The Four in a Bed contestant was left in tears as she admitted “I get really emotional”.
Meghna Amin Screen Time Reporter
14:40, 06 Jun 2026
A Four in a Bed contestant was left in tears moments into the episode.
Father-daughter duo Dennis and Holly were taking part in the competition, which aired a repeat episode on Saturday.
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The pair had been the first to welcome their competitors to their Norwich B&B, leaving them impressed with the cleanliness and Holly’s breakfast skills.
So impressed that when the final stage came around, Holly and Dennis received such high praise that she was left in tears.
On payment day, the duo received feedback from Kent hosts Harry and Sarah, Oxfordshire B&B owner Dawn, and Ollie, who owns a boutique hotel in Kent.
While Ollie paid Dennis and Holly exactly what was owed for his stay, Dawn underpaid by £10 due to a lack of wardrobe in her room and dirty windows.
Reflecting on her comments, Dennis admitted: “I’m genuinely disappointed by [the windows] because our standards should be much higher and generally are, so apologise for that. Not good enough.”
He later added to the camera: “Taking the money off was arguably a bit harsh, but I get it. We can’t complain too much, although it was uncomfortable.”
Dawn, meanwhile, said: “I stand by my payment because I believe that a wardrobe is a facility that should be in a B&B. And the window not being clean, everything should be spotless.”
However, Harry and Sarah took a vastly different view, and even overpaid Holly and Dennis for their stay.
After handing over a £12 overpayment, Harry praised: “We had an amazing stay at your place. Everything you needed and more.”
Breaking down in tears at hearing his comments, Holly said: “Thank you, sorry I get really emotional!”
Sarah, also becoming tearful, replied: “You’ll get me going!”
“It means a lot,” Holly added, while Harry later added to the camera: “They ticked every box,” as Sarah said: “They rival some of the best hotels that I’ve ever stayed in.”
Holly went on: “It means so much for us, and we’ve put so much into the business.”
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Not long later, it was revealed that Harry and Sarah’s overpayment had left Holly and Dennis the winners.
“I’m delighted,” Dennis said, as Holly added: “It’s the best feeling.”
He quipped in front of the others: “We are all winners, but we’re the best winners.”
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Dennis then added to his daughter: “I’m very proud of Holly,” as she told him: “It wouldn’t be possible without you!”
NEW YORK (AP) — The World Cup, a 48-team, 104-match behemoth kicking off next week across 16 cities in the United States, Mexico and Canada, presents an unprecedented security challenge, with more countries, games and a larger footprint than ever before.
It also comes against the backdrop of the U.S. and Israel’s war with Iran, mounting political violence in President Donald Trump’s orbit and growing fears of artificial intelligence-fueled disruptions, creating a complex threat environment for authorities.
Overseeing the sprawling security apparatus is a legion of federal agencies, state and local police departments and private entities. Their responsibilities range from securing stadiums and fan zones to escorting teams and protecting dignitaries.
Their tools include hunter drones that can shoot nets over objects in restricted airspace, bag-inspecting robot dogs, giant X-ray trucks and thousands of AI-powered cameras trained on public spaces soon to be thronged by fans.
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In the U.S., it’s “78 Super Bowls over 39 days,” said Andrew Giuliani, executive director of Trump’s World Cup task force, which is overseeing the multiagency effort.
“There’s never been a summer like this in American history from a security angle,” said Giuliani, son of former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
“We’re as prepared as we can be.”
An unprecedented security collaboration
The tournament has the same high-level federal security designation as the Super Bowl, just below a presidential inauguration or a national political convention, ensuring federal, state and local coordination. It coincides with other major events linked to the 250th anniversary of America’s founding.
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So far, Giuliani said, there are no credible threats.
The Department of Homeland Security, focused on Trump’s immigration enforcement crackdown and hit by a funding lapse only recently resolved, estimates up 7 million people will visit the U.S. for the World Cup.
The U.S. Secret Service, under scrutiny after security breaches and attempts on Trump’s life, is in charge of protecting world leaders who show up to cheer on their countries. Trump has expressed interest in attending a match.
“I feel very comfortable where we’re at, and we feel like we have a zero-fail mission,” Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin told Congress this week, noting that the Secret Service was understaffed by about 860 agents. “But it’s going to be complicated.”
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Officials have indicated they are confident they can keep Trump safe because they will be integrating his usual security into the robust World Cup plan on days he may watch a match.
The FBI has spent two years developing its security plan, incorporating lessons from other major events such as the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade and New Year’s Eve ball drop in New York and testing them at smaller ones, including last week’s Israel Day parade in the city.
“We prepare for the worst day,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Amit Kachhia-Patel in New York told The Associated Press. “And that’s how we go into any single event.”
