Shooting at Connecticut mall leaves 5 injured; person of interest in custody: PoliceNew Foto - Shooting at Connecticut mall leaves 5 injured; person of interest in custody: Police

Five people were injured in a shooting at a mall in Waterbury, Connecticut on Tuesday, May 27, and police told USA TODAY that a person of interest was in custody. Waterbury police Chief Fernando Spagnolo said at a news briefing that five people were shot at the Brass Mill Center. The victims had non-life-threatening injuries as of Tuesday night, according to a statement from the Waterbury Police Department obtained by USA TODAY. The department said the shooting appears to have stemmed from a dispute that escalated into gunfire. "We do not believe this is a random act of violence," Spagnolo said at the news briefing. "We believe this started as a conflict and it escalated." In apost on X, Connecticut Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont said the shooting at the mall was "tragic." "This afternoon, there was a tragic mass shooting at the Bass Mill Center in Waterbury, a place where everyone should feel safe. We are grateful to law enforcement, who acted swiftly," he said. Witness Javon Turnertold CBS Newsthat he heard the gunshots. "A girl got shot. She was losing a lot of blood," he said. "It was crazy, and I tell everybody, 'Get out of here, let's go.' I tried to get everybody out of here in safety." The department said that there is no ongoing threat to the public and a press conference with Spagnolo, Lamont and Waterbury Mayor Paul Pernerewski Jr. is set for 10:45 a.m. ET. This is a developing story. Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at fernando.cervantes@gannett.com and follow him on X @fern_cerv_. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Shooting at Connecticut mall leaves 5 injured: Police

Shooting at Connecticut mall leaves 5 injured; person of interest in custody: Police

Shooting at Connecticut mall leaves 5 injured; person of interest in custody: Police Five people were injured in a shooting at a mall in Wat...
6 tons of cocaine seized from "narco sub" and buried stashes, videos show

Authorities seized more than six tons of cocaine from a semi-submersible vessel — a so-called "narco sub" — and from two underground hiding places discovered in Colombia, the country's navyannouncedthis week. Officials released video of thenarco subbeing intercepted off the country's Pacific coast, as well as video showing officers and a sniffer dog locating stashes of cocaine that were buried underground. The navy also released an image of more than 100 packages of the alleged narcotics laid out on the shore next to a military boat. Officials said the street value of the seized cocaine was estimated to be about $300 million. En#Nariño, a bordo de un semisumergible y en dos caletas subterráneas, incautadas más de 6️⃣ toneladas de cocaína avaluadas en 3️⃣0️⃣0️⃣ millones de dólares.pic.twitter.com/Mp7Tlhm8qf — Fuerza Naval del Pacífico (@FNP_ArmadaCol)May 24, 2025 The navy said the narcotics were intercepted in Narino, a region on the Pacific coast of Colombia bordering Ecuador. They did not say how many people were arrested or where they believe the haul of drugs on the semi-submersible was headed. A day earlier,Colombia's navy saidforces had seized about three tons of narcotics in the Pacific Ocean that were headed to Central America. Some of the drugs were intercepted after navy ships chased a "vessel moving suspiciously," authorities said, and three people were arrested. The drugs were worth an estimated $97 million. Narco subs typically sit very low on the ocean's surface but cannot go fully underwater. They are popular among international drug traffickers because they can often elude detection by authorities. Though commonly caught off the coast of Colombia, which produces the majority of cocaine found in the world, narco subs have been spotted across the globe in recent months. In March, Portuguese police said forces had confiscated nearly6.5 tonsof cocaine from a semi-submersible vessel off the remote Azores archipelago that was bound for the Iberian peninsula. In January, a suspected narco sub broke in two pieces as afishing boat was towingit to a port in northwest Spain. In November 2024, theMexican navy saidit seized about 8,000 pounds of cocaine aboard a semi-submersible about 150 miles off the resort ofAcapulco. Two months before that, the U.S. Coast Guard said it had offloaded more than $54 million worth of cocaine  — including over1,200 poundsof drugs that were seized from a narco sub. Trump delivers Memorial Day remarks at Arlington National Cemetery SpaceX loses contact with its Starship, spins out of control Elon Musk says Trump's "big, beautiful bill" undermines work of DOGE team

6 tons of cocaine seized from "narco sub" and buried stashes, videos show

6 tons of cocaine seized from "narco sub" and buried stashes, videos show Authorities seized more than six tons of cocaine from a ...
These parents are 'unschooling' their kids. What does that mean?New Foto - These parents are 'unschooling' their kids. What does that mean?

