Tammy Daybell Lori Vallow Charles Vallow J.J.Vallow Chad state Idaho Boise, state Idaho death Tammy Daybell Lori Vallow Charles Vallow J.J.Vallow Chad state Idaho Boise, state Idaho

Lori Vallow murder trial day 24: Ex-FBI special agent reveals text exchanges in testimony

Reading now: 742
www.fox29.com

BOISE, Idaho - A former special agent with the FBI was back on the stand Monday in the murder trial of Lori Vallow, the so-called "Doomsday mom" accused of killing her two children.Doug Hart began his testimony on May 5, detailing text messages to Chad Daybell from Lori's iCloud account.Lori Vallow is accused of killing her two children, J.J.

Vallow and Tylee Ryan. She is also accused of conspiring to kill her husband's wife of nearly 30 years, Tammy Daybell.Since Friday, he’s been going over a 160-page summary of his investigation into Lori.

Specifically, iCloud data regarding her two kids who were missing from September 2019 until June 2020.The jury heard dozens of texts between Lori and Chad Daybell, her husband and alleged co-conspirator.Her and Chad's texts mainly discussed life insurance money in connection to the deaths of their spouses and planning their new life.

Hart testified that records showed Lori and Chad attended the Church of Jesus Christ Latter Day Saints temple in Gilbert as early as November 2018.This was several months before Lori's fourth husband Charles Vallow was shot and killed and nearly a year before Chad's wife Tammy died.The term "death percentage" was a topic in the text messages – Lori would ask Chad about percentages for her kids and Tammy.Hart said the closer the number was to zero or a hundred, the closer the person mentioned was to death.In a text from Lori to Chad, she asked, "Do you think there is a perfectly orchestrated plan to take the children?

Read more on fox29.com
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Robert Moses - New York smoke forces ground stop, delay at LaGuardia and Newark airports - fox29.com - New York - Usa - state New Jersey - county Queens - county Liberty - city Newark, county Liberty
fox29.com
48%
233
New York smoke forces ground stop, delay at LaGuardia and Newark airports
NEW YORK CITY - The Federal Aviation Administration has issued a ground stop at LaGuardia Airport in Queens and a ground delay at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey.Winds have blown smoke from unchecked Canadian wildfires into the region, which led the DEC to issue an Air Quality Health Advisory for all five boroughs.FOX 5 NY's Antwan Lewis has the storyCanada is dealing with a series of intense wildfires that have spread from the western provinces to Quebec, with hundreds of forest fires burning. The smoke has traveled into the United States, resulting in a number of air quality alerts issued since May.Wildfire smoke is a complex mixture of gases, particles, and water vapor that contains multiple pollutants that can get into the lungs and bloodstream. There is no evidence of a safe level of exposure to some of the pollutants, meaning that smoke can impact your health even at very low levels. Inhaling smoke from wildfires can cause headaches, sore and watery eyes, nose, throat, and sinus irritation, chest pains, heart palpitations and more. Exposure to elevated fine particle pollution levels can affect the lungs and heart.The air quality alerts caution "sensitive groups," a big category that includes children, older adults, and people with lung diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.FOX 5 NY's Robert Moses has the story.Kids, who often are encouraged to go out and play, "are more susceptible to smoke for a number of reasons," said Laura Kate Bender, the lung association's National Assistant Vice President, healthy air.
Scientist accused of developing Syria’s chemical weapons program traced to Edmonton - globalnews.ca - Canada - Syria
globalnews.ca
67%
322
Scientist accused of developing Syria’s chemical weapons program traced to Edmonton
sarin into the rebel-held Ghouta district of Damascus.As the chemical clouds spread, residents began to froth at the mouth. Fluid oozed from their eyes and noses as they convulsed and suffocated.The Ghouta gas attack killed up to 1,400 people, many of them children, and was the latest display of the horrors of chemical warfare.Ten years later, Global News has traced a scientist accused of helping Syria develop its chemical weapons program to an Edmonton suburb.De-classified Canadian government documents allege that Ahmad Haytham Alyafi made a “significant contribution to the manufacturing of chemical weapons.”From 1974 to 1994, the chemical engineer worked at the military-run centre that produces chemical weapons for the Syrian regime, federal officials wrote in the documents.Alyafi “set up a plant he knew would manufacture chemical weapons; he therefore contributed significantly to their production,” according to the documents, which call his role “indispensable.”But when rescue workers were collecting bodies in Ghouta a decade ago, Alyafi was living in a 2,500-square-foot home on a cul-de-sac in Edmonton’s west end, the records show.“Mom and dad have been living with us at our house in Edmonton since the spring of 2013,” Alyafi’s son wrote in a 2019 letter sponsoring his parents for permanent residence in Canada.“My dad picks up the kids from school daily and they spend time with them on homework after school time,” wrote the son, who works in the Alberta construction industry.Immigration records from 2019 list the Syrian scientist as “currently residing in Canada.” The address he used was a four-bedroom home in Edmonton’s Glastonbury neighbourhood.Whether he remained in Edmonton was unclear.
DMCA