To help cover security costs, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has distributed $625 million to the 11 U.S. host cities. An additional $250 million is being directed toward tracking and neutralizing suspect drones.
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The disbursement of those funds was held up by the department’s funding delay, which the Republican administration has argued hindered security planning.
Others involved in the planning effort said the federal government could have played a more hands-on role even before the shutdown.
John Cohen, a former senior DHS official who has been briefing state leaders before the matches, said the government was largely absent from planning meetings last year and did not begin sharing threat intelligence with host regions until recently.
“With an event of this magnitude, one would expect the federal government would’ve played a more active role,” Cohen said. “It felt like a missed opportunity to showcase that collaboration.”
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Evolving threats from drones and AI
In January, thousands of officials involved in World Cup security gathered for exercises simulating crowd surges, vehicle attacks and mass shootings.
A month later, the U.S. and Israel launched a war with Iran.
“The security picture fundamentally changed,” said Stefano Ritondale, chief intelligence officer at Artorias, a defense intelligence company not involved in the security preparations. “There’s a major difference in preparing for a lone wolf radical who rams his car into a public place and a terrorist who is bankrolled by a foreign country we’re at war with.”
Among the greatest concerns are drones.
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Since the last World Cup in Qatar in 2022, drones have become a prominent weapon in conflicts including Russia’s war in Ukraine and Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
“If there is one threat that keeps me up at night, it is from drones,” said New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, whose department is partnering with the FBI on drone mitigation.
Drones are prohibited over stadiums and fan zones, and Kachhia-Patel said the FBI has a “full suite of options” to thwart incursions. They include agents monitoring the sky and a “variety of means” to safely down the devices, he said without elaborating.
Before this year’s World Cup, the growing sophistication of AI videos was a particular concern, with officials warning that state actors can harness the technology to sow misinformation and panic.
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On match days, the FBI will activate joint operations centers in each host city, bringing together local, state and federal law enforcement agencies to monitor and investigate threats.
“If there’s a video that shows an explosion going off at a site, and it’s AI generated, we have people on the ground who can validate whether or not that’s true,” said Kachhia-Patel.
A scoring opportunity for private tech
Some AI companies have pitched themselves to police departments in host cities, promising to comb through data and surveillance on game days to prevent threats, including unruly fan behavior.
“We know sports fanaticism around here in terms of the NFL and baseball to some extent, but nothing like international soccer,” said Jake Becchina, a police spokesperson in Kansas City, Missouri, which is hosting six matches.
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The department has contracted with Peregrine Technologies, which promises to sift through police data and publicly available information such as team practice locations and the country affiliation of popular bars, to get ahead of possible conflict.
In Dallas, a recent $120 million tech upgrade will give local police body cameras capable of real-time translations, helping law enforcement communicate with international visitors soon to descend on the region.
Several drone detection and mitigation companies are joining efforts to help federal agencies secure the skies.
One of those companies, Fortem, has claimed to have signed a multimillion-dollar contract with DHS before the World Cup for an unusual drone mitigation strategy: quadcopters that can shoot nets at encroaching drones to trap them in midair. A spokesperson for DHS declined to discuss the contract.
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Just as the teams will aim to perform their best on the pitch, Giuliani said the security planning was a unique chance to “show off American exceptionalism.”
“If we do our job right,” Giuliani added, “nobody will be talking about security at the World Cup.”
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Santana reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Alanna Durkin Richer in Washington contributed to this report.
An American college student, who went missing eight days ago during a vacation in Japan, has been found dead, his heartbroken family revealed Saturday.
James “Weston” Higginbotham, a 20-year-old Auburn University student from Alabama, disappeared May 29 while traveling in Japan with his parents and younger brother to celebrate his sibling’s high school graduation.
Weston, an experienced hiker, was last seen on surveillance footage around 8 p.m. walking alone in a mountainous area of Yamashina ward, near Kyoto, just before a storm moved in. Search teams had concentrated on the heavily forested area before calling off efforts, which were hampered by high winds and heavy rain.
His mother, Nancy Higginbotham, shared the devastating news in a Facebook post Saturday.
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“Our family is heartbroken to share that Weston was found deceased by a volunteer search-and-rescue group in a mountainous area outside of Kyoto,” she wrote. “The grief we feel is impossible to put into words. We are forever grateful for the time we had with our sweet, precious Weston, but cannot begin to understand what life without him will be like.”