The days are about to look very different for most parents in a few weeks as schools let out for the summer. But for Christina Franco, 39, summer days in her upstate New York home are no different than any other day during the school year because her five kids are "unschooled." Instead of going to traditional school or following a homeschool curriculum, Franco's children decide what they want to learn every day. For her three younger children, who are 5, 6 and 9, that typically means playing outside for most of the day. For her 13-year-old, it means drawing or practicing the drums for hours a day. Her 17-year-old is preparing for graduation while working as a lifeguard. Whenever her kids are ready to learn, Franco plans a lesson or a field trip to museums, historical sites or mountains nearby. But there are no grades, no tests and no curriculum. "My goal for them is for them to love learning," Franco said. "It's realizing you can educate your child beyond the school model." Unschooling videos have amassed millions of views on social media as fascination with the educational movement grows. Even Kourtney Kardashian said sending kids to school felt "so dated" while speaking with her sisterduring a recent episode of the "Khloe in Wonder" Land podcast.Some parents say their children are thriving in the unschooling environment, fueling their confidence and desire to learn. But not all students find success in unschooling. Some former students say the lack of structure and accountability can lead to educational neglect if parents don't have the resources to make it work. Some kids who were unschooled feel they were left unprepared for adulthood and had fewer career opportunities. "It takes an incredible amount of time, resources and energy to do it well and there is an equity problem to that," said Jonah Stewart, interim executive director of the Coalition for Responsible Home Education, who was homeschooled. "While we see many important and very beneficial uses for (home education), there are situations where it can be used for neglect and abuse." Self-directed education, commonly known as unschooling, is a form of homeschooling that is based on activities and life experiences chosen by the child, according to the Alliance for Self-Directed Learning (ASDE), a non-profit dedicated to increasing awareness and accessibility to unschooling. Education experts say parents and caregivers unschool differently. Some take a few pages from the homeschooling curriculum and carve out lessons for their children. Others attend micro-schools or "free schools," where unschooled children are grouped together in a "nature school" or "outside school" under the guide of parents or teachers, said Daniel Hamlin, associate professor of education policy at the University of Oklahoma. Some parents dive into unschooling with no structure and don't initiate any semblance of traditional education unless explicitly asked by their children. "The thing we all have in common in unschooling is that the young person is in charge and has the autonomy of what it looks like and the parent is the support and guide," said Bria Bloom, staff member and organizer at ASDE. She was unschooled growing up and is now unschooling her two children, who are 14 and 2. There are various reasons why parents and caregivers decide to unschool their children. Many say it's to shield them from the bullying and violence that sometimes play out in a traditional educational setting. Some don't want their children to be forced into learning things they don't find interesting. Others say they don't trust educators to focus on their children if they have special learning needs. While some parents claim unschooling produces happier students, Hamline said more research is needed. "People come into this topic with their own biases in mind. People have these presuppositions about whether it's good or bad and the reality is that it's a very dynamic and diverse sector of American education," Hamline said. "There's all this change happening and there isn't a lot of good data to lean heavily into one perspective or the other." Unschooling may work for some families but some argue it's also vulnerable to unintended consequences such as abuse and educational neglect. Erin Lauraine, 42, was unschooled throughout her childhood and adolescence in Las Vegas, Nevada. Although her parents called it "homeschooling," she said there was no curriculum, benchmarks, tests or progress reports. Instead of schoolwork, Lauraine filled her day with doing household chores, watching cartoons and working at her parents' manufacturing plant. It was "absolutely" educational neglect, she said. "It took me a long time to admit that," said Lauraine, who now lives in Dallas, Texas. "I was denied access to an education and denied access at an age when my brain was primed to learn." Laws to prevent abuse and neglect when a child is educated at home, whether it's unschooling or homeschooling, vary widely from state to state, said Stewart, from the Coalition for Responsible Home Education. In New York, Franco is required to notify the superintendent of the intent to homeschool, compose and file instruction plans and turn in quarterly reports about her unschooled her children. But about a dozen statesdon't have any safety nets to ensure a child receives a proper education, Stewart said. Parents aren't required to notify the school, provide instruction plans or send in regular assessments. Families can also skirt around state laws by enrolling children in certain "umbrella schools," which offer a way for parents to meet compulsory attendance laws, Stewart said. While some umbrella schools can help with recordkeeping and submitting state paperwork, most don't provide academic oversight or accountability. The lack of check-ins with the student or family also makes it harder to provide social services, Stewart said. "A lot of social services work is predicated on continued engagement," she said. "When the opportunity for contact is foreclosed, the odds of that family receiving the intervention it needs are lower." While Franco's oldest son flourished academically, she said the social pressures of middle school weighed him down and eroded his confidence. That weight lifted once her son left traditional schooling in seventh grade and began unschooling. After graduating, Franco's son plans on taking a gap year to figure out his next chapter. He's considering an apprenticeship as a mechanic or college for a mechanical engineering degree. "I encouraged him that he doesn't need to make the decision, right now," Franco said. "He realized he can learn anything he wants to learn." While her son's future appears full of possibilities, Lauraine and other former unschooling students felt lost entering adulthood. Lauraine knew how to operate a blowtorch and balance her parents' checkbook, but she didn't know who she was and what she wanted to do with her life. Adulthood "was pretty terrifying," she said. "It was really trial and error trying to figure something out," she said. "(My parents) prioritized the practical experience but didn't understand the psychological consequences of adulthood-type exposures on kids and the meaning put into those experiences." Lauraine eventually got her GED when she was 35, which she said was an emotional experience, and graduated this year with her bachelor's degree in behavioral science. She commends parents who want to take a proactive role in their child's education, but advocates for stronger state regulations to prevent educational neglect. "My entire life is being a late bloomer," Lauraine said. "I don't believe my parents are bad people. I believe that their intentions, while they were good, were really shortsighted." Adrianna Rodriguez can be reached at adrodriguez@usatoday.com. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Unschooling movement is growing but is it good for kids?

