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Dunkin' Donuts worker arrested after cop finds 'large, thick piece of mucus' in coffee

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Illinois State PoliceBy JON HAWORTH, ABC News

(CHICAGO) — A Dunkin’ Donuts employee has been arrested after a police officer found a “large, thick piece of mucus which was later confirmed to be saliva” in his coffee.

The incident occurred at approximately 10:20 p.m. on July 30 when an Illinois State Police (ISP) District Chicago Trooper bought a large black coffee from a Dunkin’ Donuts establishment located on Archer Avenue in Chicago, Illinois.

“Due to the coffee being extremely hot, the Trooper removed the lid from the top of the cup to cool it down,” the Illinois State Police said in a statement.

It was then that the officer noticed the mucus and saliva floating inside his coffee cup.

The ISP immediately began an investigation into the incident which culminated just a couple of hours later with the arrest of 25-year-old Dunkin’ Donuts employee Vincent J. Sessler.

Sessler was taken into custody without incident by the ISP District Chicago Troopers and has been charged with Disorderly Conduct and Battery to a Peace Officer.

ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly issued a stern statement about the incident.

“This is outrageous and disgusting,” said Kelly. “The men and women of the Illinois State Police put their heart and soul into protecting the lives and rights of all people in this state every day. They deserve better than this insulting and dangerous treatment.”

Kelly also said that ISP officers and employees will now be prohibited from patronizing that Dunkin’ Donuts location for their own safety.

Sessler currently remains in custody at the Chicago Police Department’s 8th District while the investigation continues.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Nikki and Brie Bella welcome baby boys just hours apart

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ABC/Eric McCandless(LOS ANGELES) — Congratulations to the Bella twins! The 36-year-olds gave birth to their babies within a day of one another over the weekend. 

First to welcome their newborn into the world was Nikki Bella and her fiancé, former Dancing With The Stars pro Artem Chigvintsev. In an adorable Instagram pic shared on Sunday, the first-time parents are holding hands with their little one, while the caption revealed his birthdate as July 31.

The former WWE pro-wrestler added, “Our baby boy is here and we couldn’t be HAPPIER and more in LOVE! Everyone is safe and healthy.”

Also on Sunday, Brie Bella announced the new addition to her family which already includes her husband Daniel Bryan and their three-year-old daughter, Birdie. 

“It’s a BOY!!! 8-1-2020,” Brie revealed. “We are overwhelmed with joy and everyone is healthy!!!”

By Danielle Long
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Brothers Osborne mix family history and a lesson learned in "Hatin' Somebody"

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Eric Ryan AndersonWhen Brothers Osborne wrote “Hatin’ Somebody” for their upcoming third album, TJ and John had no idea how relevant it would turn out to be.

“We wrote [it] with Casey Beathard,” TJ explains, “and it’s kind of interesting how it has turned out to be timely. But ultimately, the song really just talks about, in the chorus, ‘Hatin’ somebody’s never got nobody nowhere/It’s a bad seed to sow, it’s a dead end road when you go there.’ Honestly, that just kind of always applies.”

“It was an idea that Casey brought to us,” TJ recalls, “and we instantly were like, ‘Man, I just love what that says.'”

“And everyone’s been guilty of doing some hatin’. I have,” he confesses. “And it’s a song that, it’s fun to sing for people to kinda just remind them, but also to remind myself…”

The Maryland natives also built some Osborne family history into the tune. 

“If you listen closely to the second verse,” John tells ABC Audio, “we mentioned our grandfather who grew up in West Virginia and then moved to Baltimore for work. So it explains a lot about us, our family, our upbringing.”

“I mean, hate has been around for a long time,” John continues, “longer than all of us have been alive. So it’s always going to be a topic. It just so happened that it has coincided with a lot of newer public events that have reached the media.”

“One of my favorite lines,” TJ interjects, “is ‘You need a paddle on the left and a paddle on the right, because we’re all on the same damn boat.’ That is so true.”  

Brothers’ third album, Skeletons, arrives October 9, and also features their current hit, “All Night.”

By Stephen Hubbard
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

SpaceX Dragon en route back to Earth, splashdown expected near Pensacola, Florida

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iStock/ilbuscaBy: EMILY SHAPIRO, GINA SUNSERI and CATHERINE THORBECKE, ABC News

(PENSACOLA, Fla.) — The first NASA-SpaceX astronauts are en route back to Earth, with the Crew Dragon capsule expected to splashdown near Pensacola, Florida, at 2:48 p.m. ET.

The weather conditions appear “great” for the splashdown, tweeted NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine.

Crew Dragon Endeavour’s deorbit burn began at 1:56 p.m. and was completed at about 2:13 p.m. ET. As the capsule nears Earth, there will be a communications blackout lasting about six minutes.

Astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken, who left Earth on May 30, undocked from the International Space Station at about 7:30 p.m. ET on Saturday.

Stakes are high as the astronauts only have 48 hours of oxygen in their capsule after undocking.

A recovery boat with several dozen crew members, including NASA flight surgeons, is waiting in the Gulf of Mexico.

Once the astronauts reach the port in Pensacola, they will board the NASA Gulfstream and head to Houston for a ceremony at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base.

Behnken said Friday he was most excited to see his family and his 6-year-old son, saying, “He’s changed a lot in the couple of months that we’ve been up here.”

