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Twelve miles of traffic following “serious” lorry fire

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Twelve miles of traffic following "serious" lorry fire
National Highways A CCTV image of the section of the M25. You can see a single-file line of traffic passing through the single open lane. Next to it are several large trucks and people in high-vis.National Highways

No causalities have been reported

Traffic is being delayed by about two hours on a section of the M25 after a “serious” lorry fire resulted in 12 miles (19.3km) of congestion, National Highways says.

On Friday morning, National Highways said two of three lanes on the clockwise carriageway between junction five, near Sevenoaks in Kent, and junction six, near Godstone in Surrey, had been closed.

Surrey Police said it was made aware of the incident at about 01:30 and Surrey Fire and Rescue Service said it left the scene at about 03:15 as the blaze had been extinguished.

Traffic monitoring site Inrix said one lane was still closed as of 10:00 but “severe delays” remained.

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National Highways A CCTV image showing cars passing by the burnt load via two lanes. The burnt load is cordoned off with three people in high vis standing next to it.National Highways

Delays were still expected despite another lane being opened

Just after 09.15 National Highways said the lorry’s load had been removed and recovery of the vehicle could now commence.

Inrix explained that congestion had spread to the A25 through Sundridge, Oxted and Godstone.

Delays of about 45 minutes are also affecting traffic travelling westbound on the M26 leading up to the M25 at junction five, National Highways says.

It explained that resurfacing work was required and would be completed overnight.

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National Highways said: “All lanes will be open throughout the day once recovery work has been completed.”

Surrey Fire and Rescue Service said it attended the incident along with Kent Fire and Rescue Service and there were no causalities.

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North Carolina governor candidate denies ‘black Nazi’ post

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North Carolina governor candidate denies 'black Nazi' post

A Republican candidate for governor in North Carolina has insisted he will not exit the race after it was reported that he made controversial comments on a porn website more than a decade ago.

Mark Robinson characterised the CNN report, which alleged that he had referred to himself as a “black Nazi” on an adult forum, as “salacious tabloid lies”.

He has been under pressure from state Republicans and members of Donald Trump’s campaign team to quit the race in the swing state, according to anonymous sources quoted by the Carolina Journal newspaper.

Trump himself did not refer to the report during his comments at a Thursday night event in Washington about antisemitism.

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Robinson, 56, is a former furniture manufacturer who was elected to be the state’s first black lieutenant governor in 2020.

He won the nomination to run for governor in March after receiving an endorsement from Trump, who called him “Martin Luther King on steroids”.

Robinson’s race is in a potentially pivotal swing state which Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris is hoping to wrest from the Republicans.

According to the CNN report published on Thursday, Robinson used to visit a porn website from 2008-12 called Nude Africa, with the username “minisoldr”.

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According to CNN, minisoldr posted about enjoying watching “tranny” porn, adding: “Yeah I’m a ‘perv’ too!”

The BBC has not verified the CNN report.

In 2021, Robinson refused to apologise after he was criticised for saying that children in schools should not be learning about “transgenderism, homosexuality, any of that filth”.

In a video posted to X, formerly Twitter, on Thursday, as the CNN story was being published, he denied wrongdoing.

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“Let me reassure you, the things you will see in that story, those are not the words of Mark Robinson,” he said.

“We are staying in this race. We are in it to win it.”

He said he was the victim of a “high-tech lynching” by his white Democratic opponent, Josh Stein.

Stein’s campaign said in a statement that “North Carolinians already know Mark Robinson is completely unfit to be governor”.

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Opinion polls already suggest Stein, a Harvard-educated lawyer who is currently North Carolina’s attorney general, has a firm lead in the race.

The North Carolina Republican Party defended Robinson in a statement, saying “the Left” was “trying to demonise him via personal attacks”.

Trump himself did not address the controversy during Thursday night’s comments to the Israeli-American Council National Summit, in which he vowed to “stop the toxic poison of antisemitism from spreading all over America and all over the world”.

He bemoaned the lack of support he said he was receiving from Jewish voters, saying if he failed to win the election, “the Jewish people would really have a lot to do with that”.

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The Harris campaign posted a video on social media reminding voters of Trump’s past praise for Robinson.

The deadline for withdrawing from the governor contest was on Thursday evening, as postal ballots go into the mail on Friday. Early voting in the state begins in less than a month.