These parents are 'unschooling' their kids. What does that mean?

These parents are 'unschooling' their kids. What does that mean? The days are about to look very different for most parents in a few...
Witnesses say Sean 'Diddy' Combs broke the law for decades. Why didn't they say anything?New Foto - Witnesses say Sean 'Diddy' Combs broke the law for decades. Why didn't they say anything?

NEW YORK ― When celebrity lawyer Perry Sanders Jr. finally deposedSean "Diddy" Combsabout a bloody rap music turf battle that had killed two of its biggest stars in 1996 and 1997, the young music impresario wasn't very helpful. Although not quite so forthcoming with information, Combs was, not surprisingly, disarmingly personable and offered something else instead. "When it was over, we sat there just the two of us in that conference room, and he was eating tomato soup as he was training for a marathon," Sanders told USA TODAY. "He offered me a cup, and said, 'Don't say I never gave you anything!'" As hisfederal sex crimes trialenters its third week now, a parade of witnesses has detailed a shocking level of violence that Combs allegedly inflicted onlongtime girlfriend Casandra "Cassie" Ventura Fine, including head kicks, scar-inducing beatings and dragging her by her hair. But, as Sanders recalled, Combs could also be quite charming when he wanted, or needed, to be. Diddy's sexual assault lawsuits:A timeline of alleged incidents, 1991 to 2024 Prosecutors have told jurors the violence was part of an alleged sex trafficking and criminal racketeering enterprise led by Combs thatbegan in 2008, in part to shield him from outside scrutiny. Court records and victim claims show the Bad Boy Records founder was accused of similarsexual violence and predatory behavior as far back as 1990, as he was first making a name for himself in the music business. So why wasn't significant legal action taken until last year? "People that want to keep secrets have surrounded themselves with other people that were willing to keep their secrets for generations, probably from Biblical times onward," said Sanders, who said he has known Combs and many others at the highest levels of the music business for decades. Diddy on trial newsletter: Step inside the courtroom with USA TODAY as Sean 'Diddy' Combs faces sex crimes and trafficking charges.Subscribe to the newsletter. Sanders, a Colorado lawyer who has worked on Michael Jackson's estate, says Combs' case isn't an outlier, but rather a case study in how powerful men like Combs can stay protected by lawyers, assistants, publicists, stylists, security and even random bystanders who suspected or witnessed something but looked away, stayed silent or were paid to forget what happened. Why didn't we listen?These women spoke out about Diddy years ago. Ventura Fine finally came forward in November 2023, filing a lawsuit alleging that Combs kept her locked in the abusive relationship through frequent beatings, coercion, control over her career and blackmail. That, she alleged, included threats to release explicit sex tapes of her engaging in marathon sex sessions known as "freak offs" with paid sex workers. Within 24 hours, Combs and Ventura Fine settled the case "amicably" with Combs declaring his innocence. Privately, he paid her $20 million and reportedly required her to sign a non-disclosure agreement barring her from speaking publicly of the allegations again. But Ventura Fine's lawsuit opened the floodgates. Cassie alleges horrific abuse by Diddy.Why survivors see themselves in her story. Dozens more accusers have come forward, and in September, the Justice Department's Manhattan office unsealed a federal indictment that could send the Bad Boy Records founder to prison for life. Combs, 55, isfacing charges of sex trafficking, transportation to engage in prostitution andracketeering, which consists of directing an illegal enterprise under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, known as RICO. He haspleaded not guilty to all charges. In court, his defense lawyer, Teny Geragos, said prosecutors are trying to twist his romantic relationships with Ventura Fine and others into a federal racketeering and sex trafficking case where none exists. "Sean Combs is a complicated man, but this is not a complicated case," Geragos told jurors. "This case is about voluntary choices made by capable adults in consensual relationships." Legal and law enforcement experts say Combs is not the first major celebrity to face justice years, or even decades, after their crimes allegedly began being committed. That's often the case even when their alleged behavior was anything but secret within their rarified circles. Music mogul R. Kelly and former Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein are now serving long prison terms for sex and