
Verdict reached in Lori Vallow Daybell's Arizona trial over ex-husband Charles Vallow's death
CBSN
A jury has reached a verdict in Lori Vallow Daybell's Arizona trial over the 2019 killing of her estranged husband. Jurors began deliberations on Monday.
Charles Vallow, who was Vallow Daybell's fourth husband, was fatally shot by Vallow Daybell's brother, Alex Cox, in July 2019. Cox claimed self-defense at the time and was not charged. Cox died of natural causes months later.
Cox's account was later called into question and Vallow Daybell was charged in Vallow's death following other murders, including of her children, 16-year-old Tylee Ryan and 7-year-old Joshua "JJ" Vallow. Vallow Daybell is already serving life sentences in Idaho for those murders and conspiring to murder her then-boyfriend Chad Daybell's wife, Tammy.

The leaders of a sex-focused women's wellness company that promoted "orgasmic meditation" were found guilty Monday in what has been described as an abusive scheme to coerce their employees into performing traumatic and demeaning tasks with little or no pay, authorities said. A Brooklyn jury deliberated for less than two days before convicting Nicole Daedone, 57, and Rachel Cherwitz, 44, on federal forced labor charges, following a five-week trial.

Smuggler traveling from Thailand stopped with tarantulas, possums, lizards, authorities in India say
Indian customs officers made the latest "significant" seizure of endangered wildlife from a passenger arriving from Thailand, a government statement said: nearly 100 creatures including lizards, sunbirds and tree-climbing possums.

Some of the victims of the U.S. Capitol siege are angry about the Trump administration's public statements and response to this weekend's unrest in Los Angeles, accusing top officials and the president of hypocrisy. They point to the stark difference between the aggressive response of the president and his top aides against those who allegedly assaulted police in Los Angeles, compared to their staunch defense of those who admitted beating and gassing police on Jan. 6. The disparity risks inflaming the already heated controversy in California.