Recent polling in North Carolina shows Harris and Trump effectively tied among likely voters.

The Tar Heel State has been a Republican stronghold, with only one Democratic presidential nominee winning there in the last 20-plus years.

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Trump narrowly beat Joe Biden in North Carolina four years ago by less than 2%.

Democrats have campaigned heavily in the state this election season.

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Michael Jackson estate says accuser is trying to extract $213mn

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Michael Jackson’s estate has initiated legal proceedings against a former associate of the late pop icon, who threatened to raise fresh allegations of inappropriate conduct just as it hopes a big-budget film will banish the child sex abuse claims that shadowed his later years.

The man and four others told the estate in about 2019, a decade after the singer’s death, that they might go public with allegations that he had acted inappropriately with some of them when they were children. 

In 2020, the estate quietly struck a previously unreported settlement worth nearly $20mn, under which the man and the other accusers agreed instead to defend Jackson’s reputation.

Now, the people managing Jackson’s music and image rights are accusing the man of fabricating his earlier claims while seeking to extract $213mn more in a new settlement with the estate, according to an arbitration claim. They have reported the matter to the US Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles.

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Jackson’s estate is asking an arbitrator to award damages, order the accuser to abide by the terms of the 2020 deal and issue an injunction barring him from releasing details he previously agreed to keep secret.

The episode illustrates how Jackson’s interactions with children, which led to a criminal prosecution and at least one out-of-court settlement, continue to hang over his estate years after his death in 2009 from an overdose of sedatives and anaesthetic. The Jackson estate maintains the singer never engaged in inappropriate conduct with children.

The estate, which was initially $500mn in debt, has since amassed more than $3bn — a figure revealed by its executors in an interview with the Financial Times for the first time.

The change of fortunes has come through the sale of his music catalogue, a Broadway musical and Cirque du Soleil shows. The beneficiaries are Jackson’s three children, his mother and charities.

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In an interview, John Branca, a longtime Jackson aide who co-manages the estate, said: “The time has come to stand up, take a stand, tell Michael’s story.”

The man allegedly making the claims against the Jackson estate did not respond to repeated requests for comment. He is not being named by the FT.

Jackson is one of the most successful but controversial figures in pop music history, springing to fame as a five-year-old with a soaring voice on the pop, soul and funk songs performed by his family band, The Jackson 5. He went on to record Thriller, which remains the best-selling album of all time more than 40 years after its release.

But he was also accused on multiple occasions of inappropriate conduct with children, beginning in the 1990s and continuing until his prosecution in 2005. Though the accusers’ accounts were at times contradictory and Jackson was acquitted in the court case, the allegations took a toll.

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Michael Jackson waves after being acquitted in a 2005 case
Michael Jackson waves to his supporters in California after being acquitted in a 2005 court case © Reuters

When he died, Jackson’s will gave Branca and music executive John McClain the responsibility of managing his estate. Branca has spent the past decade and a half working to restore the singer’s troubled finances and his complicated legacy.

The strategy suffered a setback after HBO’s 2019 documentary, Leaving Neverland, which featured the graphic accounts of two men, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who alleged Jackson abused them as children.

Shortly after, the five unnamed accusers — who were not featured in the Neverland documentary — made their allegations. According to Jackson’s estate, the man had previously denied Jackson ever engaged in inappropriate conduct.

The estate agreed to settle those claims under what it has described as a “business decision”. The settlement deal, signed in January 2020, was styled as a purchase of their life rights and a consulting agreement, with each of the five accusers to receive $3.3mn over six years.

Since then, it is claimed, each of the accusers received $2.8mn. But in January, before the final $500,000 payment was made to each of them, the man notified the estate that he no longer planned to abide by the agreement, and that he was seeking $213mn in new payments.

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The claim is that the man’s lawyers demanded a “substantive response” to their overture for more payments, and warned they would “be forced to expand the circle of knowledge” if the ultimatum was not met.

The demands came at the time the estate was finalising terms for the $600mn sale of a 50 per cent stake in Jackson’s music catalogue to Sony, valuing the total package at $1.2bn. The accuser’s lawyer asked the estate if it had disclosed his claim to Sony, raising the spectre of risk for the new owners of Jackson’s music and potentially affecting the deal’s value.

