exposed – Latest News https://latestnews.top Sun, 13 Aug 2023 18:56:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://latestnews.top/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-licon-32x32.png exposed – Latest News https://latestnews.top 32 32 Terrifying moment Florida deputy exposed to fentanyl collapses in bodycam footage before https://latestnews.top/terrifying-moment-florida-deputy-exposed-to-fentanyl-collapses-in-bodycam-footage-before/ https://latestnews.top/terrifying-moment-florida-deputy-exposed-to-fentanyl-collapses-in-bodycam-footage-before/#respond Sun, 13 Aug 2023 18:56:17 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/08/13/terrifying-moment-florida-deputy-exposed-to-fentanyl-collapses-in-bodycam-footage-before/ A Florida cop’s body camera captured the moment he rescued another deputy from fentanyl exposure – during a routine traffic stop that saw the officer collapse after administering an on-site substance test. Identified as Flagler County Sheriff’s Deputy Nick Huzior, the lawman is now in recovery – thanks in part to his fellow officer’s quick-thinking. The incident […]]]>


A Florida cop’s body camera captured the moment he rescued another deputy from fentanyl exposure – during a routine traffic stop that saw the officer collapse after administering an on-site substance test.

Identified as Flagler County Sheriff’s Deputy Nick Huzior, the lawman is now in recovery – thanks in part to his fellow officer’s quick-thinking.

The incident happened around 3:45pm Thursday, after Huzior pulled over 61-year-old George Clemons for fleeing a hit-and-run scene in nearby Bunnell and taking off on State Road 11, causing several near-crashes in the process.

Now out on bail despite facing an array of DUI and drug charges, Clemons eventually pulled over – at which point cops came across him still sitting in the red SUV, in the driver’s seat, with its keys out of the ignition and beneath his legs.

Huzior and other deputies immediately spotted a slew of narcotics, as well as an empty Bud Light can and a mini bottle of alcohol in plain view, cops said.

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A Florida cop's body camera captured the moment he rescued another deputy from fentanyl exposure - during a routine traffic stop that saw the officer collapse after an on-site text

A Florida cop’s body camera captured the moment he rescued another deputy from fentanyl exposure – during a routine traffic stop that saw the officer collapse after an on-site text

Identified as Flagler County Sheriff’s Deputy Nick Huzior, the lawman is now in recovery - thanks in part to his fellow officer's quick-thinking

Identified as Flagler County Sheriff’s Deputy Nick Huzior, the lawman is now in recovery – thanks in part to his fellow officer’s quick-thinking

The incident happened around 3:45pm Thursday, after Huzior pulled over 61-year-old George Clemons for fleeing a hit-and-run scene in nearby Bunnell. Now facing a litany of DUI and drug charges, Clemons is currently out on $25,500 bail, records show

The incident happened around 3:45pm Thursday, after Huzior pulled over 61-year-old George Clemons for fleeing a hit-and-run scene in nearby Bunnell. Now facing a litany of DUI and drug charges, Clemons is currently out on $25,500 bail, records show

The footage released by the Sheriff’s Office Friday begins shortly after Clemons refused Huzior’s request for a sobriety test, spurring him to test one of the drugs – a powdery white substance – then and there.

Almost instantly, the officer – who was wearing personal protective equipment but still found himself overcome by the overdose causing drug – is seen succumbing to the synthetic opioid, which is more than 100 times more potent than morphine.

‘I feel lightheaded,’ he is heard telling Deputy First Class Kyle Gaddie in the first-person footage, which shows an array of pills, marijuana, and unspecified powders spread out on an at this point already arrested Clemons’ hood.

‘Call EMS,’ the officer adds, audibly out of breath.

Telling Gaddie he feels lightheaded, shaky, and is loosing feeling in his arms and legs, the deputy is seen losing his balance – spurring his senior officer to get out of his car, where he had been parked previously for a traffic stop.

Knowing that the narcotics Huzior had been testing could contain fentanyl – a deadly synthetic drug now used by sellers to make other drugs more powerful – Gaddie dishes out a dose of Narcan, a drug used to reverse the effects of a fentanyl overdose.

