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Entertainment

Kylie Minogue’s Neighbors finale appearance explained

It was one of the biggest fan questions during Neighbours’ nostalgia-filled 90-minute finale special: why were celebrity guest stars Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan practically mute?

Fans were left baffled by the pair’s brief appearance and their lack of mingling with fellow co-stars in the final episode of the long-running soap last week.

They also had just a handful of lines, with Minogue – arguably Ramsay Street’s most successful export – uttering just five words: “Home, sweet home”, “Jane!” and “Harold!”

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Their brief return as beloved on-screen couple Charlene and Scott seemed even more flimsy when compared with Guy Pearce’s return to the soap, which became a major finale storyline.

neighbours’ executive producer Jason Herbison has finally responded to fans’ confusion, telling tv tonight that it all boiled down to timing – and that the pair’s top-secret filming was completed before the rest of the episode.

“Our discussions with Jason (Donovan) and Kylie were always about making a small appearance,” he told the website.

“They didn’t want to overshadow the current cast or make the finale about them. We also filmed their scenes before I’d written the episode, so whatever we filmed had to fit in with that. I hate to see Kylie coping with any criticism – she was nothing short of amazing on the day.”

Last week’s finale saw the original stars Minogue, Donovan and Pearce return alongside a host of other fan favourites, including Margot Robbie, Holly Valance and Natalie Imbruglia.

neighbors actress Christie Whelan revealed that while Robbie’s scenes had to be filmed in Los Angeles, she made a very sweet gesture to her fellow castmates to honor the occasion.

The actress sent 37 bottles of champagne to the Melbourne set so the entire cast and crew could toast the show when filming wrapped.

Almost 900,0000 Aussies tuned in to the tear-jerking final episode of Neighbors last week.

After 37 years on our screens, the soap came to a close as 873,000 watched on across the five metro capital cities, according to ratings published on tv tonight.

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Categories
Sports

Selection pressure keeping Swans on their game

You only have to look at the quality of the players who can’t break into Sydney’s best 22 to see the Swans depth.

Three-time All-Australian Josh Kennedy, top five draft picks Logan McDonald and Braeden Campbell, prominent ruck recruit Peter Ladhams, 161-game defender Harry Cunningham.

It’s a list that would be the envy of many clubs and a sign of the Swans’ strength as they’ve gone on a four-game winning run and elevated into the top four, three weeks out from the finals.

For in-form young gun Errol Gulden, it’s a key reason why the Swans have clicked at the business end of the campaign.

“We’ve got some really quality players who are struggling to break into the 22 at the moment, so we know it’s really competitive and you have to be training well to keep your spot in the team,” Gulden said.

“We know we’ve got a really good list internally. I don’t think anyone feels their spot in the team is safe and that equates to better training standards and on-field performance. If you know you’re not performing then someone is going to grab your spot.”

That’s not an issue for Gulden at the moment who has shown no signs of the second-year blues by building on his AFLPA Best First-Year Player award in 2021 with another stellar season.

He was unlucky not to cap off his golden run of form with a Brett Kirk Medal on the weekend after his 33-possession, two-goal display against the Giants in the Derby that included 10 inside 50’s.

“I’m probably playing some of my best footy at the moment. It helps when the team’s playing good footy as well. I don’t want to get too ahead of myself but it is nice stringing a few big games together.”

The damaging left-footer has a license to drift forward and threaten in attack, which he does with aplomb, but he mainly operates on the wing and has formed a damaging partnership with another youngster on the other flank in Dylan Stephens in recent weeks.

Amid the plethora of talent trying to break into the Swans line-up, Stephens has done that since round 15 and is producing quality performances that demonstrate why Sydney selected him with pick five in the 2019 draft.

“Dyl’s been awesome for our team. His workrate probably goes unnoticed by a lot of people. We value that really highly internally,” Gulden said.

“His last month of footy has been unbelievable, his best month playing AFL. It took him a while to break in but it’s no surprise to me that he’s playing the footy that he is, he’s such a hard worker.”

Along with the Swans’ splendid month of footy, Gulden is also reveling in having his mother Bronwyn at the club now in her role as an AFLW assistant.

“It’s awesome for her. My sister Senna as well, she played her junior footy when my mum was coaching her. I wished it was around when my mum was younger and she got the chance to play footy, but she’s loving coaching and being part of the club is a big thing,” Gulden said.

“We’ve got the mantra of being one club here at the Swans with the AFLW team. She’s loving every moment and I love that she’s got the chance to live out her childhood dream, albeit coaching.”