Cirque du Soleil show ‘Michael Jackson ONE’
Jackson’s estate has turned around its fortunes through lucrative ventures, including the Cirque du Soleil show ‘Michael Jackson ONE’ © Getty Images

When Jackson died, his estate was saddled with debt after years of unsuccessful business practices and profligate spending.

Progress has been uneven in digging out of the hole; the Broadway show has grossed $216mn, according to Broadway World. But in the aftermath of Leaving Neverland, according to Branca, national commercials with Nike and two banks that each paid $1mn to $2mn a year evaporated and attendance at MGM’s Cirque show dropped for an extended period.

The estate laid low for a few years but is now taking a more assertive approach as it seeks to defend Jackson’s name. The biopic is being directed by Antoine Fuqua, with actor Miles Teller playing Branca.

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“We survived Leaving Neverland but I’m not sure we could have with those additional allegations,” Branca said. His lawyers, he said, told him: “You have no choice. If these people come forward and make these allegations, then Michael is over, his legacy is over, the business is done.”

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Cinnamon the capybara in Telford faces fresh capture attempt by zoo

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Cinnamon the capybara in Telford faces fresh capture attempt by zoo
Hoo Zoo and Dinosaur World The head and shoulders of a capybara, a large rodent, stand sideways to the camera with a body of water in the background.Hoo Zoo and Dinosaur World

Cinnamon the capybara has been missing for a week but remains in woodland next to the zoo

The search for Cinnamon the escaped capybara is to resume after efforts to find her were paused over fears she could move on to Ministry of Defence (MoD) land.

She escaped from her enclosure at Hoo Zoo in Telford, Shropshire, on 13 September and since then has been living in zoo-owned woodland outside the site’s perimeter.

Another attempt to capture the giant rodent will be made on Friday evening.

“The big issue that we face…the thicket that she’s in is literally impenetrable,” said Will Dorrell, the zoo’s owner.

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“It’s probably about 100 square metres in total and it is 6ft high brambles that she can very easily slip under.

“If she sits right in the middle of there, practically speaking, the only way of getting to her is by chopping everything down, which is not a realistic way and also could scare her or cause injury to her.”

Hoo Zoo and Dinosaur World A drone image of a green field, with a large capybara standing in the middle of itHoo Zoo and Dinosaur World

Cinnamon was spotted by drones in the woodland

The zoo had already put down traps on tracks that Cinnamon had regularly left in the area.

However the fugitive rodent refused to take the bait.

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“She actually has now made tracks around the side of the cages,” said Mr Dorrell.

“So she’s obviously seen them and decided she’s walking around them rather than walking through them.”

The woodland sits next to a MoD site and the zoo said they were concerned if she moved there, they might not be able to capture her.

Cinnamon’s family ‘off colour’

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Cinnamon’s story has captured international attention, with media descending on the zoo and interview requests from as far away as the USA.

“It’s been a manic few days,” Mr Dorrell said.

“Last night I had about three hours of sleep, it’s been a bit of a long one.”

He added that although Cinnamon’s family were not distressed, they have been “off colour”.

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“They’re spending quite a lot of time down near the gate that she escaped through,” Mr Dorrell said.

“Either they’ve recognised that they could also get out if they’re quick enough or they’re waiting for her to come back.”

Are capybaras an endangered species?

  • Capybara are not an endangered species, according to The International Union for Conservation of Nature
  • They are sometimes referred to as the giant guinea pig and they are the world’s largest rodent species
  • Capybaras are native to South America and can grow to more than 1m (3ft) in length
  • They are highly social animals and are usually found living in small herds on grassland, in tropical rainforest, as well as in wetlands across the continent
  • They eat grass and aquatic plants and often eat their own droppings as digesting their food a second time helps to absorb nutrients
  • Capybaras have webbed feet and their eyes, ears and nostrils are on top of their heads, allowing them to stay mostly submerged in water for long periods of time

(Source: World Wildlife Fund)

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MPs call on UK government to probe VW’s supply chains

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Volkswagen faced further pressure over its Xinjiang links as British parliamentarians called on the UK government to investigate the carmaker’s compliance with the country’s slavery laws following a Financial Times investigation into an audit of its factory in the Chinese region.