coercion crimes similar to those Combs has been charged with. (Weinstein is currentlybeing retried on chargesof first-degree criminal sexual act andthird-degree rape in New York.) Like Combs, they surrounded themselves with people who did not report what they witnessed to the relevant authorities out of a mixture of admiration, fear and their self-interest, Sanders and other experts told USA TODAY. On May 27, Capricorn Clark – a personal assistant who worked in various other roles for Combs and his businesses from 2004 to 2012, then again in 2016 – spent the entire day on the stand testifying about Combs' violent and threatening nature, and his manipulative side as well. More:Diddy's ex-employee says music executive warned her 'to leave Puff alone' Clark told the jury thatCombs kidnapped her at gunpointin 2011 and threatened her, Ventura Fine and a rapper she wasdating named Scott Mescudi(aka Kid Cudi) if they told authorities about how Combs had broken into Mescudi's house in a jealous rage. Referring to Combs as Puff, Clark said he came to her home holding a gun and demanded she get dressed because "we're going to kill (Kid) Cudi." But under cross examination, Clark confirmed she kept coming back to work for Combs in various positions, and that she even discussed joining his top management team after authorities searched his Los Angeles and Miami mansions in March 2024 in connection with the current case. In dramatic and tearful testimony, she acknowledged that despite his threats, "I wanted my life back," working with Combs and his team at the top of the rap music and fashion worlds. "I wanted people to see I was a valuable person. I wasn't disposable," Clark said, sobbing. "In this business, he held all the power over me." To that end, Clark also confirmed she refused to talk to Los Angeles police and fire investigatorsabout who set fire to Mescudi's Porschemonths after Combs found out the rapper was dating Ventura Fine during a fraught part of their own relationship. Sanders found himself up against a similar wall of silence when suing the city of Los Angeles in 2007 for wrongful death in the 1997 slaying of Combs' friend and Bad Boy Records rapper Christopher Wallace. Wallace, a protégé of Combs who recorded under the name Notorious B.I.G. or Biggie Smalls, was gunned down amid a bloody turf war between Combs and his New York-based Bad Boy Records and Marion "Suge" Knight and his West Coast rival, Death Row Records. Tupac Shakur, a rising star on Knight's label, was killed in a drive-by six months earlier. But penetrating the human layers of protection surrounding both Combs and Knight to get to the truth − including alleged police corruption and a cover-up − was anything but easy, Sanders recalls. More:50 Cent, Diddy fight spills into court as former assistant reveals long-running feud Phil Carson, the FBI agent investigating Wallace's murder, agrees. Carson, who retired in 2017, said it was extremely difficult – even in the early stages of Combs' rise to stardom – to get past the wall of employees, friends, enablers and others who might have been witness to potential crimes and music business dynamics but who chose to look the other way or forget key details. Britney Spears, Michael B. Jordan, more:All the celebs mentioned during the Diddy trial "You've got to remember that when Diddy was first taking off, in terms of his popularity and the people he was rubbing shoulders with, he wasthe man," Carson told USA TODAY. "And people will do anything and everything to attach themselves to somebody like that, not just for immediate financial reasons but to try to jettison their careers." Carson, who has been following the testimony in Combs' current trial, says he sees many parallels between how those at the highest levels of the music industry operated then and now. "It's very easy for people just starting off in the industry to just kind of turn a blind eye and just say, hey, that's none of my business. I'm here to do my job. I'm just going to kind of not say anything or get involved," Carson said. "Not to say that I agree with that, because I don't. But I understand why people may think that way." In Combs' current case, some of the witnesses testified that, like Ventura Fine herself, they were terrified of the rap mogul because of his propensity for violence and retribution. Former male stripper Daniel Phillip, paid by Combs to have sex with Ventura Fine during marathon sex "freak offs," said he witnessed so many violent assaults that he discreetly pleaded with her to leave Combs. EXCLUSIVE:Civil suit against Sean 'Diddy' Combs had fabricated rape kit evidence Phillip said he was "shocked and terrified" after one incident in which Combs threw a glass at Ventura Fine and dragged her by the hair from one room to another. But he didn't