Despite the precaution, Huzior’s condition persists for several minutes – spurring Gaddie to give his comrade a second dose.

As this is happening, Gaddie is seen steadfastly crouching by Huzior’s side, while whispering words of encouragement.

At one point, he asks Huzior how he feels – to which the deputy replies that he feels ‘dizzy.’

‘I feel really dizzy,’ he says, before eventually being carted to a nearby hospital. ‘My heart is beating really fast.’

The footage begins after Clemons eventually pulled over at a traffic stop on State Road 11 - at which point cops came across him sitting in his the red SUV. Inside, cops found a bevy of drugs, pills, alcohol, and other substances. Clemons was cuffed for refusing a sobriety test

The footage begins after Clemons eventually pulled over at a traffic stop on State Road 11 – at which point cops came across him sitting in his the red SUV. Inside, cops found a bevy of drugs, pills, alcohol, and other substances. Clemons was cuffed for refusing a sobriety test

Knowing that the narcotics Huzior had been testing could contain fentanyl - a deadly synthetic drug now used by sellers to lace other drugs - Deputy First Class Kyle Gaddie (seen here) dished out a dose of Narcan, a drug used to reverse the effects of fentanyl overdose

Knowing that the narcotics Huzior had been testing could contain fentanyl – a deadly synthetic drug now used by sellers to lace other drugs – Deputy First Class Kyle Gaddie (seen here) dished out a dose of Narcan, a drug used to reverse the effects of fentanyl overdose

As his fellow officer continues to suffer from the effects of fentanyl exposure, Gaddie is seen steadfastly crouching by Huzior's side, whispering words of encouragement

As his fellow officer continues to suffer from the effects of fentanyl exposure, Gaddie is seen steadfastly crouching by Huzior’s side, whispering words of encouragement

At one point, he asks Huzior how he feels - to which the deputy replies that he feels 'dizzy'

At one point, he asks Huzior how he feels – to which the deputy replies that he feels ‘dizzy’

'I feel really dizzy,' he says in the clip released by his superiors Friday, before eventually being carted to a nearby hospital, where he was still recovering Saturday. 'My heart is beating really fast'

‘I feel really dizzy,’ he says in the clip released by his superiors Friday, before eventually being carted to a nearby hospital, where he was still recovering Saturday. ‘My heart is beating really fast’

Gaddie continued to offer his stricken companion reassuring words, as a Good Samaritan and eventually several fire officials arrived on the scene

Gaddie continued to offer his stricken companion reassuring words, as a Good Samaritan and eventually several fire officials arrived on the scene

Gaddie continues to offer his stricken companion reassuring words, as a Good Samaritan and eventually Flagler County Fire officials arrive on the scene.

‘My left hand is going numb,’ Huzior says at one point, leading Gaddie to administer a second dose.

Huzior at this point tells his superior that he his now feeling numbness in his face – to which Gaddie replies: ‘That’s probably the Narcan hitting you.’

Within minutes, first responders were seen descending on the scene, with an ambulance arriving and Huzior loaded into the emergency vehicle via a stretcher. 

In a statement Saturday, Sheriff Rick Staly revealed the officer was still recovering from the scare, and confirmed the substance he ingested had, in fact, been fentanyl.

Clemons, meanwhile, was arrested on charges of DUI, possession of fentanyl, possession of cocaine, possession of marijuana under 20 grams, possession of a legend drug without a prescription, possession of Suboxone – a prescription used to wean off opiates – and possession of drug paraphernalia.

The Bunnell Police Department also charged Clemons with leaving the scene of a crash with damage to vehicle or property in relation to a hit-and-run, which is a felony.

Within minutes, first responders were seen descending on the scene, with an ambulance arriving and Huzior loaded into the emergency vehicle via a stretcher

Within minutes, first responders were seen descending on the scene, with an ambulance arriving and Huzior loaded into the emergency vehicle via a stretcher

In a statement Saturday, officers revealed Huzior was still recovering from the scare, and confirmed the substance he ingested had, in fact, been fentanyl

In a statement Saturday, officers revealed Huzior was still recovering from the scare, and confirmed the substance he ingested had, in fact, been fentanyl

Sheriff Rick Staly is seen with Huzior's savior Gaddie, whom he praised Saturday for his heroic actions

Sheriff Rick Staly is seen with Huzior’s savior Gaddie, whom he praised Saturday for his heroic actions

Fentanyl – approximately 100 times more potent than morphine – is responsible for about 100,000 deaths each year in the US, not including deaths overseas.