The FT on Thursday reported that the audit, which VW claimed cleared it of allegations of forced labour in Xinjiang, had in fact failed to meet international standards.

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Sarah Champion, Labour MP and chair of the international development select committee, said: “There needs to be an investigation not only into Volkswagen but into supply chains of most major products.”

Champion, who is calling for stronger UK legislation to crackdown on forced labour in international supply chains, added that companies were turning a blind eye to human rights abuses in their supply chains as they prioritised commercial gains.

Liam Byrne, another Labour MP and chair of the House of Commons business and trade committee, said the issues with the audit provided “fresh evidence for why we need to quickly overhaul the UK’s modern slavery laws to deliver far tougher transparency through the supply chains of big firms”.

He urged the UK to introduce legislation similar to the US Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act or usher in a facility inspection regime that would give UK customers, suppliers and investors the protections they “want and need against the abuse of forced labour”.

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Conservative MP Sir Iain Duncan Smith, co-chair of the hawkish Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, said he was planning to table a parliamentary question demanding that ministers examine the German company’s compliance with the UK’s Modern Slavery Act.

“Following the FT’s report, I am calling on the government to carry out a thorough investigation into VW’s supply chains,” Duncan Smith said.

Human rights groups in Xinjiang have documented widespread abuse against the mainly Muslim Uyghur ethnic group, with reports that hundreds of thousands of people were detained in the region from 2017 to 2019. Beijing has denied allegations of human rights abuses.

Under the 2015 slavery act, companies that supply UK customers must annually disclose what action they have taken to ensure no modern slavery exists in the business or its supply chains.

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After pressure from human rights groups and investors, VW in December said that it had carried out an audit of its plant in Xinjiang, which is run by a joint venture with state-owned SAIC.

It said that the audit, carried out by Berlin-based consultancy Löning and an unnamed Chinese law firm, had applied the internationally renowned SA8000 standard and found “no indications of any use of forced labour”.

But a leaked document, which was also reviewed by Der Spiegel and ZDF, showed failures to comply with the standard.

The plant in Xinjiang has become a headache for VW amid growing tensions between Beijing and several western governments, including the US. Earlier this year, thousands of Porsche, Bentley and Audi cars were held up in US ports after a discovery of a Chinese subcomponent in the vehicles that breached the country’s anti-forced labour laws.

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VW executives have remained reluctant to close the plant, which no longer produces cars and only employs 197 people, as this would risk harming the company’s lucrative relationship with SAIC.

It could also hurt the company in China, where consumers in the past have boycotted brands that acknowledge controversies in Xinjiang that Beijing vehemently denies.

Chinese consumers boycotted brands including H&M and Nike three years ago after they pledged not to buy Xinjiang cotton — a scenario that VW, which has already been losing share in its most profitable market, has been careful to avoid.

VW did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the development in the UK. The carmaker on Thursday said that it “always complies with legal requirements in its communications”, adding that “investors or the public have never been deceived”.

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The UK Department for Business and Trade did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Two-year-old boy dies after TV falls on him in Wigan home

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Two-year-old boy dies after TV falls on him in Wigan home

A two-year-old boy has died after a TV fell at his home in what is believed to have been a “tragic accident”, police have said.

Carter Walsh was rushed to hospital after he was injured in Fisher Close, Wigan, at about 14:15 BST on Thursday, Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said.

He later died despite treatment from medics.

A GMP spokesman said they were still examining the circumstances but believed it was “a tragic accident with nothing suspicious”.

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It is believed the TV dislodged before falling and that a fireplace was also involved.

More than £1,000 has been raised via a Gofundme page in the toddler’s memory.

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Watch bloodcurdling moment teen ‘murderer’ Carly Gregg, 14, GIGGLES in court after ‘fatally shooting mom in the face’

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Watch bloodcurdling moment teen ‘murderer’ Carly Gregg, 14, GIGGLES in court after ‘fatally shooting mom in the face’

THIS is the bloodcurdling moment teen “murderer” Carly Gregg, 14, giggles in court after allegedly shooting her own mom in the face.

Gregg, now 15, allegedly killed 40-year-old math teacher Ashley Smylie, in their home in Mississippi in March.

