Brown’s daughter confirmed his death to TMZ, whilst the Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner stated the cause of death was diffuse thermal injury and smoke inhalation.
The manner of death was classified as accidental.
The blaze started after Brown went into the barn to jump start a vehicle. Moments afterwards, the actor called for a family member to fetch a fire extinguisher.
However, by the time his relatives reached the barn, it was completely consumed by flames.
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It is understood he did not suffer from the burns sustained in the fire.
His agent, Albert Bramante, told TMZ, “I am upset and saddened. He was such a good actor and person. He was totally dedicated to the craft of acting and was a joy to work with.”
Tributes have poured in from admirers, with one posting on X, “Sorry to see him go so young. I was just watching him on Homicide last night. RIP.”
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Another wrote, “RIP! He was very good and had a strong presence in his brief scenes in We Own This City. Very believable as Bernthal’s character’s predecessor.”
A third commented, “Tragic news…Rest in peace, Bobby J. Brown. Such a talented soul taken too soon.”
A fourth stated, “Every time I see ‘Bobby Brown’ in a headline, my heart stops, but this is a tragedy for the acting world regardless. RIP Bobby J.”
Bobby made his debut in 1998, taking on the role of Terry in the sixth series of Homicide: Life on the Street.
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The performer is best remembered for his work on the 2002 drama The Wire. Nevertheless, he delivered memorable performances in numerous other productions including Pecker, We Own This City and Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.
Bobby was also due to feature in a mini-series called The Sessions.
Beyond his on-screen work, Bobby helmed various documentaries such as Off the Chain and Tear the Roof Off- The Untold Story of Parliament Funkadelic.
He hailed from Washington, D. C.
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Before establishing himself in the entertainment industry, he pursued boxing. He subsequently changed direction and trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York.
Bobby was a committed Jehovah’s Witness. His relatives are arranging a memorial service to honour his life and achievements.
Josh Kerr completed his post-injury return to the top of a global podium in thrilling fashion as he reclaimed his 3,000m title to win Great Britain’s first medal at the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Poland.
Kerr, who won gold in the event on home soil in Glasgow two years ago, had his world 1500m title defence ruined by injury in Tokyo in September.
But, six months after sustaining a calf tear during that final, Kerr demonstrated his return to full fitness by overpowering world-class opposition as the complete line-up of Olympic 1500m medallists went head to head.
The 28-year-old, now a three-time world champion, made his move on the final lap and would not be denied as he distanced his rivals before crossing the line in seven minutes 35.56 seconds.
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American Cole Hocker, who denied Kerr Olympic gold in 2024 and won the world 5,000m title last year, out-kicked the Briton in their only previous meeting this season over two miles at the Millrose Games.
But Hocker had no response to Kerr’s dash for gold and had to settle for silver, with Frenchman Yann Schrub taking bronze.
The Department for Work and Pensions offers an “over-80 pension” top-up designed to guarantee a minimum income – yet it remains one of the most overlooked payments in the system.
If you are aged 80 or over and receive a low basic State Pension – or none at all – you could qualify for extra weekly payments.
This is worth up to £105.70 a week, or £5,759 a year.
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Despite the size of the boost, awareness is low – meaning thousands of pensioners may be missing out.
Who can claim the DWP Over 80s Pension?
According to official guidance, you can claim if all of the following apply:
You’re 80 or over
You do not get basic State Pension or your basic State Pension is less than £105.70 a week
You were resident in the UK for at least 10 years out of 20
You must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK, the Isle of Man or Gibraltar on your 80th birthday or when you claim, says the DWP.
Crucially, this payment is not based on your National Insurance record: “Your eligibility for the over 80 pension is not based on National Insurance contributions.”
Recommended reading:
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The payment many don’t know exists – and it’s going up
Many assume they are already receiving everything they are entitled to, or think it is means tested so they are not eligible.
It also increases each year, like other DWP pensions, which many may not realise.
Former pensions minister Steve Webb said support like this is essential: “These annual upratings are vital to protect pensioner living standards.”
If you or a relative is over 80 and on a low income, it may be worth checking entitlement.
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With rising living costs, even a modest weekly increase could make a significant difference.
Kidderminster Harriers’ match against Radcliffe was abandoned after goalkeeper Christian Dibble and defender Joe Foulkes suffered head injuries and were taken to hospital
18:37, 21 Mar 2026Updated 18:48, 21 Mar 2026
Kidderminster Harriers’ clash with Radcliffe in the National League North was called off on Saturday afternoon after two serious injuries were suffered.