Over the past eight years, the opioid has been funneled into the country in increasing amounts at the southern border – with some 8,400 kilograms of the overdose-inducing drug seized in 2022. 

During the time, a believed 325,000 people died in the US have died from overdoses involving synthetic opioids like the ones sold by the raided Mexican stores, which experts say are almost always made of fentanyl.

Aside from being far more powerful than others on the black market, the drug is mass produced by Mexican cartels, who make it from precursor chemical smuggled in from China, and then press it into pills designed to look like other medications.

The practice is illegal, and has been on the radar of federal authorities for the better part of a year.

Still, such practices manage to persist and are, in fact, still on the rise. 



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‘Pressure tactics’ of cheap Turkish surgery exposed: Undercover reporter, 24, seeking a https://latestnews.top/pressure-tactics-of-cheap-turkish-surgery-exposed-undercover-reporter-24-seeking-a/ https://latestnews.top/pressure-tactics-of-cheap-turkish-surgery-exposed-undercover-reporter-24-seeking-a/#respond Wed, 09 Aug 2023 12:49:16 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/08/09/pressure-tactics-of-cheap-turkish-surgery-exposed-undercover-reporter-24-seeking-a/ Pressure tactics deployed by Turkish cosmetic surgery clinics were today exposed by a shock investigation.  An undercover reporter, posing as a 24-year-old wanting a Brazilian bum lift (BBL), contacted nine providers across Istanbul. Within hours, she was offered time-sensitive deals with up to 30 per cent knocked off the total fee and incentives to book […]]]>


Pressure tactics deployed by Turkish cosmetic surgery clinics were today exposed by a shock investigation. 

An undercover reporter, posing as a 24-year-old wanting a Brazilian bum lift (BBL), contacted nine providers across Istanbul.

Within hours, she was offered time-sensitive deals with up to 30 per cent knocked off the total fee and incentives to book multiple surgeries. 

Experts today slammed the ‘unsafe and incredibly unscrupulous’ sales tactics that were found in The News Movement’s probe.

Doctors warned Brits contemplating going abroad for cut-price boob jobs, bum lifts and other procedures to think again.

Posing as a 24-year-old from the UK, an undercover reporter from The News Movement contacted several cosmetic surgery clinics across Istanbul. But within hours was offered time sensitive early booking price reductions of up to 30 per cent

Posing as a 24-year-old from the UK, an undercover reporter from The News Movement contacted several cosmetic surgery clinics across Istanbul. But within hours was offered time sensitive early booking price reductions of up to 30 per cent

Among the Whatsapp messages received from a cosmetic surgery clinic in Turkey, one read: 'We are offering you a 20 per cent discount valid for 10 days. 'Pay a 10 per cent deposit and freeze the 20 per cent discount for one year.' It added: 'Grab this great chance and benefit from this special time limited offer.' Another said: '30 PER CENT DISCOUNT- AVAILABLE FOR 48 HOURS ONLY!' Later it added: 'Do not let this opportunity slip! It will only be valid for 48 hours! If you wish to secure your treatment plan for 18 months, you can do so by making a £50 deposit'

Among the Whatsapp messages received from a cosmetic surgery clinic in Turkey, one read: ‘We are offering you a 20 per cent discount valid for 10 days. ‘Pay a 10 per cent deposit and freeze the 20 per cent discount for one year.’ It added: ‘Grab this great chance and benefit from this special time limited offer.’ Another said: ’30 PER CENT DISCOUNT- AVAILABLE FOR 48 HOURS ONLY!’ Later it added: ‘Do not let this opportunity slip! It will only be valid for 48 hours! If you wish to secure your treatment plan for 18 months, you can do so by making a £50 deposit’