On Sunday morning Hurley and Behnken woke up to a message from their children who were all excited for their return.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Threats to judges are increasing, and experts say misogyny is a problem

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iStock/niratBy: MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — For years, Roy Den Hollander railed against what he saw as an infringement of men’s rights by feminists. A self-proclaimed anti-feminist lawyer, he took on cases against feminist causes, such as “ladies’ night” and women’s studies college classes. His websites host hundreds of pages of openly misogynistic writings.

In those screeds, the court seemed to be the target of much of his ire, saying the justice system “stepped on my rights” and was biased against men.

In a document on his website, Den Hollander wrote disparagingly of several female judges, including Esther Salas, the first Latina to serve on the federal bench in New Jersey, who had presided over one of his cases.

Salas appears to have been the target, investigators said, when, on July 20, Den Hollander opened fire at her New Jersey home, killing her 20-year-old son and critically injuring her husband. Salas was in the basement at the time and was unharmed.

The next day, Den Hollander, 72, the only suspect named in the case so far, was found dead by police in an apparent suicide, according to investigators.

The tragedy highlights a surge in threats to federal judges and their families, and experts say that being a woman and being a minority only make matters worse.

While judges — male and female — face threats for a variety of reasons, the courts have in recent decades become a venue where advocates of so-called men’s rights activism have taken root. The movement, which primarily argues that men are discriminated against in areas such as the government and justice system, has been criticized for the hateful messaging or violence of extreme adherents, like Den Hollander.

And experts say that not only women, but the men connected to them, face danger from this misogyny.

According to the U.S. Marshals Service, there were 4,449 threats and inappropriate communications against federal judges, prosecutors and court officials in 2019. In 2015, that number was 926. Over that same period, the number of threats investigated rose from 305 to 373, peaking at 531 in 2018. The U.S. Marshals Service does not break down this data by gender.

Deadly attacks on federal judges are relatively rare and have primarily involved men, who, according to the Center for American Progress, make up the majority of the seats. Among the handful or so who have been killed was Arizona federal judge John Roll, one of six people who died in the 2011 shooting massacre targeting U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.

In 2005, Illinois federal judge Joan Humphrey Lefkow lost her husband and mother in a targeted attack at her Chicago home.

Julie Kocurek, the first female criminal district judge in Travis County, survived an attempted assassination outside her home in Austin in 2015, according to the Austin American-Statesman.

According to the New York Times, investigators found a list in Den Hollander’s rental car with the names of three other female judges on it, one of them — like Salas — is also a federal judge. Another was New York Chief Judge Janet DiFiore, her spokesman had previously confirmed to ABC News. The third was a state judge who had presided over one of Den Hollander’s cases, the Times reported.

“Being a federal judge in general is a role that can make enemies. People can be pretty upset about your decisions,” Emily Martin, vice president of education and workplace justice for the National Women’s Law Center, told ABC News. “When you layer that with the fact that if you are a woman, if you are a person of color, there’s a deeper vein of hostility and hatred that those reactions can tap into.”

The attack on Salas’ family “reminds us that there are people who want to kill us solely because of our gender, the color of our skin, our ethnic background — or just because we are different,” Hispanic National Bar Association National President Irene Oria said in a statement last week when the suspected gunman’s racist, misogynistic writings came to light.

That the July 20 attack targeted someone in the legal sector was “not a surprise” to Lecia Brooks, chief of staff for the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate groups and other extremists, including male supremacists.

The suspect “had an ill-conceived belief that women controlled the legal system,” Brooks told ABC News. “He felt like women who controlled the legal system were able to grant greater leniency and rights upon women. He had this whole warped belief about what was true.”

Den Hollander had “adopted” victimization language common among so-called men’s rights activists, Martin said, “to try to position men as somehow being harmed and victimized by women’s equality.”

The court is one area where men’s rights activism has played out, particularly in child custody cases, Brooks said.

“Around the 1980s it began gaining traction with men who were disgruntled by the results of their experiences with family court,” Brooks said. “It was at that time that no-fault divorce laws began to crop up, and they felt like child custody rulings were discriminating against them.”

Over the years, domestic violence charges have been another area of pushback, Brooks said.

Of late, higher education has been a focus of men’s rights activists, particularly regarding students’ due process rights in disciplining cases of sexual harassment and sexual assault on college campuses, Martin said.

The National Women’s Law Center is behind one of four lawsuits against the Department of Education’s controversial new Title IX sexual harassment regulations, which address due process. One of the changes will allow those accused of sexual harassment or assault to cross-examine their accusers. In its claim, the National Women’s Law Center argues that the regulations, scheduled to take effect on Aug. 14, favor those accused of sexual misconduct and make the process “more intimidating and traumatizing for victims.”

Brooks, another critic of the guidelines, finds that they play “into the hand of this male victimhood narrative.”

In acts of violence where suspects have demonstrated extreme misogyny, women aren’t necessarily the only victims. In addition to Salas’ son, Daniel Anderl, the FBI has tied Den Hollander to the murder in California earlier this month of men’s rights attorney Marc Angelucci.

That aspect of this case reminded Kate Manne, an associate philosophy professor at Cornell University and author of the forthcoming book “Entitled: How Male Privilege Hurts Women,” of another shooting. In 2014, 22-year-old Elliot Rodger killed six people and injured more than a dozen others near the University of California, Santa Barbara. Rodger left behind misogynistic rants that included a video where he vowed “retribution” for women rejecting him. Those murdered included four men.

The cases, Manne told ABC News, showed how “misogyny can really distort someone’s worldview so that they’re a danger to pretty much anyone.”

ABC News’ Aaron Katersky contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.