James ‘Weston’ Higginbotham has been found dead after going missing in Japan, his family announced Saturday (GoFundMe)
Nancy Higginbotham’s statement continued: “We are deeply grateful to the countless people across the United States, Japan, and around the world who shared Weston’s story, prayed for our family, offered encouragement, and helped in the search efforts. The outpouring of kindness and support has carried us through the darkest days of our lives. We shared our story here and in the media in the hope of finding Weston. We now ask for privacy as we begin to navigate this unimaginable loss.”
She concluded: “Thank you for your thoughts, prayers, and support. We will need them now more than ever. We will always love you, Weston.”
The mom had earlier told CBS News that she feared her son had been hurt and become stuck somewhere in the area.
On the evening of May 29, his parents saw through Life360, a GPS tracking app, that his phone was still moving around the city and sent him text messages, but he never responded.
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“My fear is that he doesn’t have enough food because there is plenty of water, and that he’s lost. Those mountains, that forest goes for a very long time and … it’s extremely dense,” she said.
The Higginbotham family was in Japan to celebrate Weston’s younger brother’s high school graduation (GoFundMe)
The initial search had reportedly taken place over three days and included 100 police officers, K9 dogs and helicopters but found no trace of the 20-year-old.
Nancy Higginbotham also told CBS News Friday that the pair had argued about the use of ChatGPT on the trip, which had become “a sore subject” with her son, an environmental engineering student.
“I was using a little bit too much ChatGPT. Japan is a country that I’ve had a hard time navigating,” Nancy Higginbotham told the outlet. “Weston is very anti-AI because, you know, he’s into sustainability engineering, and AI uses a lot of water and is depleting a lot of water resources.”
The family had planned to hire a private Japanese search-and-rescue team and previously said they would not leave Japan until Weston was found.
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“We have complete confidence that we are going to find him,” Weston’s dad, Keith Higginbotham, earlier told CBS News.
A Rotherham primary school teacher admitted he falsely called in sick to attend a stag do in Lisbon
A primary school teacher “pulled a sickie” to jet off on a stag do in Portugal with his mates, then attempted to cover his tracks by tearing pages from his passport, a tribunal has found.
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Joe Wilson told his headteacher at Listerdale Junior Academy in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, that he was too ill to attend work as he was “up all night being sick” on 18 May 2023, reports the Mirror.
The following day, the Year 6 teacher claimed he was unable to “keep any food or water down”, taking a second day off while promising to keep his managers informed.
Mr Wilson later admitted that both sick days were an elaborate cover story concocted to allow him to attend a friend’s stag do in Lisbon — a deception he attempted to bolster by ripping out the passport pages that revealed he had flown to the Portuguese capital.
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A Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA) panel was told that Mr Wilson embarked on the clandestine trip between Thursday 18 May and Friday 19 May 2023. He set his plan in motion at around 5am on the first day, messaging his boss: “I’m not going to be in school today. I’ve been up all night being sick and have got a really bad headache.”
The following morning, he sent a further message reading: “I’m still no better so won’t be in school today. Can’t keep any food or water down. I’ll keep you updated.” The disciplinary panel was informed that Mr Wilson was exposed by an anonymous member of staff, who brought attention to photographs showing the teacher at an airport holding a pint of beer. One image, shared by another individual at 5.23am on the morning of Mr Wilson’s departure, appeared online with the caption: “Early start for… stag do, few beers with the Portugal gaffer”.
Initially, the teacher maintained the photographs were from an earlier journey, but subsequently confessed to the TRA in October 2025 that he “agreed to attend a stag do in Lisbon”.
He stated that he “made a huge error of judgement but (felt) the situation at the time influenced (him) to make this poor decision” and that he “accepted full responsibility” for his conduct, including “falsifying a sickness”. In February, he emailed the agency acknowledging he “pulled a sickie to go on (his) mates stag do”. Mr Wilson also tore pages from his passport in an attempt to conceal that he had travelled abroad.
He informed the TRA he “made a huge mistake of taking out a page of (his) passport” following “an informal chat with (his) headteacher” as she “encouraged (him) to show something ‘to get them off my case’”.
He also admitted he was “ashamed” of his actions. An investigation report revealed Mr Wilson surrendered his passport to a school representative in June 2023, with photocopies showing pages 9, 10, 27 and 28 had been removed, the tribunal heard. The panel determined it was proven that Mr Wilson was away from school without legitimate justification, falsely claimed he was off sick when this wasn’t true, and tore out passport pages that would have contained stamps proving he was abroad on the dates concerned.
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In its judgement, the panel stated: “In falsely reporting his sickness absence and providing an altered document during an investigation, Mr Wilson was intentionally misleading the school and concealing the truth.
“The panel considered that Mr Wilson’s behaviour fell below the ethical standards expected of a teacher and was contrary to the manner in which the profession professes to serve the public.”
It also concluded his conduct demonstrated a lack of integrity, was dishonest, and that his actions may bring the profession into disrepute.