A third, after sending photos and answering a series of medical questions offered Brazilian Butt Lift surgery and liposuction with a 20 per cent 'flash discount', valid for 10 days. The surgery package, with a hotel stay, cost £2800. The deposit to secure the deal was £280. Just days later, the clinic messaged again, reducing the deposit by a further £50

A third, after sending photos and answering a series of medical questions offered Brazilian Butt Lift surgery and liposuction with a 20 per cent ‘flash discount’, valid for 10 days. The surgery package, with a hotel stay, cost £2800. The deposit to secure the deal was £280. Just days later, the clinic messaged again, reducing the deposit by a further £50

Standards are notoriously laxer than in the NHS and campaigners say aftercare can be non-existent. 

Turkey has become one of the most popular destinations, fuelled by celebrities and influencers who’ve made the four-hour trip in pursuit of revamping their bodies. 

Thousands of Brits, particularly women in their 20s and 30s, flock there every year.

Of the nine clinics contacted by The News Movement, five offered discounts on the price of the surgery or price reductions for early booking and surgery. 

Among the WhatsApps received from one clinic was a message which read: ‘We are offering you a 20 per cent discount valid for 10 days. 

‘Pay a 10 per cent deposit and freeze the 20 per cent discount for one year.

‘Grab this great chance and benefit from this special time limited offer.’ 

Another clinic said: ’30 PER CENT DISCOUNT- AVAILABLE FOR 48 HOURS ONLY!’

Later it added: ‘Do not let this opportunity slip! It will only be valid for 48 hours!’

‘If you wish to secure your treatment plan for 18 months, you can do so by making a £50 deposit.’ 

After the undercover reporter sent photos and answered medical questions, a third clinic offered BBL surgery and liposuction with a 20 per cent ‘flash discount’, valid for 10 days. 

The surgery package, with a hotel stay, cost £2,800. The deposit to secure the deal was £280.

Just days later, the clinic messaged again, reducing the deposit to just £50. 

‘We are excited to extend a special offer to you, available for the next three days only,’ the message read. 

‘If you wish to secure your treatment plan for 18 months, you can do so by making a £50 deposit.’

Other sales techniques from clinics involved asking for deposits ranging from £50 to £500 for BBL and liposuction surgery packages.

For decades, Brits have been warned against seeking cheaper surgery in places like Turkey, Eastern Europe, or South East Asia.

Turkey is not inherently more dangerous than other surgical tourism hotspots.

But cheap flights between it and the UK — as well as the rise of the trend combining cosmetic surgery with a holiday — have made it one of the leading destinations for Brits looking to go under the knife. 

Paul Harris, consultant plastic surgeon and spokesperson for the British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons (BAPRAS), said he was ‘truly astonished’ by the findings.

He added: ‘The way that patients are being persuaded and preyed upon is just dreadful.

‘It really is shocking… that is almost the best example I’ve ever seen of pressurised selling techniques, all of those, combine it together all in one message trail. It’s unbelievable.’

Mr Harris said ‘pressured selling techniques’ in cosmetic surgeries were banned in the UK more than 10 years ago and it was ‘incredibly unsafe’ for Turkish clinics to be offering discounts and time limits on ‘a very complex part of healthcare’.

Seven Turkish clinics said it was possible to have multiple body and facial surgeries — including a BBL, liposuction, rhinoplasty, blepharoplasty and buccal fat removal — under one anaesthesia. 

Some clinics said this would be dependent on having appropriate blood test results.

British surgeons have raised the alarm about the rising NHS multi-million bill of fixing botched cosmetic ops performed overseas, with costing the NHS an estimated £100,000 alone

British surgeons have raised the alarm about the rising NHS multi-million bill of fixing botched cosmetic ops performed overseas, with costing the NHS an estimated £100,000 alone

Paul Harris, consultant plastic surgeon and spokesperson for the British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons (BAPRAS), said he was 'truly astonished' by the findings. He added: 'The way that patients are being persuaded and preyed upon is just dreadful

Paul Harris, consultant plastic surgeon and spokesperson for the British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons (BAPRAS), said he was ‘truly astonished’ by the findings. He added: ‘The way that patients are being persuaded and preyed upon is just dreadful

Liposuction that offers to remove up to 15 litres of fat, BBL's, eye colour changing laser treatments and hymenoplasties are all offered in clinics across Turkey

Liposuction that offers to remove up to 15 litres of fat, BBL’s, eye colour changing laser treatments and hymenoplasties are all offered in clinics across Turkey

Mr Harris said it was ‘worrying’ that such combination surgeries could be accepted.

