Mom, stepdad charged in death of Michigan pregnant woman Rebecca Park

Authorities say two family members did their research and created a plan before they brought a pregnant woman into their home, put her into a car and then took her to an area in the northern Michigan woods —  where they forced her on the ground and stabbed her as they cut her baby out of her womb, ultimately causing both of their deaths.

Then, the pair left 22-year-old Rebecca Park there, Wexford County Prosecutor Johanna Carey said during an arraignment on Tuesday, Dec. 2, in Cadillac of Cortney Bartholomew, 40, and Bradly Bartholomew, 47.

The pair,describedby the Cadillac News as Park's biological mother and stepfather, were charged with the following: one count of first-degree premeditated murder and one count of felony murder in connection with Park's death, torture in a place of confinement, conspiracy to commit torture, assault of a pregnant woman with the intention to cause miscarriage or stillbirth, conspiracy to commit that assault and unlawful imprisonment. Both were additionally charged with moving a dead body.

Rebecca Park

"This is, frankly, evil personified," Carey said.

Carey said that Park's baby died. No other details were immediately available after the arraignment. The Wexford County Prosecutor's Office declined to comment after the court hearing.

The office is handling the prosecution with the help of the Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel's office, according to a press release.

An attorney representing Cortney Bartholomew said she was disabled and should have a lower bond and home confinement. Judge Corey Wiggins denied bond for both.

More:Sister, fiancé in custody as Rebecca Park investigation continues

Park was 38 weeks pregnant when she was reported missing Nov. 4. Her body was found in the Huron Manistee National Forest on Nov. 25, but her baby was "not present," authorities had said.

"This case involves a truly horrific homicide in which a young woman and her unborn child endured unimaginable suffering at the hands of the Defendants," Carey in a press release.

"The brutality and disregard for human life displayed here are deeply troubling. While these remain allegations until proven in court, the evidence reflects an extraordinary level of callousness and violence. We look forward to presenting the full facts in court."

It's a case that has bewildered the small-town community in Wexford County, considering police had said they were still looking for the baby as of late last month, even after finding Park's body. Twoother family membershad previously been charged after the tragic family affair: her sister, Kimberly Park, and Richard Falor, who wasreportedlyRebecca Park's fiancé.

Detectives say Kimberly Park lied to authorities, telling them that Cortney Bartholomew had Bradly Bartholomew strike Rebecca Park "in the head causing a seizure and then took her body away,"accordingto the felony complaint filed in Cadillac's district court. She was charged with tampering with evidence in a criminal case, lying to a police officer in violation of a crime investigation and false report of a felony.

Falor was charged with drug crimes and pleaded not guilty in court on Dec. 2.

Dozens of community members, who call themselves "Rebecca's voice,"packed the courtroomTuesday to witness the Bartholomews' arraignments, their cars donning messages like "Say Their Names," "Justice for Becca and Baby Park" and "We are her voice."

A community member writes a message on a car, demanding justice for 22-year-old Rebecca Park on Tuesday, Dec. 2 in the parking lot of the 84th District Court in Cadillac. Andrea May Sahouri, Detroit Free Press

It was close quarters on the small courtroom benches, but as one community member said aloud: "We're all trauma bonded by it anyways."

When Wiggins first read the charges of assault of a pregnant woman with the intent to cause miscarriage or stillbirth, the crowd gasped. Cries followed, especially after the prosecutor described what the Bartholomews are accused of.

Even before Park's body was found, most, if not all, of those in the courtroom have been boots-on-the-ground helpers.

More:Body found in Manistee National Forest confirmed to be pregnant woman

They protested in front of the last place Park was seen — allegedly the Bartholomews' home —  for nearly 12 hours on Nov. 23. They scoured through the woods trying to find her. And now that charges were announced in the killing, they're demanding justice.

When they left the courtroom, "Rebecca's voice" finally let out sobs. Stacey Davis, Bradly Bartholomew's estranged sister, could barely walk. She told the Free Press that Cortney Bartholomew and her brother wanted a baby but couldn't conceive one. Davis also said:

"I'm here for Rebecca and her baby. I'm not here for my brother."

Andrea Sahouri covers criminal justice for the Detroit Free Press. Contact her atasahouri@freepress.com.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press:Mom, stepdad charged in death of Michigan pregnant woman Rebecca Park

Mom, stepdad charged in death of Michigan pregnant woman Rebecca Park

Authorities say two family members did their research and created a plan before they brought a pregnant woman into their ...

I'm fascinated by how many fellow meteorologists I've met over the years mentioned one particular storm that is most memorable to them, which may have sparked their initial interest in meteorology.