However, the panel ruled that imposing a prohibition order, which would have barred Mr Wilson from teaching, was disproportionate and that publishing the findings would suffice.
Americans lost close to a billion dollars to AI scams in one year – and cybersecurity experts fear this is only the beginning.
Nearly $900 million was stolen in scams that incorporated AI in 2025, according to the first report of its kind from the FBI. The bureau also received more than 22,000 reports about such schemes to its Internet Crime Complaint Center.
One woman in California lost more than $5,000 when a scammer used AI to impersonate her daughter’s voice. Another woman in Ohio lost $1.5 million after fake FBI agents convinced her to drain her bank accounts.
Internet scams are not new; they’ve been around as long as people have been logging on. Fake Nigerian prince emails, phishing schemes and all types of malware have long been digital landmines for people surfing the web. But AI is now changing the cyber con game and costing Americans millions in the process — a number that is only going to grow as AI improves, which it does by the nanosecond.
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Michael Machtinger, deputy assistant director of the FBI Cyber Division, told the Wall Street Journal that AI-created fraudulent communications “can look very official and very legitimate to even the most trained individuals.”
An FBI report found that Americans lost nearly $900 million to scammers using AI in 2025. That figure is expected to rise (AFP/Getty)
‘Today’s AI is the worst AI you will ever use’
As AI companies pitch the public on the urgency of adopting their technology, criminals have been more than willing to heed that advice.
Like everyone else playing around with Claude, Gemini, Grok, and ChatGPT, scammers are still figuring out exactly what they can pull off using the chatbots, according to Jake Braun, executive director of the Cyber Policy Initiative at the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy.
He told the WSJ that as AI continues to improve, the means by which criminals can use it to bilk people out of their money will likely only get more sophisticated too.
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“The AI companies like to say that today’s AI is the worst AI you will ever use. What’s also true is that these are the lowest number of AI complaints we are ever going to see,” he told the paper.
Bob Sullivan, host of AARP podcast The Perfect Scam, explained in March that AI has helped scammers flood the internet with fraudulent offers and malicious schemes.
“We’re getting deluged,” Sullivan said. “A couple of years ago, you might have encountered one or two AI-generated scams a year. Now scammer call centers are sending out tens of thousands of scam messages per minute.”
Wide range of grifts
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Consumer protection agencies have collected long lists of all the various ways scammers are using AI to try to rip people off. Both California’s Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and New York City’s Consumer Worker and Protection agency have compiled lists of the methods criminals are using.
A new spin on an old grift is the use of deepfakes to convince people they’re talking to someone they trust — or someone they want to trust like a celebrity or a public figure — in order to convince them to send them money. AI scammers might deepfake a photo or a video of a relative in a tough situation or a celebrity as a means of establishing credibility.
Romance schemes follow a similar tack, using fake images or videos — or even voices — of attractive people or celebrities to convince a victim that they’re interested in them. Once trust has been secured, that’s when the scam hits. The account will then ask the person for money or assistance, and with people’s emotions clouding their judgment, they have been known to fork over thousands of dollars.
While some criminals seek to exploit concern for loved ones or a desire for romance, others appeal to greed.
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Criminals are using AI voice cloning, deepfake images and video generation to pose as celebrities or loved ones in an effort to steal from unsuspecting people (Getty/iStock)
According to law enforcement agencies, some scammers have created entirely fictional influencers to convince people to invest in fake businesses or to support their non-existent work.
The student told Wired that he used Google’s Gemini AI to create the fictional influencer and raked in thousands off the “super dumb” — in his words — MAGA crowd who ate up the rhetoric.
But it’s not just so-called “super dumb” people falling for AI scams. Advice, especially online, has typically been aimed at older Americans who may be less fluent in technology and unaware of the red flags associated with fraud. However, the new FBI report suggests broader messaging may be needed to teach a much younger group of Americans how to keep criminals out of their wallets.
Targeting teens
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According to the FBI, teens have become a prime target for scammers in recent years. The bureau reports that it received 31,000 complaints to its crime complaint center from people under the age of 20 last year. That’s up 74 percent from 2024 and is nearly triple the number of complaints it received from the same demographic in 2015.
Ade Clewlow, associate director and senior adviser at cybersecurity consulting firm NCC Group, told the WSJ that teens who have grown up online are more likely to trust what they encounter on the internet and “are just as susceptible as anyone else” to fraud.
Social media sites are especially useful for scammers because they allow them to peer into a target’s network of friends and family and search for vulnerabilities they can exploit.
Focusing on a target’s family was exactly how scammers managed to steal more than $5,000 from Deborah Del Mastro of San Francisco.
