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07/07/2026

🚨 JULY 6 UPDATE: Lesli Lambeth Bryant, 37, a former Orange High School counselor in Hillsborough, North Carolina, has been charged after authorities said allegations of misconduct involved multiple students.

The Orange County Sheriff’s Office said school administrators notified a school resource officer about allegations involving Bryant. Deputies opened an investigation, and Bryant later turned herself in on July 2 after warrants were issued.

Bryant is charged with two counts of indecent liberties with students and one count of second-degree sexual exploitation of a minor.

Court records say the alleged victims were students at Orange High School, where Bryant worked as a counselor. The warrant says Bryant communicated with two students on Snapchat, including sending n**e photos and videos with sexual content as recently as April.

Chapelboro reported the indecent-liberties allegations allegedly happened in November 2025 and involved at least two students. The sexual-exploitation charge stems from allegedly soliciting an inappropriate photo from one student.

Orange County Schools said Bryant was placed on paid suspension after the district learned of the allegations. She resigned from her counselor position on June 12. Chapelboro reported Bryant had worked at Orange High for two school years, starting in August 2024.

Bryant is married with three children. She appeared in court after turning herself in, received a $50,000 secured bond, was ordered to have no contact with two named witnesses, and cannot go on Orange County Schools property. Her next court date is July 20.

She is charged, not convicted.

A school counselor is supposed to be one of the safe adults. The person students can go to when something feels wrong. And now authorities say that same trusted role is tied to allegations involving Snapchat, sexual content, and students.

A title does not make someone safe. Not counselor. Not teacher. Not coach. Not pastor. Not family friend. Access to children should always come with boundaries, supervision, and accountability.

Parents, talk to your kids about adults messaging them outside school apps. Check Snapchat, deleted chats, hidden accounts, camera rolls, saved folders, and adults who act too friendly online. No school employee needs secret messages, sexual jokes, private photos, gifts, rides, or “don’t tell anyone” conversations with a student.

And if your child says a trusted adult made them uncomfortable, listen the first time. Save the messages. Screenshot usernames. Document dates. Report fast.

The Orange County Sheriff’s Office said the investigation is active and ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to contact Investigator C. Tapp at 919-245-2964.

SOURCES: Orange County Sheriff’s Office, WRAL, Chapelboro, ABC11, The News & Observer

07/07/2026

🚨 JULY 6 UPDATE: Police in Gilbert, Arizona have recommended felony child-abuse charges against the parents of 18-month-old Vincent Lorenzo Fiordilino after he nearly drowned in a backyard pool, was declared dead at a hospital, and was later found alive in the morgue.

The incident happened Feb. 8 during a Super Bowl party at the family’s home in Gilbert. According to police records reported by AZ Family, Vincent was pulled from the backyard pool around 5:30 p.m. after floating face down for about 10 to 15 minutes.

Police said both parents admitted to smoking ma*****na during the party and not watching Vincent closely. Investigators said his fall into the pool may have gone unseen because both parents’ state of mind may have been impaired by ma*****na and/or other mind-altering substances.

First responders rushed Vincent to Dignity Health Mercy Gilbert Medical Center. Reports say nurses, officers, and Vincent’s parents raised concerns that he still showed signs of life, including a pulse and gasping. A doctor still declared him dead that evening, and Vincent was moved to the hospital morgue.

Just before midnight, medical examiner staff arrived to transport the body and found Vincent was still breathing. He was then airlifted to Phoenix Children’s Hospital.

Police said the doctor who declared Vincent dead is not facing criminal charges. Dignity Health said the hospital completed a review and made changes to strengthen care.

The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office is now reviewing Gilbert police’s recommendation for felony child-abuse charges against Vincent’s parents. No charges have been filed as of the latest reports.

This is the part that should make every parent stop cold: a party full of adults does not mean a child is being watched. A pool does not forgive one missed minute. And being high while responsible for a toddler near water can turn a normal day into a nightmare.

Pool safety is child safety. One sober adult should be the water watcher. No phone. No smoking. No drinking. No “I thought someone else had him.” Toddlers move fast, drown silently, and disappear in seconds.

Lock pool gates. Use door alarms. Learn CPR. Keep toddlers within arm’s reach. And if there is a pool nearby, supervision cannot be casual. It has to be constant.

A GoFundMe titled “Support Miracle Baby Vincent’s Recovery” was created by Yaleen Perez on behalf of Alexus Fiordilino to help with Vincent’s ICU bills, airlift, long-term therapy, and ongoing medical care.
GOFUNDME LINK: https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-miracle-baby-vincents-recovery

SOURCES: AZ Family, Law&Crime, PEOPLE, Fox News, GoFundMe

07/06/2026

🚨 JULY 6 UPDATE: Hunter R. Lawrence, 25, of Auburn, New York, has been arrested after New York State Police said he allegedly had multiple sexual encounters with a victim under 17 over an extended period of time.

Lawrence was employed as a deputy with the Cayuga County Sheriff’s Office. Local reports say he had worked for the agency since June 16, 2023, and was assigned to the Road Patrol Division.

State Police said the alleged incidents happened while the victim was at different ages, which led to multiple charges under New York law.

Lawrence has been charged with two counts of r**e in the second degree, two counts of r**e in the third degree, and one count of endangering the welfare of a child.

State Police said there are no allegations that the alleged conduct happened while Lawrence was on duty. He was processed at the State Police barracks in Homer and taken to the Cortland County Jail for centralized arraignment.