Dec. 3, 1990, 35 years ago today, was the most memorable winter storm of my life.

A classic "Panhandle hook" low-pressure system surged northeastward from the Texas Panhandle and generated a blizzard over the upper Midwest, including southern Wisconsin.

In just 24 hours, Madison, Wisconsin, measured 17.3 inches of snow, still its all-time 24-hour snowfall in records dating to 1884. Whipped by strong winds, drifts were as high as 7 feet in the capital city, leaving streets choked with snow and trapped vehicles. Widespread power outages were reported and nine people died from shoveling snow in the Badger State.

At the time, I was a freshman at UW-Madison and trudged through the snow and wind to my two morning classes. As I was walking home up Bascom Hill, I saw Chancellor — and future Health and Human Services secretary — Donna Shalala walking down the hill saying, "Class is canceled." It ended up beingone of the few times since World War IIthat the school shut down.

What's a college student with a snow day to do?

I joined dozens of students using dormitory food hall lunch trays to sled down Observatory Hill. But only for a while — that driving wind and snow was brutal.

Other students went skiing down Bascom Hill. Thisdelightful videochronicled a couple of intrepid students as they somehow drove around campus during the blizzard. Let's just say there were more pedestrians and skiers than motorists.

The snowball fights, the snow football games outside the dorms and the surreal feeling of typical everyday life coming to a halt are among the things I'll forever miss about snow days before the age of the internet

Madison Wisconsin snow

Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been covering national and international weather since 1996. Extreme and bizarre weather are his favorite topics. Reach out to him onBluesky,X (formerly Twitter)andFacebook.

On This Date: Record Snowstorm Shuts Down A University, The Most Memorable Storm Of My Life

I'm fascinated by how many fellow meteorologists I've met over the years mentioned one particular storm that is most memorable to t...
AI companies' safety practices fail to meet global standards, study shows

Dec 3 (Reuters) - The safety practices of majorartificial intelligencecompanies, such as Anthropic,OpenAI, xAI and Meta, ​are "far short of emerging global standards," according to a ‌new edition of Future of Life Institute's AI safety index released on ‌Wednesday.

The institute said the safety evaluation, conducted by an independent panel of experts, found that while the companies were busy racing to develop superintelligence, none had a robust strategy for controlling such ⁠advanced systems.

The study comes ‌amid heightened public concern about the societal impact of smarter-than-human systems capable of reasoning and logical ‍thinking, after several cases of suicide and self-harm were tied to AI chatbots.

"Despite recent uproar over AI-powered hacking and AI driving people to ​psychosis and self-harm, US AI companies remain less regulated ‌than restaurants and continue lobbying against binding safety standards," said Max Tegmark, MIT Professor and Future of Life President.

The AI race also shows no signs of slowing, with major tech companies committing hundreds of billions of dollars to upgrading and expanding ⁠their machine learning efforts.

The Future of ​Life Institute is a non-profit organization ​that has raised concerns about the risks intelligent machines pose to humanity. Founded in 2014, it was ‍supported early on ⁠by Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

In October, a group including scientists Geoffrey Hinton and Yoshua Bengio called for a ban ⁠on developing superintelligent artificial intelligence until the public demands it and science ‌paves a safe way forward.

(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala in ‌Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)

AI companies' safety practices fail to meet global standards, study shows

Dec 3 (Reuters) - The safety practices of majorartificial intelligencecompanies, such as Anthropic,OpenAI, xAI and Meta, ...
Nick Saban's scapegoat for Lane Kiffin's LSU decision is absurd. Here's why

BATON ROUGE, LA – Imagine a college sports world in which the transfer portal didn't exist andnational signing daydidn't occur until after the season.

Now, imagineLSUhad a coaching vacancy in that world.

When would LSU make the hire? Would LSU wait until after the season, and would its top target wait to accept?

We know that wouldn't happen, because we've lived in the world I asked you to imagine. We saw what happened.

In 1999, the college football calendar looked much different. The transfer portal didn't exist. Neither did a December signing period. The lone signing period occurred in February, after the season.

And what happened in 1999?

Well, on Nov. 30 that year, LSU announced it had poached a gentleman named Nicholas Lou Saban Jr. from Michigan State to be its coach.

This fella named Saban — have you heard of him? — accepted the job, quit on his 10th-ranked Michigan State team, and vamoosed to Baton Rouge before the postseason.

"I mean, what about the bowl game?"one Michigan State student said to ESPNafter Saban's exit.

Pfft. You think Saban cared about the Citrus Bowl? He had a better job on the line. Adios!