intervene, he testified, because "it was going through my head that if I tried to do something, I might lose my life." Israel Florez, a hotel security guard, told jurors he intervened after a now-infamous 2016 incident in which Combs beat and kicked Ventura Fine as she tried to enter an elevator at a Los Angeles area hotel. Closed-circuit video of the assault, first released by CNN, went viral and was shown to jurors. When escorting Combs back to his room, Florez testified, the mogul offered him a stack of money in exchange for staying silent about the altercation. He said he declined the offer. And while Florez filed a hotel incident report, he said he didn't call the police because Ventura Fine didn't want him to. Many of the others who have testified were much closer to the often-fraught dynamic between Combs and Ventura Fine than Florez. They too didn't act on their concerns. Celebrity makeup artist Mylah Morales, who had worked for both Ventura Fine and Combs, said she awoke once to hear Combs screaming andattacking Cassie in the next room of their Beverly Hills hotel suite. Content warning:See photos prosecutors released of injuries to Diddy's ex-girlfriend, Cassie Ventura Fine Despite seeing Ventura Fine with a swollen eye, busted lip and knots on her head, she said she didn't call the police – or bring up the incident to either of them. "I feared for my life. Because if he could do that to her …" Morales testified, before being cut off by an objection from Combs' lawyers. Some of the most compelling testimony has come from former Combs former personal assistant,George Kaplan. Kaplan testified that Combs brutally attacked Ventura Fine during a crowded flight to Las Vegas on his private jet in 2015, and that he heard screams and the sound of shattering glass coming from the jet's bedroom. There was a "tremendous commotion," Kaplan testified, and Ventura Fine screamed, "Isn't anybody seeing this?" No one else on the plane, including Combs' ever-present security staff, did anything to help Cassie, Kaplan said. And he looked away out of fear for his budding career. Diddy trial replay:Former aide George Kaplan says Combs threatened his job "I was 23 years old," Kaplan testified. "All I wanted to do was have a great job in the entertainment industry." Similar acts of violence made Kaplan quit, ultimately, he said, adding that he was "tremendously" shaken by the plane incident and "felt an element of guilt for not stopping it." But even now, a decade later, he said, "I desperately did not want to come here," and only took the stand because he had no choice but to obey a Justice Department subpoena. Danity Kane singer Dawn Richard, who recorded music with Combs and for Bad Boy Records, said she witnessed Combs kicking, punching and dragging Ventura Fine by the hair. Who is Dawn Richard?Danity Kane singer testifying in Diddy trial about alleged abuse More witnesses are expected to testify about acts of violence that were seen by many others but never reported, or even questioned. A Los Angeles Fire Department arson investigator and a Los Angeles Police officer are expected to take the stand as early as today to testify about how Clark refused to assist them in their investigation into who firebombed Mescudi's car and the threats to Mescudi that Combs allegedly made. "I did not want to be involved in any of this any longer," Clark testified on May 27 as to why she refused to cooperate. Later, she told the jury she also "felt like somewhat of a protector of Puff." AndKristina Khorram, Combs' longtime chief of staff for his many business ventures, could be called as well. Khorram, whom Combs once called his "right hand," has been named as a defendant in at least three civil suits. More:Sean 'Diddy' Combs' 'right hand' breaks her silence following sex trafficking claims So might a Bad Boy Records executive who was mentioned, but not by name, by witness David James, another former Combs personal assistant. James, who said Ventura Fine told him she couldn't leave Combs because he controlled her money and her career, tearfully began his testimony last week by describing his hiring process and a remark made by the executive. "This is Mr. Combs' kingdom," the executive told James, he said, "and we are all here to serve in it." If you are a survivor of sexual assault,RAINNoffers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656.HOPE (4673) andHotline.RAINN.organd en EspañolRAINN.org/es. Josh Meyer is a veteran correspondent focusing on domestic, national and global security issues, including transnational criminal organizations.Reach him atJMeyer@usatoday.com.Follow him on X at @JoshMeyerDC and Bluesky at @joshmeyerdc.bsky.social. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Why people stayed silent about Sean 'Diddy' Combs' criminal behavior

