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California millionaire trampled to death by elephants while on African hunting expedition
A California vineyard owner has died after being crushed by elephants while on a hunting expedition in Africa.
Ernie Dosio, 75, was hunting yellow-backed duikers in Gabon when the deadly April 17 incident occurred.
Dosio, who kept an extensive collection of animal heads in his home, was trampled to death when he and his guide stumbled into five female elephants with a calf in the Lope-Okanda rainforest, the Daily Mail reported.
Collect Africa, the Nigerian-based safari operator, confirmed Dosio’s death to the publication. The California-Hawaii Elks Association also confirmed Dosio’s death on Facebook.
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“It is with a most heavy heart and sadness that I am reporting the passing of Ernie Dosio earlier this week,” Tommy Whitman, secretary of Lodi Lodge 1900 and Central District Scouting chairman, wrote in a statement. “May all of our thoughts and prayers go out to his family and loved ones. He will be sorely missed.”
Fox News Digital has reached out to the U.S. Embassy in Gabon and the safari company.
An unnamed hunter in Cape Town who knew Dosio told the news outlet that Dosio had been “hunting since he could hold a rifle and had many trophies from Africa and the U.S.”
“Although many disagree with big-game hunting, all of Ernie’s hunts were strictly licensed and above board and were registered as conservation culls to manage animal numbers,” he said. “Ernie had booked a hunt for dwarf forest buffalo and duikers — in particular, the yellow-backed duiker — and, under strict licensing laws, he could not take along his own guns.”
The hunting company would supply a shotgun and cartridges for the duiker hunt, he said.
The hunter added he believes Dosio and his guide surprised the elephants, who attacked because they felt threatened.
“I would rather not go into detail, but it is safe to assume it would have been quick,” he said. “Ernie was a very well-known and popular hunter in the U.S. and in Africa, and a very keen conservationist; he did a hell of a lot of charity work and was a really good guy. What happened has been deeply felt by many on both sides of the Atlantic.”
Dosio’s body is being repatriated to America with assistance from the U.S. Embassy.
Dosio owned Pacific AgriLands Inc., a Modesto, California, vineyard land management company with its own 12,000-acre vineyard, according to Lodi News.
Central Africa is home to roughly endangered 95,000 forest elephants, with the largest numbers being found in Gabon, according to the World Wildlife Fund.
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Man confesses to dismembering father, stuffing remains in suitcases as DNA finally solves cold case: police
New DNA technology has cracked yet another cold case surrounding a man’s dismembered body parts being found inside two suitcases in Ohio nearly three decades ago, police said.
Larry Drotleff, 81, of Euclid, confessed to the 27-year-old dismemberment of his father, Lawrence A. Drotleff, who would have been 93 at the time his remains were found, Tuscarawas County Sheriff Orvis Campbell said in a news release.
The case began in February 1998, when authorities received a complaint regarding a suitcase found by a group of children on Winkler Hill Road in Dover Township containing unidentified male body parts – including a pelvis and part of one leg.
One week later, a second suitcase containing a torso was found along Boltz Orchard Road in Jefferson Township, authorities said.
Despite the recovery of a body, authorities were unable to determine the identity of the victim or a potential suspect.
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“While DNA was collected from the remains in both suitcases, neither fingerprints from the suitcases themselves nor the DNA from the body parts ever led to the identification of the remains or a suspect,” Campbell said. “All leads were run out and leads that did come in over the years were investigated with no progress on identifying the victim or a suspect.”
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The case ultimately ran cold until investigators decided to take another look in February 2023, with DNA testing pointing to Larry Drotleff as a family member of the deceased, Lawrence A. Drotleff, police said.
Authorities then learned Larry Drotleff had previously been caught collecting retirement and social security funds from his father, according to police. When questioned by social security investigators at the time of the alleged thefts, Larry Drotleff offered the explanation that his father had moved away.
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In January 2024, Larry Drotleff told investigators he was living with his father when he came home from work and found him deceased, according to authorities. He cooperated with the investigation by providing his own DNA for investigators to confirm his father’s identity.
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“Larry indicated that he then cut up his father’s body with a manual hand saw and disposed of some body parts in the suitcases and others by just putting them in bags in a dumpster near his workplace,” Campbell said.
Although the statute of limitations has passed on abuse of a corpse charges, Larry Drotleff is facing two federal counts of stealing his father’s Social Security and pension funding, totalling over $250,000.