Fast-forward 26 years to the day, and LSU hired a gentleman namedLane Kiffinon Nov. 30. Heard of him?

News media arrive before a press conference by LSU's new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. A sign is seen before a press conference by LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin is introduced at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025.

See Lane Kiffin's LSU introductory press conference in Baton Rouge

Kiffin, like his mentor Saban before him, hopped on a plane instead of staying put and coaching in the postseason.

So, when Saban and Kiffinblame the college football calendarfor this situation of a coach bolting for a new job rather than staying put and coaching in the postseason, you must realize they're absolutely full of it.

Only a sheep would believe the GOAT that the calendar is responsible and that some magical coaching carousel ethics would leap out of the weeds, if only the portal dates got shifted and the signing period got bumped back.

If the calendar was constructed differently, do you know whenthe Tigers would have hired Kiffinto replace Brian Kelly, whom LSU fired on Oct. 26?

"I would anticipate they would be making the hire in virtually this exact same time frame," said one Power Four athletic director, granted anonymity to speak on the realities of the hiring cycle. "I do agree the calendar is a problem, but, even with a change, it wouldn't impact the hiring time frame."

We can debate the pros and cons of a December signing period or whether shifting the portal from January to May would be a good idea.

But, don't kid yourself that making any of those changes would have stopped LSU from hiring Kiffin ASAP or stopped Kiffin from choosing the Tigers instead ofOle Missand the playoff.

Don't let yourself be distracted by Saban trying to provide Kiffin some cover by blaming this on the mean, mean calendar that coaches and their bosses helped create.

"We shouldn't have an early signing date that conflicts with people wanting to hire an early coach, a portal situation where you've got to hire an early coach, fire your coach early," Saban said recently on ESPN, while ignoring his history of leaving Michigan State for LSU in November.

"So, if we did all that in May, … we wouldn't have all these issues."

You've got to be kidding me, right? I'd like to meet this magical genie who will suddenly appear and solve college football's bankruptcy of ethics, if only the portal window and signing period shifted to May.

Otherpunditsparroted Saban's messagingfaulting the calendar. Kiffin latched onto the propaganda, too.

"It's a bad scheduling system of how it's set up," Kiffin said at his LSU introduction.

Do you really believe if the calendar was different, LSU would have let interim coach Frank Wilson ply his trade for three months while waiting until after the season to hire Kiffin, and risk someone else swooping in first?

Not a chance.

You could change the calendar, and sure as the sun rises on the Bayou, schools would keep trying to hire their next coach as swiftly as possible after firing their last coach, even if it means trampling on Michigan State's 1999 bowl team or Mississippi's playoff squad.

TheSpartans, by the way, won the Citrus Bowl without Saban.

Just in case Kiffin was wondering.

The real change inside college football since Saban's heel turn is not the calendar, but rather the creation of a 12-team College Football Playoff.

Coaches used to accept new jobs and skip out on bowls. Now, Kiffin has become the first coach to swap the playoff for a step up the perceived food chain.

If the 12-team playoff had been in place in 1999, I wonder whether Kiffin would be making this history. Or, would history of a playoff-skipping coach already have been made?

The 1999 Spartans would have qualified for a 12-team playoff, and when Saban boarded a plane bound for LSU, he would've been fast at work engineering a scapegoat to blame for the predicament his ego and ambitions created.

Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Nick Saban, Lane Kiffin blame CFB calendar for chaos. I'm not buying it

Nick Saban's scapegoat for Lane Kiffin's LSU decision is absurd. Here's why

BATON ROUGE, LA – Imagine a college sports world in which the transfer portal didn't exist andnational signing daydid...
Australia and New Zealand drawn into same group at 2027 Rugby World Cup

SYDNEY (AP) — Host Australia and three-time champion New Zealand were drawn into the same group Wednesday for the expanded Rugby World Cup in 2027, with the group winner likely to meetdefending champion South Africain the quarterfinals.

Australia was placed into Pool A from the second band of teams that were ranked from seventh to 12th.

No. 2-ranked New Zealand was the last team pulled out in the draw by World Rugby chairman Brett Robinson. They'll be joined by Chile and Hong Kong in the group stage.

South Africa was drawn into Pool B with Italy, Georgia and Romania.

The result means the2023 finalistscould meet in the quarterfinals, if both the Springboks and the All Blacks top their groups.

England, winner of the last Rugby World Cup staged in Australia in 2003, was drawn into Pool F with Wales, Tonga and Zimbabwe.

The field was expanded to 24 teams for the 2027 tournament, which kicks off in Perth on Oct. 1 and culminates in aNov. 13 final in Sydney.