He said: ‘It really concerns me that [the surgeons are] not appropriately trained and that they are operating beyond their level of experience in that training.’

Meanwhile, Mr Navid Jallali, a former consultant surgeon at Imperial College NHS Trust, said: ‘There seems to be a big push for having multiple surgeries and they incentivise this by giving additional discounts.

‘In general, we don’t like doing procedures that will take longer than four-and-a-half hours in the UK. 

‘However, the combination being discussed will take well over that even in a very experienced surgeons hand. 

‘It is also a very unusual combination of procedures and should have been queried at the outset.’

He added: ‘This is not UK standard in terms of practice and would not be supported by any surgeons in the UK.’

‘From the General Medical Council point of view and actually for any reputable surgeon in the UK, that incentivisation of saying “we can give you a discount if you proceed” should never ever happen.

‘The patient [should] only receive surgery based on the fact that they’re going to gain a benefit and not the fact that the surgery has been done cheap or for a discounted price.’

It comes as MailOnline last month revealed taxpayers last year spent £1.7million on fixing Brits botched by cosmetic surgery carried out abroad.

An audit by the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons — shared with MailOnline — showed 111 Brits needed emergency NHS care after returning from places like Turkey in 2022 to go under the knife. 

Surgeons reported their patients were lured in by what looked like ‘bargain’ tummy tucks and boob jobs. 

Others were deemed too unfit for surgery in the UK. 

But some patients were left with flesh-eating bacterial infections and implants bursting through their skin. 

Others endured potentially deadly blood clots that required urgent NHS treatment, sometimes within just days of arriving back in the UK.

Some Turkish clinics provide extreme transformations that surgeons in the UK would never dream of performing, either because the procedure is illegal in Britain or is considered too risky. 

Responding to the findings from The News Movement, Dr Alex Karidis, a consultant plastic surgeon in the UK, said: ‘I don’t think it’s ethical. I don’t think it’s right.

‘Surgery – that’s not a product that you sell… You’re potentially playing with people’s lives.’

Dr Karidis said a cosmetic surgeon in the UK who offered discounts and incentives would be ‘investigated straightaway and possibly suspended.’

He added: ‘It’s a wild west out there, they can do whatever they want. They don’t play by the same rules.’

Mr Harris acknowledged that while there are ‘reputable’ surgeons in Turkey, it was important for people to do their ‘own research’ and to think ‘very carefully’ before booking cosmetic surgery abroad.

He added: ‘We really need to be informed before making these decisions which will have a lifelong impact on you. This is not like having a haircut or buying some new clothes or going on holiday, this is a big decision that will affect the rest of your life.’

The red flags of getting cosmetic surgery abroad

All surgery carries risk, but it is important to do your research before hopping on a plane to get cheap plastic surgery. 

Although it can cost less than getting surgery in the UK, you need to bear in mind that the safety standards may not be the same. 

Holiday packages 

You should be cautious of any website that sell cosmetic surgery as part of a holiday, the NHS warns. 

Some websites sell the idea of sightseeing alongside hotels with breakfast included. 

NHS advice adds that if you are looking at holiday packages make sure you have a consultation with a surgeon and don’t just meet a salesperson. 

The health service adds that you should not pay to see a surgeon you have never met.  

The Royal College of Surgeons of England also echoes the NHS’s concerns and advises to not agree to cosmetic surgery before meeting the surgeon and visiting the hospital.

UK plastic surgeon Veerle Rotsaert said: ‘Travelling long-haul overseas to have surgery done, followed by no proper aftercare, that’s where often things go wrong.

‘Often third party agencies sell surgery without any surgeon ever seeing the patient in person and having a proper consultation until it is actually surgery day.’