Witnesses say Sean 'Diddy' Combs broke the law for decades. Why didn't they say anything?

Witnesses say Sean 'Diddy' Combs broke the law for decades. Why didn't they say anything? NEW YORK ― When celebrity lawyer Perry...
The Shocking Confession a 'General Hospital' Co-Star Made to Genie FrancisNew Foto - The Shocking Confession a 'General Hospital' Co-Star Made to Genie Francis

AGeneral Hospitalco-star had a shocking confession forGenie Francis, who plays Laura Collins on the daytime soap. Genie Francis has portrayed Laura Sullivan Vining Webber Baldwin Spencer Collins onGeneral Hospitalfor 48 years. She is one half of Luke (Anthony Geary) & Laura, the most well-known soap opera supercouple, and their TV wedding still holds the record for the highest-rated hour in daytime soap history. She has been nominated for 5Daytime Emmy Awards, winning one in 2007 forOutstanding Supporting Actress in a Daytime Series.Aside fromGeneral Hospital, she has also appeared onHotel,Days of our Lives,Loving, All My Children, andThe Young & the Restless. She is daytime royalty. Recently, her co-star of 32 years,Maurice Benard, who plays Sonny Corinthos, shared a shocking confession he had made to Francis after filming some scenes with her withWoman's World. "One time we did this scene on a couch, and I told her after we finished that there was a moment that I kind of wanted to make out—not in an unclassy way, but in a way where it felt like I needed so much comfort," he told the outlet. "I'm not saying they should put us together or anything, but I just respect Genie a hell of a lot, and in the scenes, there's a lot of love. It's just very sweet, man." For her part, Francis recently revealed in an interview withTV Insiderhow much she loves working with Benard, "I have to say, without question, he's my favorite person to work with," she shared. "There's a comfort there that is unexplainable. The only other time I felt it was with Tony Geary. I just feel safe and when I work with him. He reminds me of how beautiful our profession of acting can be, and it makes me love it again. He's that kind of actor, and I just feel so lucky when I get to work with him." 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 Could GH put these two long-time friends and sometimes adversaries together romantically? Benard told fans in a recentInstagram Livethat he didn't think the show would go there with them, but you never know with daytime! "GH is both the longest-running scripted drama and the longest-running American soap opera currently in production. GH continues its tradition of passion, intrigue, and adventure that has depicted the ongoing lives of the diverse and evolving citizens of the fictional town of Port Charles, set in upstate New York. The glamour and excitement of those who have come to find their destinies in this familiar seaport town intertwine with the lives, loves, and fortunes of beloved, well-known faces. As always, love, danger, and mind-blowing plot twists abound on GH with contemporary storylines and unforgettable characters." General Hospitalairs weekdays on ABC, and you can catch up anytime onHulu. The Shocking Confession a 'General Hospital' Co-Star Made to Genie Francisfirst appeared on Parade on May 28, 2025

The Shocking Confession a 'General Hospital' Co-Star Made to Genie Francis

The Shocking Confession a 'General Hospital' Co-Star Made to Genie Francis AGeneral Hospitalco-star had a shocking confession forGen...

 

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