Masked male caught on video allegedly trying to kidnap 6-year-old boy while victim holds his father's hand on sidewalk



A masked male was caught on video allegedly trying to kidnap a 6-year-old boy while the victim was holding his father's hand on a sidewalk in Brooklyn over the weekend.

WABC-TV reported that the 28-year-old male was seen on surveillance videos yanking the boy so hard while he held on to his father's hand that the victim's feet came off the ground — but the the dad and son continued to hold hands tight.

'I don't think it was a hate crime, but it was scary.'

The father is seen on the clip quickly turning around and shoving the culprit, and the incident appears to end at that point.

You can view a video report here about the incident, which includes a pair of surveillance clips showing the suspect grabbing the child.

The incident occurred in front of multiple cameras on a block of Kingston Avenue in Crown Heights around 3:30 p.m. Saturday while the father and son were on their way to a Sabbath gathering, WABC said.

Incredibly, the boy's mother told the station that the suspect is actually their neighbor.

What's more, the couple noted to WABC that they've seen the suspect before and said he's never said or done anything unusual.

"He'd always hold the door, he always was nice," the mother added to the station.

The mother also told WABC she's heard from neighbors that something else was going on with the suspect, and he'd had a bad day.

She added to the station that while members of the Jewish community in the neighborhood already are on edge with a citywide increase in anti-Semitic incidents since October 7 of last year, the mother doesn't believe it was a hate crime.

"I don't think it was a hate crime, but it was scary," she told WABC. "It was like a scary incident. When you live in New York, you don't expect someone to attack a six-year-old and take him away from his parents."

The mother noted to the station that she's proud of her husband and son for the way they held on to each other and didn't let go.

She added to WABC that her boy will be getting therapy, and her family is hoping justice is served in court.

The station said Stephen Sowe is charged with attempted kidnapping, harassment, and endangering the welfare of a child.

Anything else?

In mid-October, a male was charged with a hate crime after he allegedly hollered, “I’m gonna kill you f***ing Jews!" during Yom Kippur in a predominantly Jewish neighborhood in Brooklyn. Police said Muhammad Hashim's alleged outburst was directed at a 43-year-old man in Borough Park, according to the New York Post.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Motorist with long criminal history allegedly tries to run over a father and son. But Dad has a gun.



A motorist with a long criminal history allegedly tried to run over a father and son Saturday in Florida — but authorities said the father fatally shot the motorist.

Marcus Blicker, 47, followed two vehicles driven by a neighbor’s son and his friend and aggressively swerved toward them in traffic, deputies from the Volusia County Sheriff's Office told the Daytona Beach News-Journal.

Blicker was found dead in the driver’s seat of his pickup.

The neighbor's son called his father and told him he was being followed, the News-Journal said.

When the son and his friend got to the father's home on Jackson Lane in Port Orange, deputies told the paper that Blicker arrived there as well and started yelling and threatening the son and his friend. Port Orange is about 15 minutes south of Daytona Beach.

The homeowner fired warning shots, asking Blicker to leave, the News-Journal reported.

However, the paper said Blicker around 7:40 p.m. tried to ram them with his truck and was shot.

When deputies arrived at the scene, Blicker was found dead in the driver’s seat of his pickup, the sheriff's office told the News-Journal.

The incident was captured on video and audio recordings that support the accounts of the shooter and witnesses, deputies told the paper.

No criminal charges have been filed against the homeowner who shot Blicker, the News-Journal reported. The sheriff's office added to the paper that the shooting remains under investigation.

The News-Journal also noted that a Rottweiler in Blicker's truck was injured during the shooting, after which Volusia County Animal Services responded and took the dog for veterinary care. The dog is expected to recover, the paper said.

The News-Journal, citing court records, said Blicker has a long criminal history. He was arrested in 2020 for aggravated stalking, for which he served 12 months' probation, the paper said, adding that in 2012 he was sentenced to 12 months' probation for battery after punching a woman in the cheek at the Flagler Tavern in New Smyrna Beach.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Grief-stricken father launches personal crusade to help FBI find suspects whose sextortion plot led to son's suicide



When a young man committed suicide last year after falling victim to a financially motivated sextortion plot, his grief-stricken father went on a crusade to help the FBI track down the scamming suspects on another continent.

The FBI defines financially motivated sextortion as: "When predators pose as someone else online to coerce victims into taking and sending sexually explicit photos and videos — and then immediately demand payment or threaten to release the photo to the victim’s family and friends."