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Earlier this month, Del Mastro answered a phone call and received terrifying news; a voice on the other end of the call told her they had kidnapped her daughter, Sarah, and demanded a ransom.
She told Good Morning America that the voice told her there was “someone here that you need to talk to” before she heard her daughter’s panicked voice.
“I hear my daughter’s voice — sobbing, trying to breathe, having a panic attack,” Del Mastro said. “And [the voice] says, ‘I’m so sorry, Mom. I am so scared. I’m so sorry.’”
The kidnappers demanded she send $5,400 to multiple locations in Mexico if she wanted to see her daughter again. She obliged, fearing for her daughter’s safety. Once she had hung up with the kidnappers, she called her daughter only to find that she was fine.
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Del Mastro realized then she’d been scammed, likely by an AI clone of her daughter’s voice.
Scammers have already used deepfakes and voice cloning to steal thousands — and in one Ohio case, more than a million dollars — from victims (Getty/iStock)
Erin West, founder of Operation Shamrock, an organization focused on combating scammers, told KGO that even seconds-long audio clips of a person’s voice — like what might be included in a video shared to Facebook or Instagram — can be used to create believable voice clones.
“What they can do with just a few seconds of your voice [is] they can clone it, and they can essentially produce sound that sounds exactly like you,” she told the broadcaster, adding that AI voice cloning is “only getting worse, and it will only continue to get worse with the use of AI and deepfake technology.”
Another woman in California fell victim to a similar scam. When Abigail — no last name given — received a Facebook message from someone claiming to be Steve Burton, a longtime star of the legendary “General Hospital” soap opera, she readily accepted the message.
The two chatted, moving their conversation from Facebook to WhatsApp. Their conversations continued, and eventually Abigail received a video from the person claiming to be Burton. The man in the video — who looked and sounded just like the soap star — called Abigail “my queen” and promised to love her.
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Abigail’s daughter, Vivian Ruvalcaba, told Fox News that she saw the video and warned her mother it was AI, but her mother was convinced it was real.
Before she realized it was all a lie, Abigail had sent the fake Burton $81,000 and sold her condo — at $200,000 under its estimated value — on a promise that she and the faux celebrity would run away together to live in a beach house.
If impersonating loved ones or celebrities isn’t bad enough, fraudsters have also used AI to more convincingly impersonate government workers.
Scammers and disinformation peddlers can use deepfakes — enhanced by AI technology — to make convincing clones of politicians, celebrities, and even loved ones with as little as a few photos or video clips posted online (AFP/Getty)
Fake government officials
The FBI’s report found that government impersonation schemes are becoming not only more prevalent but more sophisticated. The bureau’s complaint center received more than 32,000 calls last year about government impersonation schemes, up from around 17,000 in 2024.
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“What began as clumsy phone calls from fake IRS agents demanding gift cards has evolved into something far more sophisticated and far harder to dismiss,” Judson Dressler, director of the risk operations center at cyber risk company Resilience, told the WSJ.
Fraudsters use spoofing to make their calls appear legitimate on caller ID systems; lift official seals and logos off agency websites; and employ AI deepfake audio and video to create convincing fakes of public officials, Dressler said.
One 93-year-old woman in Ohio reportedly lost $1.5 million to a government impersonation scam when a fake FBI official convinced the woman that criminals were targeting her assets. They warned her she needed to drain her bank accounts and deposit the money into crypto ATMs for safety. The thieves took the money, with no means for her to recover her savings.
In 2025, Consumer Reports delivered a petition signed by 75,000 Americans to the Federal Trade Commission asking it to hold companies that produce products capable of AI voice cloning accountable for the scams made possible by the technology.
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Staying safe in the age of AI
As AI improves, it will become increasingly difficult to know not only what information is real, but whether the people you’re talking to online even exist.
In an effort to better educate the public on the latest methods fraudsters are using, the FBI has bolstered its resources available on IC3.gov.
One way Americans can protect themselves from digital scams is to always verify that the person they’re communicating with is legitimate. If someone calls or messages from a government agency, for example, it’s good practice to call the agency directly to verify the identity of the person.
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There’s almost never a time when an agency or company needs immediate payment. If someone contacts you demanding money immediately, that’s a good time to pause and verify, according to the FBI.
According to Navy Federal Credit Union, which released guidance for avoiding AI scams earlier this year, Americans may also want to limit how much of themselves they share online. AI needs very little — a few photos, a few seconds of voice — to create a compelling clone that can be used against your loved ones.
If you suspect you’ve been a victim of a scam, you should act quickly and notify your bank, as well as file a report on IC3.gov. Machtinger told the WSJ that reporting is crucial to stopping fraudsters.