The teams were divided into four bands of six based on World Rugby rankings at the time of the draw. Each of the six pools contain one team from each of the four bands.

The Australians, World Cup winners in 1991 and '99 and runners-up the last time the tournament was played Down Under in 2003, missed a seeding in the top six after their firstwinless November tour to Europesince 1958.

Australia, which missed the quarterfinals for the first time ever in a disastrous 2023 campaign in France under Eddie Jones, was ranked seventh and placed with Fiji, Scotland, Italy, Georgia and Wales.

No. 6 Argentina was drawn into Pool C with Fiji, Spain and Canada, while three-time finalist France will face Japan, the United States and Samoa in Pool E. Ireland is in Pool D with Scotland, Uruguay and Portugal.

The addition of four teams means the tournament will have a Round of 16 for the first time, a stage that World Rugby chairman Robinson predicted "brings greater jeopardy, earlier knockout drama, and even more entertainment from the opening matches."

AP rugby:https://apnews.com/hub/rugby

Australia and New Zealand drawn into same group at 2027 Rugby World Cup

SYDNEY (AP) — Host Australia and three-time champion New Zealand were drawn into the same group Wednesday for the expande...
Chris Paul says the Clippers are sending him home from their road trip in a shocking late-night move

Chris Paul says the Los Angeles Clippers are sending him home from their road trip, putting a shocking twist on what is expected to be the veteran point guard's final NBA season.

"Just Found Out I'm Being Sent Home," Paul posted on social media at around 3 a.m. Wednesday morning, adding a peace emoji.

The struggling Clippers are in Atlanta for a road game against the Hawks on Wednesday night.Los Angeles lost at Miamion Monday night to fall to 5-16in a wildly disappointing start to the season.

The 40-year-old Paul is playing his 21st NBA season, andhe strongly hinted last monththat it will be his last. The 12-time All-Star and two-time Olympic gold medalist has earned four All-NBA first team selections, and he ranks second in NBA history with 12,552 assists. He was the first player to score at least 20,000 points while recording at least 10,000 assists.

He became arguably the most accomplished player in Clippers franchise history while leading the team to six winning seasons from 2011-17, including the Clippers' first two Pacific Division titles and three playoff series victories. Paul returned to Los Angeles as a free agent last July, rejoining a franchise where he is loved by fans while having an outside chance to contend for his first championship alongside Kawhi Leonard and James Harden.

Lawrence Frank, the Clippers' top basketball executive, issued a statement confirming Paul's departure to several media outlets early Wednesday. He indicated the Clippers will attempt to trade Paul, who signed a $3.6 million deal to return to LA.

"We are parting ways with Chris, and he will no longer be a part of the team," Frank said. "We will work with him on the next step of his career. Chris is a legendary Clipper who has had a historic career. I want to make one thing very clear. No one is blaming Chris for our underperformance. I accept responsibility for the record we have right now. There are a lot of reasons why we've struggled. We're grateful for the impact Chris has made on the franchise."

Paul hasn't spoken to reporters since he strongly hinted at retirement while the Clippers were back in his native North Carolina. But he acknowledged a video retrospective of his career played by the Clippers during a timeout at Intuit Dome last week. The video ended with "Congratulations, Point God" on the screen.

Paul couldn't really be blamed for the Clippers' profound struggles this season because he hasn't played much.

He is averaging 2.6 points and 3.3 assists while playing just 14.3 minutes per game — all career lows — and he didn't play at all in five straight games in mid-November. Paul had eight points and three assists while playing 15 minutes against the Heat in what turned out to be his final game with the team — a game in which Harden and other starters were effectively benched, in the latest sign of discord for coach Tyronn Lue's team.

The Clippers are on a five-game skid, and they're tied with Sacramento for the second-worst record in the Western Conference heading into Wednesday's games. Leonard has been limited to 10 games by injuries, and they've already lost guard Bradley Beal to season-ending hip surgery.

The Clippers' streak of 14 consecutive winning seasons is the longest active streak in the NBA, but owner Steve Ballmer's club has yet to show signs of contention this season — and now they're going forward without a historically talented point guard and franchise favorite.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/NBA

Chris Paul says the Clippers are sending him home from their road trip in a shocking late-night move

Chris Paul says the Los Angeles Clippers are sending him home from their road trip, putting a shocking twist on what is e...
Jake Rosenberg/Netflix  Meghan Markle in Netflix's 'With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebration'

Jake Rosenberg/Netflix

NEED TO KNOW

  • Meghan Markle demonstrates a beloved British Christmas tradition in her new Netflix holiday special

  • In the hour-long episode, streaming now, Meghan makes her own Christmas crackers, a paper toy that snaps when pulled at both ends, revealing a sweet treat or prize

  • The royal family has long included crackers as part of their holiday festivities, with Meghan saying it feels 'really connected and sweet'

Meghan Markleis keeping at least one British Christmas tradition alive for her family.