Within days of his son's suicide, the father discovered "suspicious banking transactions" to an unknown phone number from his son's Zelle account.

In 2023, a young Pennsylvania man fell victim to a financially motivated sextortion scheme. He allegedly believed he had met a girl online on Instagram, Google, and Snapchat. He reportedly sent the girl sexually explicit images of himself, according to USA Today.

But two men from Nigeria purportedly posed as a girl to financially extort the young man.

The Nigerian men in a text message reportedly threatened to release the compromising material and "ruin" the victim's "career" if he did not make a $1,000 blackmail payment to them, according to court documents.

"The extortion scheme that targeted [the victim] is consistent with a trend of foreign-based organized groups targeting victims in the United States in various sextortion schemes," FBI Special Agent Jennifer Zenszer wrote.

The victim, identified only as J.S. in court documents, reportedly told the suspects in a text message, "I don't even think I have enough for it."

Three minutes after sending that message in January 2023, J.S. died by suicide, federal officials said.

Following his son's tragic death, the father was determined to locate the suspects who allegedly drove his son to take his own life.

Within days of his son's suicide, the father discovered "suspicious banking transactions" to an unknown phone number from his son's Zelle account. The father forwarded the information to the FBI — which used the phone number to track down an email address with the name "Antonia Diaz." The phone number was linked to several other email addresses using different variations of the name "Antonia Diaz," according to Fox News.

Court documents say FBI agents twice issued subpoenas to Google and connected the email addresses to a phone number in Nigeria.

In March 2023, the father logged into his son's Snapchat account and saw that J.S. had been receiving messages from a user under the name of "Alice." The father messaged the user, who then demanded money.

A Pennsylvania district court judge subpoenaed Snapchat for information regarding the "Alice" account. Authorities said the Snapchat account was linked to another phone number based in Nigeria.

"J.S.’s father later reviewed J.S.’s Apple iPhone, and observed that notifications of emails from ALICEDAVE660@GMAIL.COM appeared repeatedly," court documents said. "J.S.’s father emailed that address using his own email account, identifying himself as J.S.’s father and requesting a phone call. ALICEDAVE660@GMAIL.COM refused to speak with J.S.’s father by phone, and instead directed via iMessage that J.S. ‘reply me if he doesn’t want trouble.’"

The father then sent screenshots of the communication from the emails from "Alice" to law enforcement.

Days later, an undercover FBI agent sent a friend request to "Alice" on Snapchat. The agent posed as a friend of J.S., and the alleged scammer attempted another blackmail scheme but provided bank account usernames, believing the person would send more money.

Law enforcement named two suspects — both from Nigeria — in the sextortion scheme: Imoleayo Samuel Aina, 26, and Samuel Olasunkanmi Abiodun, 24.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania announced that Aina had been charged with cyberstalking, interstate threat to injure reputation, and receiving proceeds of extortion.

Aina and Abiodun are both charged with wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy.

If convicted of all the charges against them, Aina faces a maximum possible sentence of life in prison, and Abiodun faces a maximum possible imprisonment sentence of 40 years.

The suspects were arrested in Nigeria, and the FBI took custody of them on July 31.

On Aug. 2, Aina and Abiodun appeared in federal magistrate court in Philadelphia before U.S. Magistrate Elizabeth T. Hey.

According to the FBI, financially motivated sextortion victims are typically males between the ages of 14 and 17, and the schemes can lead to victim suicide.

From October 2021 to March 2023, the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations received more than 13,000 reports of online financial sextortion of minors. The sextortion schemes involved at least 12,600 victims — mostly boys — and led to at least 20 suicides.

There was a 20% spike in reports of financially motivated sextortion in the six-month period from October 2022 to March 2023 compared to the same time period the previous year.

The FBI noted that financially motivated sextortion criminals usually are located outside the United States and known to operate out of West African countries such as Nigeria and Ivory Coast or Southeast Asian countries such as the Philippines.

Blaze News previously reported about a 16-year-old Mississippi boy who committed suicide after getting entangled in a sextortion plot in 2023.

In 2022, a 17-year-old Michigan boy committed suicide after falling victim to a sextortion scheme that three Nigerian men orchestrated.

South Carolina state lawmaker Rep. Brandon Guffey (R) lost his 17-year-old son, Gavin Guffey, to a suicide in 2022 due to a sextortion scheme.