“It could help you and prevent numerous other individuals from falling prey to similar kinds of criminal activity,” he said.
Downing Street has hit out at outside actors “trying to interfere in our democracy” after JD Vance claimed the “invasion of migrants” in Europe is to blame for the murder of Henry Nowak.
The US vice-president said the 18-year-old, who was fatally stabbed by Vickrum Digwa, would still be alive if Europeans “stood their ground” against “politics of self-hatred”.
No 10 slammed the remarks as “seeking to stir up division on our streets” and urged people to “respect the wishes” of Nowak’s family, who said they did not wish his death to be used to create division.
Bodycam footage from the night Nowak was killed by Digwa shows police handcuffed him as he lay on the ground, despite his repeated pleas that he could not breathe, after his killer falsely claimed he had been the victim of a racist attack. He died shortly after.
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In the latest intervention by the Trump administration over the murder, Mr Vance said: “Henry Nowak died the same way a civilisation dies: abandoned, handcuffed by authorities who neither trusted nor cared for him, and accused of hate crimes he did not commit.
“His murder is as tragic as it is enraging.
“He should still be alive today, and he would be if the last few generations of European elites had stood their ground against the politics of self-hatred and the mass invasion of migrants, many of whom despise the West and the people who love it.”
Henry Nowak, 18, died after suffering a stab wound to the chest while on a night out (PA)
In response to Mr Vance’s comments, a No 10 spokesperson said: “In recent days we have seen people trying to interfere in our democracy and seeking to stir up division on our streets.
“The Nowak family are grieving after Henry’s horrific murder.
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“They have said they do not want his death to be used to create further division, hatred or tension. We should be respecting their wishes.
“Our politics should bring people together even in the most terrible of circumstances. That is who we are as a country.”
Mr Vance’s comments come after the Trump administration called for an end to “two-tier” policing in the wake of Nowak’s murder.
In a post on X, the US state department wrote: “Ideological conditioning and two-tiered policing are glaring symptoms of civilisational decline. They must be rejected across the West.
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“The United States sends our condolences to the family of Henry Nowak and the people of the United Kingdom at this troubling time.”
Downing Street rejected “any suggestion of two-tier policing across the United Kingdom”.
The Trump administration has repeatedly been critical of the UK government over its immigration policies. Mr Vance urged anti-immigration activists to “keep on going” after tens of thousands attended a London rally last month.
Plus, at the United Nations in New York in September last year, Mr Trump said Britain and Europe are “going to hell” because of immigration and dismissed climate change as “the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world”.
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Mr Nowak’s family have also called on politicians to rebuild trust in the police as they stressed they “do not want anger to tear communities apart” in the wake of their son’s murder.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey stressed that the UK needs to resist attempts to “divide the country”. He said in a post on X: “We all need to resist attempts like this to politicise Henry Nowak’s death and divide our country – whether they come from Maga politicians like Vance or their cronies here in the UK.”
Digwa was given a life sentence with a minimum of 21 years in prison for stabbing Nowak with a knife with a 21cm blade.
The Independent Office for Police Conduct is investigating Hampshire Police’s response in Nowak’s case.
Given the grim nature of the weather forecast, even the small amount of play that was possible on Saturday could be viewed as a bonus.
Perhaps more could have taken place. Lord’s appeared dry and ready during an early lunch taken at 12:20 BST before play eventually began at 13:00.
The players yo-yoed on and off the field over the course of the next 70 minutes, with two delays before the weather had the final say at 14:10.
Just as in his 5-39 in the first innings, Robinson revelled in the conditions in his first Test for more two years. The damp conditions under the floodlights exacerbated the difficulty of batting on a surface that has been uneven for most of this match.
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After New Zealand resumed on 37-3, Ravindra and Mitchell were the most likely of their remaining batters to dig in and made England’s task harder. Robinson dealt with them both.
Left-hander Ravindra was undone by a beauty. Robinson, from round the wicket, angled the ball in, then nipped it away off the surface and up the Lord’s slope. It defeated Ravindra’s defensive stroke and kissed the off stump. Almost unplayable.
Ravindra, the heir to Kane Williamson as New Zealand’s leading batter, has had an awful Test. Batting returns of nought and eight are added to two bad drops, which have been important in the context of a low-scoring match.
Knowing conditions were in their favour and time on the field was short, England crowded the bat with as many as seven close catchers.
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And the Mitchell wicket went against a theory held by this England regime that a certain style of cricket cannot be successful in the Test arena.
“This 75mph, keeper up, dobbing it on a length – we know that doesn’t work in Test cricket, wherever you are,” was once the view of England director of cricket Rob Key.
