Say' the NWord' Pat SapersteinAugust 1, 2025 at 6:30 PM Machine Gun Kelly says he could have auditioned for a vampire role in Ryan Coogler's "Sinners," but he turned it down over his reluctance to say the nword.

- - Machine Gun Kelly Claims He Refused 'Sinners' Audition Offer Because 'I Wouldn't Say' the N-Word'

Pat SapersteinAugust 1, 2025 at 6:30 PM

Machine Gun Kelly says he could have auditioned for a vampire role in Ryan Coogler's "Sinners," but he turned it down over his reluctance to say the n-word.

Kelly appeared on "The Pat McAfee Show" on Thursday, where he explained that he declined to audition when he learned a racial slur would be included.

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"Like 'Sinners,' I was supposed to be in that," he asserted. "The vampire, they had me set up to do the audition — it's the one that's in the house, so he's the second vampire, the one that the guy comes and eats the family. In the audition, he has to say the 'n-word' and I wouldn't do it."

"I have a lot of aspirations to be in movies, it just hasn't panned out that way," he said. But "I'm on universal timing," he explained cryptically, then went on to explain, "It'll align. The angels will put something in the works."

"There's been plenty of movies that come out that I was like, ah, I was supposed to be in that, or I did auditions for that," he said.

The show's co-host Darius Butler then gave him a fist-bump for taking a stand about what he would say.

Kelly said he was referring to "the second vampire" — likely the role of Bert, a KKK member who was turned by the vampire Remmick played by Jack O'Connell. Peter Dreimanis ended up playing that vamp's role in the hit movie that starred Michael B. Jordan, Hailee Steinfeld and Miles Caton.

"I'd like to be in cinema while I still look young," he told the hosts. MGK's album "Americana" releases on Aug. 8.

Watch MGK's interview below:

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New Photo - Billionaire Hermès Heir, 82, Who Planned to Give Fortune to His Gardener May No Longer Hold $16.2B in Shares, Exec Says

Billionaire Hermès Heir, 82, Who Planned to Give Fortune to His Gardener May No Longer Hold $16.2B in Shares, Exec Says Hedy PhillipsAugust 1, 2025 at 2:46 PM Kevin Carter/Getty Hermès storefront.

- - Billionaire Hermès Heir, 82, Who Planned to Give Fortune to His Gardener May No Longer Hold $16.2B in Shares, Exec Says

Hedy PhillipsAugust 1, 2025 at 2:46 PM

Kevin Carter/Getty

Hermès storefront.

Hermès chairman Axel Dumas believes an heir to the luxury retailer, Nicolas Puech, no longer holds his $16.2 billion shares, per Business of Fashion

Dumas reportedly shared the news on an earnings call

Puech left the Hermès supervisory board in 2014 when LVMH acquired 23% of Hermès

A Hermès executive is offering some insight into the ongoing legal battle over the luxury goods company's shares.

Per Business of Fashion, executive chairman Axel Dumas shared that he has reason to believe that 82-year-old heir Nicolas Puech no longer holds his $16.2 worth of shares in the retailer. The outlet also notes that Puech's former wealth manager died last week, further complicating the issue.

"I've had the certainty for a long time that Nicolas Puech no longer holds his shares," Dumas told reporters July 30 on an earnings call, per BOF. "This is why we've started legal proceedings."

Edward Berthelot/Getty

Hermès Birkin handbag.

Dumas, who is a sixth-generation descendant of the company's founder Thierry Hermès, added that he doesn't believe the shares can be recovered.

Puech is the fifth-generation heir of Hermès, which was founded in Paris in 1837 and has become most known for its Birkin bags. He left the supervisory board in 2014 on shaky terms when LVMH acquired 23% of Hermès, according to Fortune. Per BOF, it was not made clear what would come of Puech's shares.

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"He resigned because he has felt for several years beleaguered by members of his family, who have attacked him on several fronts, not only regarding LVMH," a spokesperson for Puech said at the time, Fashion Network reported via AFP.

"He has had some very bad experiences and felt very badly and felt harshly criticized on numerous occasions, even while he is very attached to Hermès."

In December 2023, Swiss publication Tribune de Genève, as cited by the New York Post, reported that Puech was planning to designate his "former gardener and handyman," an unnamed 51-year-old man as his heir. Puech is unmarried and has no children of his own.

Getty

Hermès store

The publication reported that Puech could be passing on half of his inheritance to his former gardener. At the time, he was was allegedly still rearranging his benefactors if his estate and could pass on the rest of his money elsewhere.

According to Tribune de Genève, Puech has already begun the legal proceedings to make the man his heir. The unidentified man was reportedly of Moroccan descent, married to a woman from Spain and has a family of his own. He also stood to inherit property from Puech in Marrakesh, Morocco, and Montreux, Switzerland, valued at $5.9 million.

Per BOF, Puech accused his former wealth adviser Eric Freymond of mishandling his holdings in 2023. Last week, Freymond died in Switzerland.

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Billionaire Hermès Heir, 82, Who Planned to Give Fortune to His Gardener May No Longer Hold $16.2B in Shares, Exec Says

Billionaire Hermès Heir, 82, Who Planned to Give Fortune to His Gardener May No Longer Hold $16.2B in Shares, Exec Say...

 

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