Goalkeeper Christian Dibble and right-back Joe Foulkes, both playing for Kiddy, were transported from Stainton Park in an ambulance after the English sixth-tier fixture was brought to a sudden halt late in the second half. The duo suffered head injuries and were rushed to hospital for further medical attention.
Dibble, who previously spent six years at Wrexham and featured in their Disney+ documentary Welcome To Wrexham, lay on the turf for a considerable period and received care from both clubs’ medical staff. A collision left the keeper down and forced a stoppage in play. Radcliffe posted on X: “This afternoon’s game has been abandoned due to an injury to Kidderminster goalkeeper, Christian Dibble. We wish him a very speedy recovery.”
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They continued in a subsequent post: “Some things are bigger than the game we all love. Kidderminster’s Christian Dibble and Joe Foulkes have both been taken away in an ambulance. We’d like to thank the emergency services for their quick response, and wish both players a healthy recovery.”
In their own social media updates, Harriers posted: “There’s a stoppage in play as Christian Dibble has come for a free kick and taken a fairly heavy landing. He’s getting some treatment.
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“We’re up to 81 minutes of match time but no idea as yet as to whether the game will continue and, if it does, we’ll have a huge chunk to add on. Only real concern right now is big Dibbs who is still down getting treatment from the medical teams after taking a heavy landing.”
Confirming the abandonment, they added: “Saturday’s game at Radcliffe has been abandoned due to an injury to Christian Dibble. There is no further information at this stage – all thoughts and love with the big man for a quick recovery.”
They later confirmed that Dibble and Foulkes were transported to hospital, both suffering head injuries. Harriers said: “Both players were conscious. We’d like to thank the medical teams of both Harriers and Radcliffe for their impeccable work in treating both boys.”
Kiddy and Radcliffe were locked at 1-1 before the match was called off prematurely. Owen Evans had levelled for the visitors before the interval after striker Rio Clegg netted his 22nd goal of the campaign to put The Boro in front.
With the fixture unfinished, Kiddy remain third in the National League North standings, 18 points behind second-placed South Shields. They have contested two matches fewer than their play-off competitors and three fewer than Merthyr Town beneath them in third, also on 66 points. Radcliffe sit 11th on 56 points, six points adrift of the playoff places.
Only the title winners – with AFC Fylde currently leading the way – automatically secure promotion to the National League. The second promoted side is decided through the playoffs, with six teams qualifying to contest quarter-finals, semi-finals and a final.
The final is staged at the home ground of whichever finalist finished higher in the league table during the regular campaign.
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Kiddy were last in the National League in 2023-24, whilst they finished third in the lower tier last season but were knocked out in the playoff semi-finals. Radcliffe won the Northern Premier League Premier Division title in 2024 and have never competed as high as the National League.
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Sky Sports discounted Premier League and EFL package
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Sky has slashed the price of its Essential TV and Sky Sports bundle for the 2025/26 season, saving £336 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more.
Sky shows at least 215 live Premier League games each season, an increase of up to 100, plus Formula 1, darts, golf and more.
For any history buff, there is a day out within easy reach of Cambridge that is a “lunar landscape” waiting to be discovered. Cambridgeshire is a setting that was a prime location for the Anglo Saxons, but this was also the case in nearby Norfolk.
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Just a 51-minute drive from Cambridge is Thetford, and in Thetford is Grime’s Graves. Described as a “lunar landscape”, this is more than 430 shafts and quarries that were first named Grim’s Graves by the Anglo Saxons. This means ‘pits of the pagan god grim’.
In 1870, an excavation took place and something was discovered. Flint mines that were dug around 2650 BC were discovered, and this is the only Neolithic Flint mine in Britain. Today, people can visit the site and descend 9m down to experience the mines.
As people descend down, there are light projections that show the lives of the people that worked and lived there. If people want to know more information, they can listen to an audio guided tour along the way, which is read out by Time-Team archaeologist Phil Harding and English Heritage historian Dr Jennifer Wexler.
After you’ve come back to the top, there is more history to discover. There is an exhibition space that tells the tales of the first pits opening in 2650 BC.
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People can also learn about the origins of the name of the pits, as well as the excavations that happened in the 1800s. There is also a family trail people can embark on.
For people wanting to descend to the pits, they must be aged seven or over, and it’s advised to wear flat footwear. To find out more, go to the website.
Robert Mueller, who is known for his extensive reshaping of the US’ FBI and his inquiry into Donald Trump, has died (Picture: MANDEL NGAN / AFP via Getty Images)
The former head of the FBI who investigated ties between Russia and Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, has died aged 81.