One ball after England keeper Jamie Smith came up to the stumps, Robinson struck Mitchell on the pad. The review could not save Mitchell, who was frustrated to see the ball was shaving leg stump – another umpire’s call that has gone against the Black Caps in this match.
Two overs later, the weather made a terminal intervention, with the day abandoned at 17:30.
Criminal Record has brought together a round-up of today’s biggest crime stories.
17:13, 06 Jun 2026
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Every day on Criminal Record we will be bringing you a round-up of the biggest crime stories of the day.
Whether it’s a child killer making a bid for freedom or another attack in Scotland’s gangland war – this is the place where you’ll get the low-down.
If you love to read about crime – this is the place to be every day.
Here’s what has been making the news across the country on Saturday.
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Three men admit roles in death of Canadian restaurant owner
Three men extradited from Scotland to Canada have admitted their roles in the death of a restaurant owner who confronted customers over an unpaid bill.
Dad-of-one Sharif Rahman, 44, died a week after suffering a fatal head injury during an altercation outside The Curry House restaurant in Owen Sound, Ontario, in August 2023.
Robert Evans Jr, 25, pleaded guilty to manslaughter at the Ontario Court of Justice on Friday, while his father, Robert Busby Evans, 49, and uncle, Barry Evans, 56, admitted being accessories after the fact.
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The three men were arrested in Scotland on international warrants before agreeing to be extradited to Canada in December last year.
Woman seriously injured after being struck by car near Fife church
A woman has been left seriously injured after she was struck by a car near a church in Fife.
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The 55-year-old pedestrian was taken to hospital following the collision on the B9037 Main Street in Torryburn, near Dunfermline, at around 4.10pm on Friday.
The crash involved a blue Suzuki Vitara and happened close to Torryburn Parish Church. Police Scotland said the woman remains in a serious condition and officers are continuing efforts to trace the occupants of the vehicle.
Fallout from Murrell embezzlement conviction continues
Former Scottish first minister Humza Yousaf says he thought Nicola Sturgeon looked “quite a broken women” in the wake of her ex-husband Peter Murrell admitting to embezzling more than £400,000 from the SNP.
In an interview with the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme, Ms Sturgeon said her ex-husband has never explained to her why he took party funds as she spoke of the “trauma” she has gone through.
Murrell pleaded guilty at the High Court in Edinburgh last week to embezzling the sum from the SNP between 2010 and 2022.
Speaking on BBC Newsnight, Mr Yousaf was asked whether he believed Ms Sturgeon’s version of events that she was unaware of her then-husband’s actions.
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He said: “I believe Nicola because I know the person and I believe her to be a person of great integrity. In that Laura Kuenssberg interview, I thought I saw quite a broken woman. I thought I saw somebody who was really suffering as a result of what’s happened in a huge betrayal.
“I certainly am in that percentage that believe her, but I can understand people’s scepticism. I mean, I’m not surprised by it.”
Two teenage boys have been found guilty of murdering 16-year-old Kayden Moy at Irvine beach. Jay Stewart, 18, and a 15-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, fatally stabbed Kayden at the Ayrshire beauty spot on May 17 last year.
A third teenager, 18-year-old Cole Turley, previously pleaded guilty to the murder before the trial started at the High Court in Glasgow. They will be sentenced next month.
A 17-year-old who stabbed a man to death with a ‘rambo knife’ while on bail for a slashing, has been jailed for life. The killer who cannot be named for legal reasons chased and killed John McNab, 22, in an unprovoked attack on Great Junction Street in Leith, Edinburgh, on September 2 last year.
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He was handed a life sentence with a minimum term of 17 years at the High Court in Dundee.
Iain Potter, Jack Wright and Ross Fathi oversaw an industrial‑scale distribution hub which exploited the Royal Mail system to send thousands of drug parcels to customers across the UK.
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Inside the warehouse, officers found a professionally organised operation equipped with vacuum‑sealing machines, packaging stations, label printers and stacks of Royal Mail bags prepared for dispatch. A raid uncovered a large catalogue of illegal substances, including cocaine, MDMA, ketamine, LSD, psilocybin mushrooms, cannabis resin and THC edibles.
The criminal trio had sent 1,724 parcels between February and April 2025, Royal Mail records show, each weighing between 0.1kg and 10kg. At least 19kg of cocaine had been delivered in the operation, police estimate, among drugs worth a total of £2.2m. Encrypted mobile phones and £13,000 in cash were also seized.
Potter, 45, of Sefton Drive, Liverpool, and Wright, 30, of Westgate Lane, Wakefield, were each handed 11 years and four months in prison after admitting conspiracy to supply Class A and B drugs. Fathi, 46, of Wingfield Drive, Wilmslow, received a six‑year sentence for his role in the operation, having been convicted of the same offences.