“While the case did not prove to be a murder, it should be noted that the inhumane treatment of the Corpse was conduct so inexcusable that this case remained a priority for the Tuscarawas County Sheriff’s Office,” Campbell said. “It remains difficult to comprehend that the greed of theft could cause someone to treat their father’s body in this manner.”
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LeAnn Rimes poses in red bikini in Cabo, shares emotional message about ‘heart-wrenching’ family issues
LeAnn Rimes is posing in a tiny red bikini as she celebrates her wedding anniversary that is filled with “very tense, heart-wrenching things happening at home with family.”
On Thursday, Rimes took to Instagram to share photos with Eddie Cibrian for their 15th wedding anniversary in Cabo, revealing family struggles.
“we got to step away for 3 days amidst work and some very tense, heart wrenching [sic] things happening at home with family,” Rimes’ caption began.
“it’s been a different anniversary, one filled with tears and worry, but in between, there were moments of laughter and deep gratitude for this love of ours. day by day, we walk hand in hand through the rollercoaster of life… and god, i’m so grateful that it’s with each other.
“we’ve been through so much in our 15 years as husband and wife,” she continued. “we know how to ride the waves 🌊, hold each other in times of need, mend what needs mending. i’m so proud of what we have created together. 15 years is just the beginning.”
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Rimes included photos with Cibrian on the beach and also thanked the Las Ventanas Al Paraíso romance director for making their anniversary “so special.”
Amid the very heavy message, Rimes shared a photo of herself in a red bikini, holding a drink in a coconut. “till next time, cabo…” she wrote alongside the image.
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Cibrian and Rimes first met while filming the TV movie “Northern Lights” in 2008. Their relationship began controversially while both were still married to other people, leading to highly publicized divorces before they eventually married in 2011.
In February, Rimes spoke to E! News about her marriage to Cibrian ahead of their anniversary.
“We’ve evolved so much. We’ve been through so much together. Now our boys, my stepsons are 22 and 18. They’re grown boys. And to help raise his sons — we have a very calm life, which is wonderful,” she began. “And it didn’t start out that way at all, but now, we’ve really grown into — we just love each other. We love being around each other. We laugh a lot. He’s just a good guy, he really is.”
“So, 15 years is wild to think about that it’s been that long. But so far, so good,” Rimes concluded.
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Transgender lawmaker ‘doesn’t know what a woman is,’ White House says after dig at Trump firings
The White House brushed aside remarks made by Rep. Sarah McBride, D-Del., to a reporter alleging that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard would be the next Cabinet official to leave the administration because President Donald Trump “only fires women.”
“Rep. McBride doesn’t know what a woman is,” White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said of McBride, a biological male who identifies as a woman.
McBride speculated to MeidasTouch reporter Pablo Manríquez that Tulsi Gabbard will be the next Cabinet member on President Donald Trump’s chopping block. In separate interviews, Manríquez asked McBride and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., who they believed would be next to be fired. Both said it would not be a man.
The remarks come amid a shake-up in the Trump administration, as Trump announced the dismissal of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Attorney General Pam Bondi within a span of four weeks. On Monday, Department of Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer resigned amid allegations of misconduct towards staffers.
“All of them deserve to be fired,” McBride quipped. “I’m supporting impeachment of Pete Hegseth, because obviously right now, we are engaged in a reckless war of choice that he was a primary driver of.”
“But we know this president,” McBride said. “He only fires women, so my guess is Tulsi Gabbard.”
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., echoed McBride’s sentiment when asked the same question by Manríquez.
“Is he out of women?” Ocasio-Cortez asked. “Because that seems to be his pattern right now.”
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She went on to say that Trump “seems to only have the capability to fire female secretaries.”
In response to a follow-up question about the “clownish behavior” of War Secretary Pete Hegseth and FBI Director Kash Patel, Ocasio-Cortez claimed that what Patel has done is “a thousand times worse” than what other officials have done.
Neither Manríquez nor Ocasio-Cortez gave specific examples of misconduct by either man. Patel has filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic over reported allegations that he is a heavy drinker and that it affects his work. Meanwhile, Hegseth faced sexual assault and drinking allegations during his confirmation hearings, which he denied, and his tenure at the War Department was rocked by two separate Signal chat leaks in which information about military airstrikes were inadvertently shared with a journalist.
While the White House has stood by Hegseth, Democratic lawmakers have demanded his resignation and criticized his handling of the war with Iran.
“If you’re a man in the Trump administration, it seems that they reward misconduct,” Ocasio-Cortez said.
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