Robert Mueller, who ran the US crime investigation body from 2001 to 2013, died on Friday evening, a spokesperson for his family said.
His cause of death has not been released publicly.
In a statement, a spokesperson for his family said: ‘With deep sadness, we are sharing the news that Bob passed away. His family asks that their privacy be respected.’
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At the FBI, Mr Mueller set about almost immediately overhauling the bureau’s mission to meet the law enforcement needs of the 21st century, beginning his 12-year tenure just a week before the September 11 attacks in 2001 and serving presidents of both political parties. He was nominated by Republican George W Bush.
The cataclysmic event instantly switched the bureau’s top priority from solving domestic crime to preventing terrorism, a shift that imposed an almost impossible standard on Mr Mueller and the rest of the federal government: preventing 99 out of 100 terrorist plots was not good enough.
Later, he was special counsel in the Justice Department’s investigation into whether the Trump campaign illegally co-ordinated with Russia to sway the outcome of the 2016 presidential race.
Mr Trump posted on social media: ‘Robert Mueller just died. Good, I’m glad he’s dead. He can no longer hurt innocent people!’
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The second-longest-serving director in FBI history, behind only J Edgar Hoover, Mr Mueller held the job until 2013 after agreeing to Democratic president Barack Obama’s request to stay on after his 10-year term was up.
After several years in private practice, Mr Mueller was asked by deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein to return to public service as special counsel in the Trump-Russia inquiry.
His team spent nearly two years quietly conducting one of the most consequential, yet divisive, investigations in Justice Department history.
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He held no news conferences and made no public appearances during the investigation, remaining quiet despite attacks from Mr Trump and his supporters and creating an aura of mystery around his work.
Mr Mueller later brought criminal charges against six of the president’s associates, including his campaign chairman and first national security adviser.
His 448-page report released in April 2019 identified substantial contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia but did not allege a criminal conspiracy.
He laid out damaging details about Trump’s efforts to seize control of the investigation, and even shut it down, though he declined to decide whether Mr Trump had broken the law, in part because of department policy barring the indictment of a sitting president.
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Mr Mueller noted: ‘If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the president clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state. Based on the facts and the applicable legal standards, we are unable to reach that judgment.’
The conclusion did not deliver the knockout punch to the administration that some Trump opponents had hoped for, nor did it trigger a sustained push by Democrats to impeach the president – though he was later tried and acquitted on separate allegations related to Ukraine.
The outcome also left room for attorney general William Barr to insert his own views. He and his team made their own determination that Mr Trump did not obstruct justice, and he and Mr Mueller privately tangled over a four-page summary letter from Mr Barr that Mr Mueller felt did not adequately capture his report’s damaging conclusion.
During his time at the FBI, it was defined by the 9/11 attacks and its aftermath, as an FBI granted broad new surveillance and national security powers scrambled to confront an ascendant al-Qaida and interrupt plots and take terrorists off the street before they could act.
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It was a new model of policing for an FBI that had long been accustomed to investigating crimes that had already occurred.
Mr Mueller was born in New York City and grew up in a well-to-do suburb of Philadelphia.
He received a bachelor’s degree from Princeton University and a master’s in international relations from New York University.
He then joined the marines, serving for three years as an officer during the Vietnam War.
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He led a rifle platoon and was awarded a Bronze Star, Purple Heart and two Navy Commendation Medals. After his military service, he earned a law degree from the University of Virginia.
Mr Mueller became a federal prosecutor and rose quickly through the ranks in US attorneys’ offices in San Francisco and Boston from 1976 to 1988. Later, as head of the Justice Department’s criminal division in Washington, he oversaw a range of high-profile prosecutions that chalked up victories against targets as varied as Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega and New York crime boss John Gotti.
In a mid-career switch that shocked colleagues, Mr Mueller quit a job at a prestigious Boston law firm to join the homicide division of the US attorney’s office in the nation’s capital, where he immersed himself as a senior litigator on unsolved drug-related murders in a city rife with violence.
Sarah James, executive producer at Strictly, said in a statement: “As the longest-serving female professional dancer in the history of the show, Karen has given so much of herself and her time to the programme, and we are extremely grateful for the passion, creativity and dedication she has brought to every single performance.
When Liverpool came to Brighton last May, the away end was in party mode at the full-time whistle despite the defeat as they sang and celebrated with inflatables and balloons.
