Video shows aftermath of ambush shooting of Baltimore officer as bystander says 'Don't call the police' to report the crime



A Baltimore police officer is clinging to life after being ambushed and shot, and disturbing video shows the immediate aftermath of the shooting when a bystander says not to call the police.

What are the details?

According to a Thursday report from the Baltimore Sun, 39-year-old Officer Keona Holley was sitting inside her patrol car on Thursday night when she was ambushed and shot.

One witness said he was inside his home when he heard a "loud crash" come from outside at around 2:00 a.m. local time.

The crash, according to the report, was Holley's vehicle, which accelerated after the attack, smashing through a nearby chain-link fence and rolling toward a nearby playground, where it eventually came to a stop.

Authorities said that officers found Holley inside the patrol car after she failed to respond to their radio requests.

Video shared to social media showed the moments following the attack and subsequent crash.

The man apparently filming the video can be heard saying, "Don't call the police, don't."

The man adds that police only harass people within the community.

A woman says, "We can't let him die."

Reporter Justin Fenton tweeted the video, captioning it, "Instagram video that appears to show immediate aftermath of officer being shot this morning in Curtis Bay: 'Don't call the police,' person shooting the video says[.] 'We can't let them die,' woman responds.'"

Content warning: rough language:

Instagram video that appears to show immediate aftermath of officer being shot this morning in Curtis Bay: \u201cDon\u2019t call the police,\u201d person shooting the video says\n\u201cWe can\u2019t let them die,\u201d woman respondspic.twitter.com/UnrjbzKBvO
— Justin Fenton (@Justin Fenton) 1639663673

'It should not be like this'

Baltimore Police Commissioner Michael Harrison said that investigators have located a vehicle believed to be involved in the shooting and are in the process of questioning persons of interest.

He has yet to release a motive but said that it appeared the officer was targeted for being a police officer.

Holley's sister, Lawanda Sykes, said that the officer is "a mother, a daughter, a sister, and a woman" who always dreamed of becoming a police officer.

“We gotta do better in this city,” Sykes said. “Baltimore, we are killing ourselves. It should not be like this.”

Holley said in 2020 that she decided to join the department in 2019 to help police-community relations in the embattled city.

“I feel like Baltimore city police officers have a bad name about themselves,” she said. “And we have to change that — and change it together.”

Update: The officer fighting for her life after being shot this morning is Keona Holley, a 39-year-old who joined the department two years ago to make a difference. @BusinessInsider interviewed her in the academy: https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/crime/bs-md-ci-cr-officer-shot-curtis-bay-20211216-3uokzv6xmje25cdxmy4mtvbtpq-story.html\u00a0\u2026pic.twitter.com/ytMhFSyXa1
— Justin Fenton (@Justin Fenton) 1639689746

(H/T: The Police Tribune)

'I want to sue them': Dave Portnoy unveils eyebrow-raising counterattack defending himself against 'sloppy' Business Insider 'hit piece'



Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy vehemently denied allegations recently published in Business Insider of him having sex with women that "turned violent and humiliating." Portnoy claimed that the Business Insider article is a "hit piece" that framed him as a "rapist," "sexual monster," and "deviant."

The article written by reporter Julia Black – which was eight months in the making and is behind the site's paywall – claimed that three women allegedly had sex with Portnoy which "turned into frightening and humiliating experiences that have taken a toll on their mental health." The women – who were not named – claimed to have sex at Portnoy's home in Nantucket. One woman claims she was "literally screaming in pain," and another said she became so depressed after the encounter that her mother notified the police.

Portnoy acknowledges having sex with the women, but passionately declares that all the encounters were consensual during the live press conference on Thursday afternoon. Portnoy shared alleged screen captures of text messages and social media postings that he claims exonerate him of the accusations of nonconsensual sexual encounters. "They're just sloppy," he said of Business Insider.

A 22-year-old woman we will refer to as "Olivia" told Business Insider that her friends were attempting to get Portnoy's attention by direct messaging him, but he "wasn't giving them the time of day." Olivia allegedly encouraged her 19-year-old sister "Allison" to contact Portnoy, who then "completely took the bait."

Portnoy and the young woman allegedly had sex, which purportedly included choking. Allison told the outlet that she felt "very preyed upon." Her memories of the experience are "fuzzy because of her emotional distress surrounding the event." Allison did not classify the situation as sexual assault, but was "deeply disturbed."

Portnoy released text messages that he claims are between him and the woman at the time of the incident. He initially declined her offer to meet up at the Cisco Brewery in Nantucket, according to the alleged messages. The next day, she allegedly asks him to have sex via text message, and he agrees.

According to screenshots of the alleged communication, the woman claimed that she was going to brag to her friends about the sexual encounter with Portnoy. The Barstool Sports founder claimed that he stopped speaking to the woman on Aug. 2.

The alleged victim – who was said to have depression – was reportedly hospitalized a few days after the incident.

Allison's mother said her daughter "basically couldn't talk the next day." The mother called Nantucket police to "pursue some sort of legal action against Portnoy." Her daughter was against contacting the authorities.

The mother filed a police report on Aug. 10, where the mother allegedly told law enforcement: "She heard David always asks girls if they are at least 18-years-old and willing to have sexual intercourse with him."

The mother claimed on the police report that her daughter has "no memory of going to David Portnoy's house."

The police noted that they told the mother, "We haven't had any complaints from any other 18-year-olds about David Portnoy."

Portnoy discussed further allegations detailed in the article from another woman named "Madison." Portnoy said the situation is a "he said/she said" ordeal. In a video posted last week, he claimed that the two had a "disagreement on life."