Thomas Tuchel’s side are currently based in the United States ahead of the World Cup
England continue their preparations for the 2026 World Cup when they take on New Zealand in an international friendly this weekend.
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Thomas Tuchel’s side are currently based in the United States ahead of the tournament and will be hoping for an improved performance after a disappointing March international window, which saw the Three Lions draw with Uruguay and lose to Japan.
New Zealand head into the match looking to bounce back from a heavy 4-0 defeat to Haiti as they also fine-tune their plans for the World Cup.
Here’s everything you need to know about watching England v New Zealand.
What time is England v New Zealand?
England v New Zealand kicks off at 9pm BST on Saturday, June 6.
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The match will be played at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.
Is England v New Zealand on TV?
Yes. The game will be shown live and free-to-air in the UK.
Coverage will be available on ITV1, with the broadcast beginning at 8.15pm BST ahead of kick-off.
England v New Zealand live stream
Viewers can watch the match live via the ITVX website and app.
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The streaming service is available on mobile devices, tablets, smart TVs and desktop computers.
England v New Zealand t
England are expected to be without several players who were involved in last weekend’s Champions League final, including Bukayo Saka, Noni Madueke, Declan Rice and Eberechi Eze.
Dean Henderson has also joined up later than the rest of the squad following Crystal Palace’s Conference League success.
However, the majority of Tuchel’s 26-man World Cup squad trained this week, including John Stones and new Barcelona signing Anthony Gordon.
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New Zealand could again be without Ryan Thomas, who missed the defeat to Haiti with a hamstring injury, while Joe Bell is a doubt after suffering a calf problem.
Ferrari drivers Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc are both expected to challenge for pole position, but Vasseur, 58, is being kept “under observation” at a local medical facility in Monaco.
It is unclear whether the Frenchman will be back in time for Sunday’s grand prix. No further medical information was provided by the team, who merely said in a statement on Saturday morning that they wished their boss a “speedy recovery” and looked forward to seeing him back at the track “soon”.
Vasseur will miss the most important qualifying session of the season, given how difficult it is to overtake around Monaco’s tight, twisty streets during the actual race.
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Moreover, it is a qualifying session for which his team are highly fancied. Hamilton, who is still searching for his first Ferrari win, and Leclerc, a local who has a stellar record at his home race, finished one-two in both practice sessions on Friday. The Monegasque topped the first session with the Briton finishing fractionally ahead in the second.
Ferrari prioritised a smaller turbo in the new engine regulations for 2026, which means their car lacks top-end power but is useful at starts and low-speed pick-up – ideal for Monaco.
Mercedes have won every race so far this season, with Italian teenager Kimi Antonelli having won the last four to establish a 43-point lead over Britain’s George Russell.
Ferrari said in a statement: “Fred Vasseur will not be present at the circuit today. Following some medical checks, Fred will remain under observation at a local medical facility. No further medical information will be provided. We wish Fred a speedy recovery and look forward to seeing him back at the track soon.”
Good afternoon and welcome to our live coverage of Maja Chwalinska v Mirra Andreeva in the women’s French Open final.
What a tantalising match-up this promises to be. Poland’s Chwalinksa, the world number 114 has stunned Roland Garros these past two weeks after coming through qualifying and is one win away from a fairytale triumph.
If she succeeds, she will write her name into the history books by becoming only the second qualifier in the Open Era to win a major after Emma Raducanu’s 2021 US Open victory. It would also provide a fitting ending to a French Open that has been defined by chaos and shock results.
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Less than a week ago, Chwalinska was jokingly asking for help paying for a hotel room, but as she sank onto the red brick dust of Philippe-Chatrier after clinching a place in the final, she tripled her career earnings during her time in the French capital.
“Let’s not pretend someone expected it,” she said after her 7-6, 6-4 semi-final win over Diana Shnaider. “I was outside the top 100, and now I’m in the finals of a grand slam, so I feel like it’s a big thing. So it’s hard to process it.”
But 19-year-old Andreeva, the world number eight, stands in the Pole’s way. Should the in-form teenager come out on top this afternoon, she will be the first Russian to win a major since her country’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
A semi-finalist at Roland Garros two years ago, Andreeva would also become the third-youngest first-time Grand Slam champion this century, after Maria Sharapova and Raducanu.
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Her first Grand Slam appearance was always going to come sooner rather than later. Ever since she burst on to the scene as a 16-year-old and reached the Wimbledon fourth round, Andreeva has been one of the brightest young stars in the sport.
However this one pans out it promises to be an intriguing contest between a player who has emerged from relative obscurity or an established teenage star who seems born for the big stage.
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