"The most important thing for [victims] to realize is to remember that they are a victim of a crime," Guffey told Fox News. "They are not the cause of this happening. They are not in trouble because they sent an image. And then I always recommend to not delete the messages. Instead, screenshot them and go offline. Disconnect your account because they will continue to harass you."

Special Agent in Charge Douglas DePodesta of the FBI Memphis Field Office said, "The FBI has seen a horrific increase in reports of financial sextortion schemes. Protecting children is one of the highest priorities of the FBI. We need parents and caregivers to work with us to prevent this crime before it happens and help children come forward if it does."

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Coach hits wrestler on mat, says he was protecting son — the other wrestler — from getting choked. Now coach banned for life.



Authorities handed down a lifetime ban to an Idaho high school wrestling coach for hitting an opposing wrestler during a match last weekend, the Idaho Statesman reported.

But the circumstances are a bit unusual given that the coach's son was the other wrestler in the match, and the coach — Russell Brunson— said he was trying to protect his son from getting choked.

What are the details?

The Statesman said video of the incident shows Brunson — an assistant coach for Rocky Mountain High School — getting on the mat and hitting a freshman from Nyssa, Oregon, at least three times during the Jan. 20 Skyview Duals match in Nampa, Idaho.

Officials had to stop the match to get Brunson off the mat, the paper said.

Niki Scheppers, spokesperson for Idaho's West Ada School District, told the Statesman that Brunson wasn't ejected from the tournament.

'What would you if your kid was getting choked out?'

Brunson penned a Jan. 22 letter to the District Three Board of Control, the local arm of the Idaho High School Activities Association, the Statesman said.

Brunson said he thought his son was put into an illegal choke hold and feared he was about to pass out, the paper noted.

“As a coach, the normal reaction would be to yell and point it out to the ref, but my reaction as a dad took it one step too far,” Brunson wrote, according to the Statesman. “What would you do if your kid was getting choked out, just 2 feet in front of your face? If I had more time, I probably could have made a better decision. But it all happened, I panicked, and it was over in less than 3 seconds.”

Scheppers told the paper that Brunson resigned Jan. 21 from his volunteer coaching position, and the board of control on Jan. 23 banned him from coaching any Idaho high school sport or activity for life. The board also barred Brunson from attending any state high school sporting event for the rest of this school year and the 2024-25 year, the Statesman reported.

"The board felt the actions of coach Brunson were egregious and unacceptable,” board president Craig Woods wrote in a letter Jan. 23 to Rocky Mountain, the paper said. “There is no place for this type of behavior in high school athletics, and it will not be tolerated.”

Scheppers added to the Statesman that Brunson plans to appeal the ban on attending events. The paper said Brunson's son will finish his senior season next month.

The Statesman said Brunson declined an interview request Jan. 24 but provided the paper with a statement.

"There is no excuse for my actions on January 20th,” he wrote in a text message, according to the Statesman. “I should not have stepped onto the mat and tried to break up the wrestling match. I saw my child in a potentially dangerous position and reacted rashly. I have reached out to the [Nyssa wrestler’s] family directly and sincerely apologized for my inappropriate reaction.”

Criminal charges?

The paper added that the Nyssa School District in Oregon has not ruled out seeking criminal charges.

“We are collaborating with the family, athletic associations, school district officials and, if necessary, law enforcement to investigate this incident,” Nyssa Athletic Director Joshua De Anda wrote in an email to the Statesman. “Both Nyssa High School and Nyssa School District are committed to ensuring the safety and well-being of our students.”

The West Ada School District also is investigating, Scheppers added to the paper. Nampa police opened an investigation as well, Big Country News reported.

Brunson apologized in his letter to the board and wrote that his actions weren't premeditated, the Statesman said.

“My initial reaction (as you’ll see from the video) was correct,” Brunson wrote, according to the paper. “I yelled that he was getting choked and tried to show the ref. But in the last 2 seconds, I was wrong. I don’t know what happened. I was scared, and my instinct was to push the other kid off of him so the choking would stop and he could breathe. If I could go back and replay those 2 seconds of my life, I would. But unfortunately, it’s too late.”

Anything else?

The Statesman at the bottom of its story embedded Brunson's letter to the board, and in that letter was a link to a video of the incident Brunson said is from his phone "so you can see the angle and my point of view during the incident."

The web address in the letter is www.RussellBrunson.com/thevideo. The main part of the internet address — minus the "thevideo" extension — goes to Brunson's marketing and sales website. Big Country News characterized Brunson as "a social media influencer and millionaire."