Now, after we hooked up we were hanging out more and it just became one of those situations where we just disagreed on just about everything from you know, is it raining or sunny out? It was oil and vinegar, just two people who did not see the world the same way and that is why she slept on the couch. I do believe, my recollection is she was still interested in hooking up and I was like this just isn't working. We don't get along. Flew back, I never talked to her again, I never knew she had any issue. It's the first I heard of it and quite frankly was stunned to read and hear about it. I'm obviously not going to say her name. I don't want her harassed. If what she's telling that she didn't enjoy the experience is true, I had no idea and that's horrible and I never want to feel that way but if there was a hidden camera in that room and it wasn't a he said/she said and someone saw the interaction there would be absolutely nothing there. I promise you.

The woman seems to have despised former President Donald Trump, according to certain social media posts. The Barstool Sports founder claims that they had sex three days before Portnoy's interview with Trump, which he surmises may have set her off.

In the hour-long "emergency press conference" video, Portnoy said that he does not want to identify the women who made the allegations against him.

Portnoy noted that Business Insider only spoke with one woman who gave her real name. Portnoy admits that he messaged the woman – Ava Louise – in 2017.

Louise told Business Insider that she willingly messaged him back, "I probably would have let Dave Portnoy do whatever the hell he wanted to me."

Louise was featured in a different Business Insider article from 2020 titled: "The influencer who licked a toilet seat for the 'coronavirus challenge' is finding TikTok fame for music she recorded while concussed."

Louise appeared on the "Dr. Phil" TV show in 2020, where she talked about "clout chasing."

[Other influencers] make their career off clout chasing. They make their career off scandal. When there's a problem in their lives, they put it on the internet because they know people will eat that up. And why can't I?" she asked. "All of a sudden I'm the clout chaser because I have 140,000 followers. But if I had 2 million, would I be a clout chaser, or would I just be another influencer who got herself in some drama?

Portnoy highlighted Business Insider correspondents targeted companies that advertise with Barstool Sports Business, asking if they will continue to advertise with the massively popular sports blog following the accusations against the site's founder.

And just to be clear Patrick sent this to everybody and is going to publish who says and who goes. It\u2019s scare tactics. Write a malicious story with fake facts. Put behind paywall. Write more stories. Threaten advertisers. Business Insider 101. https://twitter.com/stoolpresidente/status/1456971145954144256\u00a0\u2026pic.twitter.com/DzkBmb5arT

— Dave Portnoy (@stoolpresidente) 1636204333

"Not one person from Business Insider has had the guts, the balls, whatever you want to call it, to speak to me," he asserted. "They won't talk. They accused me of rape and ran away."

When talking about the possibility of suing Business Insider, Portnoy said he wants his "pound of flesh."

"Yeah, I want to sue them," Portnoy said, but added that his lawyers give the case little to no chance of being successful.

Lawyers told him that a "famous person cannot win this case."

"I'm still debating doing this, just to drag them through it," he said. "I still may do it just to see them eye-to-eye and be in that courtroom, and this is way more important than money."

"If I lose, I pay their legal fees," he revealed. "If they think I'm done because of that, they don't know the first thing about me."

Portnoy says Business Insider CEO Henry Blodget is now his "arch-enemy."

Meet the CEO of Business Insiderhttps://twitter.com/mdsmaldon/status/1456390155661717504\u00a0\u2026

— Dave Portnoy (@stoolpresidente) 1636065637

Portnoy said, "This is just the beginning."

"I got accused of rape, it's arguably the most horrific thing you can be accused of with zero point zero evidence, and they f***ing knew it," Portnoy concluded.

Following the video conference on the allegations, Portnoy urged people to cancel Business Insider and tweeted, "Will @BusinessInsider include any of the facts I just dropped on their head?"

(CAUTION: Explicit language)

Dave Portnoy Exposes Business Insider Hit Piece www.youtube.com

Twitter suspends Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy after he publishes email exchange with Insider editor



Twitter suspended Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy from its platform after he published an email exchange with an Insider editor. The apparent basis of the suspension was that the screenshot contained the email address of the editor in question. Meanwhile, the editor was not suspended by Twitter, even though he shared Portnoy's email address in a tweet he later deleted.

Portnoy is currently embroiled in a scandal involving several sexual assault allegations and has been publicly railing against the outlet since it published an early November exposé featuring the accounts of several women who said they were subjected to "violent," "painful," and "humiliating" sexual experiences with Portnoy.

What are the details?

On Tuesday, Portnoy announced via an Instagram Story that Twitter suspended him for sharing emails with Insider editor in chief Nicholas Carlson.

The message, according to Portnoy, showed a Barstool Sports employee requesting that Carlson appear on Portnoy's podcast to discuss the story, but Carlson declined and said that the Insider report spoke for itself.

He captioned the screenshot, "Nothing like 'journalists' who write slanderous hit pieces, put it behind a paywall, use it as marketing to make money and then refuse to defend their work. There is clear evidence that refutes their 'reporting' that @businessinsider refuses to acknowledge. Meanwhile I'm an open book."

At least two women told the outlet that Portnoy violently choked them during sex, filmed them without their consent, and spit into their mouths, among other lurid behaviors. A third woman said that she was suicidal following her sexual experience with the Barstool Sports founder.

While the sex was said to be initially consensual, the women told the outlet that the encounters quickly turned violent.

Portnoy has denied all allegations, and in a statement on the matter, his attorney told Insider that a variety of the accusations contained in the report "embody half-truths, are highly misleading, lack appropriate context, and appear to have been provided to you by individuals whose motivations and trustworthiness should at least have been fully vetted."