Extra costs

Many of the surgeries offered overseas in countries such as Turkey are more affordable than private clinics in the UK.

However, there could be hidden costs. 

The Royal College of Surgeons of England urges people to consider the cost for additional flights and hotel stays for future corrective, or touch-up procedures.

It also warns patients to consider what might happen overseas if they pay ahead of time but change their mind before the operation as their right to a refund could vary in different countries. 

Choosing the right surgeon

Surgeons and clinics are regulated differently in different countries and standards can vary.

Before traveling abroad for surgery the NHS says you should ask if the surgeon is fully trained in the surgery you want and how long they have been practicing for. 

The surgeon should also be fully insured to carry out the surgery you want, says the Royal College of Surgeons of England. It suggests asking to see details of the surgeons insurance. 

It is also vital you have a proper consultation with your surgeon before you consent to having the surgery, experts warn.

Risks of flying 

Flying and having major surgery increases your risk of getting a blood clot, which can be life threatening. 

As a result, the NHS warns people should wait five to seven days to fly after procedures such as breast surgery and liposuction and wait seven to 10 days to fly after facial cosmetic procedures or tummy tucks.

However, some surgeons suggest waiting between two to six weeks before flying depending on the procedure. 

Dr Rotsaert explained: ‘This is because first of all, you want patients to stay relatively close to their surgeon in case of any immediate post-op issues.’

He added: Secondly because of the deep vein thrombosis/pulmonary embolism risk associated with the act of surgery, it’s aftermath, as well as prolonged immobilisation.’

Drinking plenty of water, avoiding alcohol and walking about during your flight can help circulation, but this doesn’t completely remove the risk of a blood clot especially having major surgery, the British Association of Plastic Reconstruction and Aesthetic Surgeons (BAPRAS). 

Aftercare

Follow up care after your surgery is an important part of your treatment. But traveling abroad can make it more complicated. 

Before getting surgery outside of the UK consider how long it would take you to travel back to your surgeon if there is a complication, says the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

Make sure you have a contact for a named doctor that can deal with any complications, rather than a helpline, experts warn. 

You need to also make sure the clinic will deal with any problems and that they will help if you are not happy with your outcome. 

In many cases the NHS will not help you unless you have a serious complication which requires emergency or life-saving support. 

Source: NHS, BAPRAS and Royal College of Surgeons England. 



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Idaho man accused of shooting dead four of his neighbors after one exposed himself to his https://latestnews.top/idaho-man-accused-of-shooting-dead-four-of-his-neighbors-after-one-exposed-himself-to-his/ https://latestnews.top/idaho-man-accused-of-shooting-dead-four-of-his-neighbors-after-one-exposed-himself-to-his/#respond Wed, 21 Jun 2023 07:33:33 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/06/21/idaho-man-accused-of-shooting-dead-four-of-his-neighbors-after-one-exposed-himself-to-his/ An Idaho man appeared in court Tuesday accused of shooting dead his four neighbors after he became enraged at the teenage son of the family performing a sex act within sight of a window. Majorjon Kaylor, 31, who has ‘savage’ tattooed above his eyebrow, reportedly told police he ‘lost it’, and acted to protect his […]]]>


An Idaho man appeared in court Tuesday accused of shooting dead his four neighbors after he became enraged at the teenage son of the family performing a sex act within sight of a window.

Majorjon Kaylor, 31, who has ‘savage’ tattooed above his eyebrow, reportedly told police he ‘lost it’, and acted to protect his three young children.

On Sunday evening he became involved in an argument with the teenager’s mother, Kenna Guardipee, 41.

She lived in the Kellogg, Idaho, home with her sons Devin Smith, 18, and 16-year-old Aiken, plus her father Kenneth Guardipee, 65.

