Eileen Davidson (The Young and the Restless), Loretta Devine (Grey’s Anatomy) and Vince Van Patten (7 Days to Vegas) are among the latest actors to join second chapter of Peacock’s original series Days of Our Lives: Beyond Salem.
17.05.2022 - 19:29 / thefader.com
One of three drug dealers charged in connection with Mac Miller's 2018 death by fentanyl overdose has been sentenced 17 years and six months in prison. Stephen Andrew Walter was sentenced on Monday, May 16. Last month a federal judge in L.A.
sentenced a second man, Ryan Michael Reavis, to 10 years and 11 months of prison time for his involvement in the rapper’s death. Walter was arrested on charges of fentanyl distribution and had previously agreed to a 17-year sentence as part of a plea agreement last year. However, U.S.
District Judge Otis D. Wright II rejected the plea, stating that Walter continued selling the same oxycontin pills that caused Miller’s overdose following his death. Walter’s attorney William S.
Harris told Pitchfork that his client does not plan to appeal the 210-month sentence. Read Next: Dealer who sold Mac Miller fentanyl-laced oxy handed 11-year sentence A third co-defendant, Cameron James Pettit, faces a mandatory minimum of 20 years and the possibility of life without chance of parole if convicted on conspiracy and drug distribution charges. He pleaded not guilty in October 2019.
.Eileen Davidson (The Young and the Restless), Loretta Devine (Grey’s Anatomy) and Vince Van Patten (7 Days to Vegas) are among the latest actors to join second chapter of Peacock’s original series Days of Our Lives: Beyond Salem.
EXCLUSIVE: The acclaimed Young Vic/West End revival of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman starring Wendell Pierce and Sharon D Clarke will begin previews on Sept. 19 at Broadway’s Hudson Theatre, producers announced today.
Rapper Percy Robert Miller, popularly known as Master P, on Sunday announced the death of his 29-year-old daughter, Tytyana Miller. "Our family is dealing with an overwhelming grief for the loss of my daughter Tytyana," the "Bourbons and Lacs" artist said in a Sunday Instagram post. "We respectfully request some privacy so that our family can grieve. We appreciate all of the prayers love and support.
Josh Flagg is enjoying a night out with his new boyfriend!
An Ecclefechan drug dealer who was part of a county lines cocaine gang that made £1.8million has been ordered to repay £8,500 at a Proceeds of Crime hearing.
A man accused over two shootings has told a jury he wasn't involved, insisting he was merely selling drugs. Dominic Hughes, 28, insisted he had nothing to do with the shootings, one at a taxi office in Salford and another at a house in Whitefield months later.
A member of an organised crime gang has been jailed for 11 years after being found with £180,000 of high purity cocaine hidden behind a secret trap door in his van. Paul Marrow was part of plot aimed at flooding the streets of Tyneside with cocaine and amphetamine.
A drug dealer who hid a phone 'up his backside' when his prison cell was raided has been jailed. Harri Pullen, 24, smuggled the mobile from Strangeways to HMP Swansea by hiding it in the secret compartment of a tin when he moved jails.
Zack Sharf George Miller electrified the Cannes Film Festival with “Three Thousand Years of Longing,” his first directorial effort since “Mad Max: Fury Road.” Miller’s latest, starring Tilda Swinton and Idris Elba, earned a six-minute standing ovation after its world premiere at Cannes’ Palais theater.A love letter to storytelling and its tropes and parables passed down through history, “Three Thousand Years” follows a solitary academic (Swinton) and a burdened genie (Elba) she finds in a bottle in the markets of Istanbul. His history unfolds in the stories of those who had found him before.While his memories were relayed in dazzling ancient locations with heavy special effects, half of the film is spent in a hotel room (the same that Agatha Christie lived in when she wrote “Murder on the Orient Express,” a bellhop tells Swinton).
three men charged in relation to Mac Miller‘s 2018 death from a drug overdose has been sentenced to 17 years and six months in prison.Stephen Andrew Walter, 49, was handed the sentence on Monday (May 16) after pleading guilty to a single charge of fentanyl distribution. Walter had previously agreed to a 17-year sentence as part of a plea deal last year, dropping the more serious charge of fentanyl distribution resulting in death.However, the judge in the case, Otis D.
Chloë Sevigny has wed her husband Siniša Mačković for the second time in two years.The Russian Doll actress, 47, wowed in a sheer gown as she tied the knot with art gallery director husband Siniša, 39, at Talmadge Hill Community Church in Darien, Connecticut.The couple first married two years ago in March 2020, just two months before welcoming their now two year old son, Vanja, at New York City Hall – and just a week before New York went into lockdown at the start of the pandemic. Chloë wore several looks throughout the day, with the highlight being her sheer white Jean Paul Gaultier number, designed by Glenn Martins, while her husband looked dapper in a black tuxedo.
Mac Miller's fatal overdose four years ago, has been sentenced. On Monday, Stephen Walter was sentenced to 210 months — 17 and a half years — in federal prison for his role in the crime.According to the court docs, obtained by ET, days before Miller's overdose, Walter directed co-defendant Ryan Reavis to distribute the fentanyl-laced pills to co-defendant Cameron Pettit, who in turn sold them to Miller. As a result, all three defendants were charged with distribution of fentanyl resulting in death and conspiracy to distribute controlled substances resulting in death, with Walter also being charged with being a felon in possession of ammunition.While the charges carry a 20-year mandatory minimum prison term, Walter entered into a plea agreement last October, under which he would instead be subject to a 17-year prison term.
UPDATED: A Westwood man was sentenced today to more than 17 years behind bars for his role in supplying the fentanyl-laced pills that led to rapper Mac Miller’s fatal overdose four years ago.
A police officer who used to catch criminals now finds himself living among them after he was jailed for perverting the course of justice.