The Duchess of Sussex's Netflix special,With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebration, dropped on Wednesday, Dec. 3. In the festive hour-long episode, Meghan shares some of her favorite tips and tricks for entertaining and celebrating over the holidays with a host of famous friends.

During one segment, Meghan, 44, is joined by restaurateur Will Guidara, who co-founded the NoMad chain of restaurants. The pair sits down in the craft room of Meghan's rented Montecito, Calif. home where she films her series, to make Christmas crackers, a beloved British tradition.

Crackers consist of a cardboard tube covered in festive wrapping, tied off at both ends. When the ends are pulled, a friction-reactive strip of paper within the cracker "snaps," creating a loud sound as it splits in two, revealing a sweet treat or message, and, traditionally, a paper crown for the winner to wear.

"Living in the U.K., it's just such a big part of [ the culture over there]," Meghan shares with Guidara. "Typically, people cross their arms and do it. They sit around the table, and they all pull at the same time...It does feel really connected and sweet. The way that I started to know them was that they would always have a fortune cookie-sized joke or riddle and something sweet [inside]."

Netflix/YouTube Meghan Markle and Will Guidara pull Christmas crackers in 'With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebration'

Netflix/YouTube

Meghan experienced two royal family Christmases at Sandringham — in 2017, after her engagement to Harry, and again in 2018, during the early years of their marriage. They spent the 2019 holidays in Canada, shortly before the couple stepped back from royal duties in 2020.

The royal family has long embraced Christmas crackers as part of their holiday traditions. British manufacturer Tom Smithboasts of being the inventor of the noveltiesin 1847, and, since 1906, has held a royal warrant to supply Christmas crackers and wrapping paper to the royal family. (The lateQueen Elizabethreportedly loved to read the corny jokes found inside aloud at the royal family's Christmas lunch at Sandringham.)

Ontheir website, the brand states, "Tom Smith still proudly hold the honour of producing special crackers each year for the Royal Household, although designs and contents are a closely guarded secret."

Ben Birchall/WPA Pool/Getty Queen Elizabeth is shown how Christmas crackers are made during a visit to International Greetings UK Ltd in Ystrad Mynach, Wales, in April 2014

Ben Birchall/WPA Pool/Getty

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For her homemade crackers, Meghan added a personal touch for each member of her family. Harry's has "a little love letter, a chocolate and little hat," while the cracker forPrince Archie, 6, centers on two of his favorite things: hamburgers and the color red.

As forPrincess Lilibet, 4, her mother indulges one of her current interests. "Lili really likes trying to be a grown-up lady at the moment, so this is like a lavender roller ball," Meghan says in the special.

Meghan and Guidara even try their hands at a test cracker, which Guidara "wins," pulling the larger half of the tube that includes the confetti and prizes.

Jake Rosenberg/Netflix Meghan Markle and Will Guidara make Christmas crackers in 'With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebration'

Jake Rosenberg/Netflix

With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebrationalso features appearances fromtennis champion Naomi Osaka, chef andTop ChefjudgeTom Colicchio, Meghan'sclose friend Kelly McKee Zajfenand her longtime friend andauthor-producer Lindsay Roth.

"I love the holiday season," the Duchess of Sussex says in the trailer, which she first shared last month. "It's about finding time to connect with the people we love, embracing traditions and making new ones."

Jake Rosenberg/Netflix Meghan Markle in 'With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebration'

Jake Rosenberg/Netflix

In the special, she visits a Christmas tree farm, prepares Christmas goodies for visiting friends, and shows off some of her DIY gift-wrapping techniques. Prince Harry makes a brief cameo,sharing a sweet kisswith his wife towards the end of the special as he helps himself to some of the treats in their kitchen.

The special coincides with the release of thefirst holiday collectionfrom Meghan's lifestyle brand, As ever. The new launch includes sparkling wines, hand-poured candles, artisanal fruit spreads and golden California honey — several of which appear in theHoliday Celebrationtrailer as part of her hosting spread.

With Love, Meghan: Holiday Celebrationis streaming now on Netflix.

Read the original article onPeople

Meghan Markle Reveals the Royal-Favorite Christmas Tradition She Still Keeps Alive in California

Jake Rosenberg/Netflix NEED TO KNOW Meghan Markle demonstrates a beloved British Christmas tradition in her new Netflix holiday special I...

 

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