Majorjon Kaylor, who has 'savage' tattooed above his eye, is accused of shooting dead his four neighbors on Sunday evening. He told police he killed them to protect his three children

Majorjon Kaylor, who has ‘savage’ tattooed above his eye, is accused of shooting dead his four neighbors on Sunday evening. He told police he killed them to protect his three children

Kaylor, a 31-year-old miner, appeared in court in Wallace, Idaho, Tuesday accused of shooting dead his four neighbors Sunday evening

Kaylor, a 31-year-old miner, appeared in court in Wallace, Idaho, Tuesday accused of shooting dead his four neighbors Sunday evening

Kaylor is accused of murdering (from left) Kenneth Guardipee, 65; his grandson Devin Smith, 18; Devin's mother Kenna Guardipee, 41; and her 16-year-old son Aiken

Kaylor is accused of murdering (from left) Kenneth Guardipee, 65; his grandson Devin Smith, 18; Devin’s mother Kenna Guardipee, 41; and her 16-year-old son Aiken

Five days before the shooting, police were called to the Guardipee’s home after Kaylor reported Devin Smith had exposed himself to his wife, Kaylie, and daughter.

A family friend of Smith, Katy James, told The Spokesman-Review that Devin Smith had a learning disability and struggled socially, but had been getting help through a program at school.

A classmate, Daisy Sawyer, told the paper he had harassed her at school and was known to be inappropriate.

Kaylor came home from working in a mine Sunday evening and confronted Kenna Guardipee, angry that her son was unlikely to face further punishment for his acts.

Kaylor then shot the mother in the head, as well as her father and two sons.

Police responded to reports of shots fired at a duplex at 515 W. Brown Ave around 7:20 pm on Sunday.

Shortly after the first call, a second call came in reporting that someone had ‘executed his neighbors,’ according to court documents.

Kaylor is seen with his wife Kaylie: the couple have two daughters and a son

Kaylor is seen with his wife Kaylie: the couple have two daughters and a son

Kaylor and Kaylie Kaylor are seen in a photo from her social media

Kaylor and Kaylie Kaylor are seen in a photo from her social media

The Kaylors lived in the upstairs unit of this duplex in Kellogg, Idaho

The Kaylors lived in the upstairs unit of this duplex in Kellogg, Idaho

Investigators found a .45 caliber Hi-Point semi-automatic pistol with what appeared to be blood on it in a truck parked in the duplex’s driveway, according to court documents obtained by The Spokesman-Review.

Kaylor told police that he ‘snapped’ and ‘lost it’ over the dispute, saying he had spoken to Kenna Guardipee and her father, but was upset that they did not appear to take his concerns seriously.

His wife told investigators he ‘said he did what he had to do, and to tell their kids he protected them.’

She added that she overheard him saying he had killed four people.

A GoFundMe has been started for Kaylie and the three children by Kaylor’s brother Buddy.

‘I am trying to raise money for my sister-in-law and 3 small children for rent groceries and the necessities to live after a tragic event,’ wrote Buddy Kaylor.

‘After enduring continuous unthinkable sexual harassment by a neighbor the current situation has left my brother in jail and the three kids and mom without a provider, thank you for your donations anything helps.’

Kaylor could face the death penalty or life in prison if convicted.

He also faces a separate felony burglary charge, and police said he had a ‘sparse and sporadic’ criminal history for drug abuse, battery and traffic offenses, according to KXLY4 News.

Kaylor is seen in court on Tuesday, sitting with his head down. A judge did not set bail

Kaylor is seen in court on Tuesday, sitting with his head down. A judge did not set bail

Kenna Guardipee is pictured with her sons Devin and Aiken

Kenna Guardipee is pictured with her sons Devin and Aiken

From left: Devin Smith, 18; his mother Kenna Guardipee, 41; and his brother Aiken Smith, 16

From left: Devin Smith, 18; his mother Kenna Guardipee, 41; and his brother Aiken Smith, 16

On Tuesday, Kaylor appeared in court in Wallace, Idaho – 50 miles east of Coeur d’Alene – in an orange jumpsuit and handcuffs.

Prosecutor Benjamin Allen said Kaylor confessed to the shooting when interviewed by police.

‘Admissions were ultimately made to the offenses charged,’ Allen said.

Allen said the killings were done in a ‘horrific manner.’

Magistrate Judge Keisha Oxendine did not set bond and Kaylor will continue to be held in jail. Another hearing has been set for July 3.



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