By then, Arne Slot’s side had won the Premier League title and a trip to the south coast was another excuse to enjoy themselves. And rightly so.
Ten months on, Liverpool tasted defeat against Fabian Hurzeler’s side again but this time the away end was half empty by the time Slot made his way over to the travelling supporters.
Their latest defeat is the 10th in the league this season, making it only the seventh time the reigning Premier League champions have lost 10 or more games during their title defence.
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Since starting the campaign with five wins on the trot, Slot’s side have won just nine of their next 26 games in the league. With that kind of form, Liverpool do not look like a team that has it in them to qualify for the Champions League.
It is all but certain that the Premier League will get an extra place in the Champions League and Liverpool currently occupy that fifth spot, though they have a game in hand on sixth-placed Chelsea who play later on Saturday.
Much had been made in the build-up about the 62 hours Liverpool had to prepare between their Champions League win over Galatasaray at Anfield and this trip to Brighton.
With Alisson and Mohamed Salah forced out with injuries, Liverpool‘s situation worsened when striker Hugo Ekitike was forced off early on.
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“What went wrong started off with the lead up to this game,” Slot said.
“As so many times has happened this season, when we played a very good game [against Galatasaray] and we thought we could bring that level to the next game, or even better, we had Mo Salah injured, we had Alisson injured and, after two minutes, Hugo Ekitike out.
“That has happened to us so many times this season and what happened to us a lot this season is that the first chance of the other team immediately went in.
“But in the second half Brighton were the better team and deserved to win.”
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Slot was the first to say that his side deserved to lose here and it would hardly have surprised him. Of their 10 Premier League games this season following a Champions League fixture, Liverpool have lost five of them.
Questions have to be asked about fitness and, despite spending £450m in the summer, Liverpool lack proper squad depth.
“It makes complete sense if you win the league last season and you spent £450m that the expectations are high, and those expectations were high for the pundits, for the media, for me, for the fans,” said Slot.
“At our club we’re also looking at the situation and the challenge we had during this season, and then we might be a bit more realistic [about] why the season has gone why it is gone.
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“But still it’s not good enough no matter how much excuses I can come up with – it’s still not good enough for the position we’re in right now.”
The cute green top and matching midi skirt costs under £40
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A new F&F co-ord has been described as the “perfect” outfit for spring. The warmer weather and lighter nights are finally here, which means it’s time to switch up your spring wardrobe.
This cute two-piece was posted to the F&F Instagram, which has over 887,000 followers. Posted with the caption: “The perfect spring co-ord does exist”, people have already shared their love for the outfit.
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One Instagrammer described the skirt as “sublime”, while another also described it as “perfect”. The two-piece can be bought online or in-store, with the top costing £16 and skirt costing £22.50.
The outfit is lightweight and is the “perfect style to carry you from work-to-weekend looks from now into the warmer weather”, as stated on the Boden website.
To mix it up a bit, New Look offers the dark red fringe hem cotton rich midi skirt and matching hem top. On the New Look website it says: “Knitted to a slender silhouette, this dark red-hued midi skirt will lend a playful spin to your wardrobe with its fringed hem.”
The building had been facing problems for 40 years
An ‘eyesore’ building in a Cambridgeshire town centre has been redeveloped after more than 40 years of neglect. The site, known as ‘The Gap’ at 24 High Street in Wisbech, has been turned into a new shop and flats by Fenland District Council.
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The building was once the site of Cook’s Butchers, but had been facing problems since the business collapsed more than 40 years ago. The council is now in the process of finding the first tenants for the shop and flats.
The redevelopment formed part of the council’s Wisbech High Street Project, which was launched in 2017 with £1.9 million from the National Lottery Heritage Fund.
The development was also supported by the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority’s Market Towns Programme, which aims to improve business premises.
Cllr Chris Seaton, Fenland District Council’s portfolio holder for Wisbech High Street projects, said: “We’re proud to have taken on this complex and challenging site to make what will be a long-lasting difference to the restoration of Wisbech High Street for generations to come.”
Repairs are also being carried out at other buildings on the High Street, including at 13-17, where derelict first floors have been brought back into use. The council are currently working on plans for 11-12 High Street, which are also derelict.
Everton, meanwhile, have picked up more points away from home so far this season but did beat Burnley in their most recent match here before losing to Arsenal in London. European qualification remains a possibility for the Toffees, currently a dark-horse in the Champions League battle, a win this evening would move them to within two points of Chelsea. Follow the game LIVE below with our dedicated match blog, featuring expert insight and analysis from Dom Smith at the ground.
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