Teen Carly Gregg appeared to stifle a giggle in court as she stands accused of murdering her mom

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Teen Carly Gregg appeared to stifle a giggle in court as she stands accused of murdering her momCredit: CourtTV
Gregg continues to smile in the clip from court

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Gregg continues to smile in the clip from courtCredit: CourtTV
Gregg's mother, Ashley Smylie, was fatally shot in the face

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Gregg’s mother, Ashley Smylie, was fatally shot in the faceCredit: Enterprise

At the start of proceedings on Thursday, Gregg was caught on Court TV footage trying to sickeningly stifle a laugh.

Footage shows the 15-year-old break a smile before quickly covering her mouth with her hand.

She then proceeds to pretend like she is leaning on her hand to continue covering her mouth.

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Gregg still has a slight smile as the clip continues to play – despite being accused of murdering her own mother.

Gregg was 14 years old when she murdered her mom inside their home in Brandon, Mississippi, outside Jackson, after the two argued over her marijuana usage, prosecutors allege.

Horrifying surveillance footage in the house showed Gregg wearing a Nirvana tee and dark pants, walking from the kitchen to another room that morning before gunshots and screams rang out.

Gregg shot her mom in the neck, stole her phone, and went back to the kitchen to text her stepdad while playing with their two dogs, prosecutors allege.

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The eerie video showed a stone-faced Gregg staring at her mom’s phone while she texted her stepdad, Heath, “When will you be home, honey?”

Gregg also texted a friend, referred to only as BC in court, and asked them to come over, prosecutors claim.

When BC came to the house, Gregg asked them, “Have you ever seen a dead body?” before leading the friend inside.

By the time Heath came home, BC was standing outside, where they heard gunfire.

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Chilling moment Carly Gregg, 14, calmly texts pals after ‘shooting mum in the face’…& invites one to ‘see a dead body’

Heath managed to wrestle the gun out of Gregg’s hand and then called police, prosecutors allege.

His shoulder was grazed by a bullet, but he otherwise came out unscathed.

Gregg, now 15, has pleaded not guilty by way of insanity, and her lawyers are claiming she blacked out during the shootings.

At the time of the killing, Gregg had been smoking marijuana for about six weeks and was on the anxiety and depression drugs Lexapro and Zoloft.

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One psychiatrist testified that she was experiencing hallucinations around that time.

Gregg’s lawyers told the court that she has no memory of her mother’s murder.

DISTURBING BEHAVIORS

On Thursday, Gregg started her fourth day of trial with disturbing courtroom behavior by being caught laughing.

A raft of mental health professionals testified for Gregg’s case and debated the severity of her mental health struggles.

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Chilling moment Carly Gregg, 14, calmly texts pals after allegedly shooting her mom in the face

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Chilling moment Carly Gregg, 14, calmly texts pals after allegedly shooting her mom in the faceCredit: Law&Crime Trials/ Youtube
The teen girl is now pursuing an insanity defence after turning down a plea deal

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The teen girl is now pursuing an insanity defence after turning down a plea dealCredit: Law&Crime Trials/ Youtube

The teen had a troubled relationship with her mother but was described as a gifted child who excelled in school, Gregg’s former counselor Rebecca Kirk testified in court.

Gregg skipped the fourth grade and had no history of violence.

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Her biological father was allegedly abusive toward her and had been diagnosed as bipolar.

Kirk saw Gregg for nine weeks at the beginning of 2024 for counseling and said the teen described some mental health struggles but seemed relatively normal.

The pair spent most of their time talking about school, and Gregg excitedly told Kirk she was reading Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky.

The book follows the main character’s conflicted feelings of guilt after he murders his neighbor.

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Another professional, Dr. Jason Pickett, interviewed Gregg after her mother’s death and said, in his opinion, the teen does not meet the insanity requirements.

He doubted the teen had bipolar and questioned whether her father suffered from the mental disorder either.

Meanwhile, Dr. Andrew Clark, a medical psychiatrist, argued on Wednesday that Gregg had “blacked out” the day of the killing.

However, he suggested that Gregg could be capable of faking a mental health condition.

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Gregg was offered a plea deal to serve 40 years in prison, but she dismissed it.

She faced a potential sentence of life in prison.

Horrifying surveillance footage captured Gregg playing on her phone seconds after allegedly gunning down her mom

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Horrifying surveillance footage captured Gregg playing on her phone seconds after allegedly gunning down her momCredit: Law&Crime Trials/ Youtube

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