However, the complete address — www.RussellBrunson.com/thevideo — goes to a Facebook post by marketer Marley Jaxx that advocates for Brunson and includes the secondary-angle video Brunson mentions in his letter to the board.

While the YouTube video of the incident recorded from a high angle appears to show Brunson throwing his right hand three times at the opposing wrestler, the below clip from the floor angle shows Brunson slapping the wrestler once with an open right hand and then throwing his right hand a second time.

Image source: Facebook video screenshot via Marley Jaxx

However, the clip ends right in the middle of the second thrown hand — whether or not it comes in contact with the wrestler isn't clear.

Image source: Facebook video screenshot via Marley Jaxx

A third thrown hand apparently visible in the YouTube video isn't included in the floor-angle clip.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

'My dad's a bull, like old-school men. They don't make them like they used to': Father, 68, and son stabbed while fighting thugs who attacked, robbed woman



A 68-year-old man and his son were stabbed while intervening in an attack and robbery on a woman in front of their New York City pizzeria over the weekend — and not only did they hold down two of the attackers until police arrived, but the father and son walked themselves to a hospital afterward, WABC-TV reported.

What are the details?

Police told the station a 61-year-old woman was pushing a grocery cart outside Louie's Pizzeria & Restaurant in the Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens just before 9 p.m. Saturday.

Image source: WABC-TV video screenshot

WABC said the Korean woman didn't want to appear on camera but told the station she remembers being pushed from behind, knocked to the ground, having her bag stolen, and then being stabbed.

Louie Suljovic — a 38-year-old military veteran — told the station from his hospital bed that he was working behind the counter at Louie's with his father, Charlie, when the attack took place.

"My father noticed it first, that the woman was attacked, and she was on the floor, and my understanding was he heard screaming," Suljovic told WABC. "So he went after them and yelled my name. Once I heard my name, we both chased them down the block."

Image source: WABC-TV video screenshot

Louie Suljovic was stabbed while fighting the attackers, but his dad was stabbed in the back nine times, the station said, adding that they both suffered collapsed lungs.

"Trying to take a breath, but it's hard to take a real breath, and you feel like a bubbling inside," Louie Suljovic told WABC before heaping praise on his father.

"My dad's a bull, like old-school men," he told the station. "They don't make them like they used to."

Image source: WABC-TV video screenshot

The Suljovics held down two of the three suspects until police arrived, WABC said, and then the father and son walked themselves to the emergency room at Elmhurst Hospital across the street.

What happened to the woman?

Louie Suljovic said the woman suffered a long gash and was losing a lot of blood, the station reported, adding that she doesn't know what her assailants said to her due to a language barrier.

What happened to the suspects?

Robert Whack, 30, is facing charges of second-degree attempted murder, assault, robbery, criminal possession of a weapon, and possession of a controlled substance, Fox News said.

Whack told officers that after the woman began screaming, "Honestly I didn't know what to do, so I just stabbed him [sic]," the cable network said, citing the criminal complaint.

Police also found 39 heroin packets and a bloody knife on Whack, Fox News said, adding that a judge set his bail at $250,000 or a $500,000 bond; he's due back in court April 1.

The second suspect, 18-year-old Supreme Gooding, is awaiting arraignment, Fox News said, citing a spokesperson for the Queens district attorney's office. But WABC said Gooding is charged with robbery, assault, and criminal possession of a weapon.

The third assailant remains at large, WABC said.

'The very best New York has to offer'

Police tweeted that during the pandemic, Louie's remained open and donated meals to Elmhurst Hospital staff — where they're recovering — and first responders.

"He and his father are among the very best New York has to offer," police added in the tweet. "We thank them for their bravery and wish them a speedy recovery."

#Elmhurst heroes:\nLocal Military veteran and pizzeria owner Louie was working behind the counter at Louie\u2019s pizza when he and his father witnessed an elderly woman being robbed outside. Without hesitation, they jumped into action to help and were stabbed in the process. (1/3)pic.twitter.com/CB42vjTsVH
— NYPD 110th Precinct (@NYPD 110th Precinct) 1648475275

A GoFundMe page was created for the Suljovics' medical expenses; nearly $140,000 has been raised as of Wednesday morning.

"People who know us in the area know our personality and what we're willing to sacrifice for everybody in our area," Louie Suljovic told WABC, adding that while they don't know if their injuries will have long-lasting effects, they'll take a few weeks off to recover and then reopen the pizzeria.