After the arrest, Cayuga County Sheriff Brian Schenck said Lawrence was placed on paid administrative leave, relieved of all law enforcement duties, and stripped of his authority to carry a department-issued firearm or exercise police powers while the criminal case and internal investigation continue.

He is charged, not convicted.

This is the part people cannot ignore: he wore a badge. He worked in law enforcement. And State Police say he is now facing multiple r**e charges involving a minor.

A badge does not make someone safe. A uniform does not erase red flags. No police job, school job, church role, coaching position, family name, or “good reputation” should stop hard questions when a child may be at risk.

No adult needs secret access to a child. No hidden messages. No private meetups. No secret rides. No gifts with strings attached. No “don’t tell anyone.”

Parents, talk early. Check who your child is messaging. Watch for sudden secrecy, fear, mood changes, older “friends,” deleted chats, private gifts, secret rides, or someone making your child feel special in a private way.

If a child speaks up, listen the first time. Save messages. Document dates. Report fast.

SOURCES: New York State Police, Cayuga County Sheriff’s Office statement reported by Finger Lakes Daily News, Spectrum News, News10NBC

07/06/2026

🚨JULY 6 UPDATE: Daniel Jeffrey Moist, 38, of Nazareth Township, Pennsylvania, has been charged after police say his 14-month-old daughter died in a hot SUV after he failed to drop her off at daycare.

The case happened on June 11 in Northampton County. Investigators said Moist left home that morning with his 7-year-old daughter and his 14-month-old daughter. He dropped the older child off at sports camp around 9 a.m., then was supposed to take the baby to daycare.

Moist drove past the daycare, stopped at a gas station for drinks, and went to work in Lower Nazareth instead. Investigators said he arrived at work around 9:50 a.m., sat in the vehicle for about 10 minutes, then went inside.

Around 2:30 p.m., investigators said Moist went back to the SUV for 10 to 15 minutes, then returned to work again.

Shortly after 4 p.m., Moist’s wife went to daycare to pick up their daughter and learned the baby had never been dropped off. She called Moist. Police said he went back to the SUV and found his daughter lifeless in a rear-facing car seat.

Moist called 911 while driving toward a hospital. A dispatcher told him to pull over so EMS could respond. Police later found the child dead inside the vehicle.

Authorities said temperatures climbed into the 90s that day. The SUV was parked in an unshaded lot, and investigators said a rear-seat mirror in the vehicle would have allowed the driver to see the child in the back seat.

Investigators said Moist had glassy, bloodshot eyes after police arrived. A THC v**e device was found in the vehicle, and a court-authorized blood test later detected active ma*****na compounds in his system. Prosecutors said those facts support their claim that he was under the influence while responsible for taking his daughter to daycare.

Moist was arrested July 2 and charged with third-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter, endangering the welfare of children, reckless endangerment, and leaving a child unattended in a vehicle. His bail was set at $500,000 unsecured. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 15.

He is charged, not convicted. His attorney has maintained his innocence.

This baby was not lost in a crowd. She was strapped in a car seat behind him on a normal daycare route. He allegedly passed the daycare, went to work, returned to the SUV midday, and still that baby sat there until she died.

A missed drop-off became a death sentence.

Check the back seat every single time. Open the back door before you walk away. Put your phone, wallet, purse, badge, laptop, or one shoe in the back seat. Text the other parent after drop-off. Daycares should call fast when a child expected that day never arrives.

And never drive impaired with children. Not high. Not drunk. Not “just fine.” A child in your care needs your full mind.

Cars heat up fast. Babies cannot save themselves. Adults have to build habits that do not fail.

SOURCES: Northampton County District Attorney’s Office, NBC10 Philadelphia, 6ABC Action News, FOX 29 Philadelphia, PEOPLE, Daily Voice


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07/05/2026

🚨 JULY 5 UPDATE: Kev’Ronn Brown, 26, has been charged in Franklin County, Ohio, after a 6-year-old boy was taken to Nationwide Children’s Hospital with serious injuries.

The child arrived at the hospital around 1:30 a.m. on April 18 with a fractured arm, swollen face, and bloodshot left eye. Investigators said Brown first claimed the boy was hurt by older kids, ages 12 to 14, during a playground fight over a popsicle.

Then the child talked.

According to reports citing the probable cause affidavit, the boy told Franklin County Children’s Services that Brown beat him inside a hotel room on April 16 while other family members were asleep. The child said Brown punched him, hit his back and shoulder, put hot sauce in his eyes and mouth, and dropped him on his head.

The boy later gave the same account to Columbus police detectives. A medical evaluation found more serious injuries, including a broken bone in his left shoulder and a hemorrhage in his left eye.

Brown is the live-in partner of the child’s mother. Franklin County Children’s Services took emergency custody of the victim and the other children in the home.

Brown was arraigned in Franklin County Municipal Court on child-endangerment charges with a torture and cruel-abuse specification. A judge set his bond at $800,000. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 10.

He is charged, not convicted.

A 6-year-old had to explain injuries an adult allegedly tried to blame on a playground fight. That is why hospitals, relatives, teachers, neighbors, and caseworkers have to question stories that do not match the wounds.

If a child has serious injuries, sudden fear, flinching, bruises, eye injuries, broken bones, or a story that keeps changing, do not ignore it. Ask questions. Document what you see. Report it. Push for a medical check.

Kids often tell the truth once they feel safe. Adults have to listen.

SOURCES: 10TV WBNS, Law&Crime

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