“She definitely played a massive role in my pathway to the AFL. She coached me at my junior club Maroubra Saints but now that I’m on AFL list she takes a back seat and supports me more than anything.”

Categories
Australia

Cat found alive and well after spending 10 days missing in the cold at Melbourne Airport

An elderly cat has remarkably been found alive and well after being missing around melbourne Airport for 10 days in freezing conditions.

An airport worker found Buggsy the cat hiding down a muddy drain near Terminal 2 at the airport late on Tuesday afternoon, leading to the pet being reunited with her owners last night.

The much-loved cat had gone missing at the airport on July 23, with her distressed owners unable to find her.

Buggsy the cat was found in a drain at Melbourne Airport. (Facebook)

Their daughter took to Facebook to explain the situation and plead for help to find the pet.

She posted that Buggsy had sneakily “decided to hitch a ride” in the car with her 72-year-old dad when he drove from their home in Bendigo to pick up her mum at the airport.

She said that when the couple opened the car door on Level 1 of the carpark, Buggsy had “a little freak out” and bolted.

“The spent a great deal of time at 1am and the age of 72 trying to find her with no luck and returned home to Bendigo distraught,” the daughter explained.

Buggsy the cat was found in a drain at Melbourne Airport. (Facebook)
Buggsy is happily back at home. (Nine)

The airport worker who discovered Buggsy posted about his find on Facebook, leading to him being connected with his owners.

Thousands of animal-lovers have celebrated the happy ending on Facebook, with many sharing how concerned they had been for the cat and her owners.

“This is the best news, so happy for the owners,” one woman shared.

“I am so happy to hear that Buggsy is safe. I’ve been worrying about him and wishing I lived near the airport so I could help look,” another posted.

Cows swept 20km in Sydney floods

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US

Kansas voters decide ‘no’ on the abortion amendment : Live Coverage: 2022 Primaries : NPR

Kansas state Rep. Stephanie Clayton, an abortion rights supporter who was a Republican and is now a Democrat, reacts as a referendum to strip abortion rights out of the state constitution fails.

Danielle Kurtzleben/NPR


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Kansas state Rep. Stephanie Clayton, an abortion rights supporter who was a Republican and is now a Democrat, reacts as a referendum to strip abortion rights out of the state constitution fails.

Danielle Kurtzleben/NPR

LAWRENCE, Kan. — Voters in Kansas rejected a proposed state constitutional amendment Tuesday that would have said there was no right to an abortion in the state, according to The Associated Press.

Kansas was the first state to vote on abortion rights since the US Supreme Court handed down its ruling in Dobbsv. Jackson’s Women’s Health Organization.

President Joe Biden hailed Tuesday’s vote and called on Congress to pass a law to restore nationwide abortion rights that were provided by Roe.

“This vote makes clear what we know: the majority of Americans agree that women should have access to abortion and should have the right to make their own health care decisions,” Biden said in a statement.

Kansas For Constitutional Freedom, the main abortion rights group opposing the amendment, called the victory “huge and decisive.”

“The people of Kansas have spoken,” said Rachel Sweet, campaign manager for the group. “They think that abortion should be safe, legal and accessible in the state of Kansas.”

This year, a record number of abortion questions will be on state ballots, and many are asking Kansas’ decision Tuesday will be an indicator of what is to come.

In the lead-up to the vote, supporters of the amendment argued that it was necessary to correct what they say was the Kansas Supreme Court’s overreach in striking down some of the state’s previous abortion restrictions in 2019.

Opponents argued that the amendment would set state lawmakers up to pursue a total abortion ban.

an overwhelming victory

Struggling to speak after the race was called, 23-year-old Jae Moyer said the decisive victory in the red state was surprising.

“It’s never looked like this in Kansas,” Moyer said. “It’s so amazing. I’m so proud of my state right now.”

Planned Parenthood donated millions of dollars to the opposition effort.

“Anti-abortion politicians put this amendment on the primary ballot with the goal of low voter turnout,” said Emily Wales of Planned Parenthood Great Plains Votes, “but they discounted Kansans, who said loud and clear they believe and trust patients to make their own medical decisions.”

Access to abortion in Kansas remains limited. The state has only four clinics where abortions remain available, all in the Wichita and Kansas City areas.

That leaves many Kansans in the western part of the state hundreds of thousands away from abortion care. Many are closer to abortion providers in other states, like Colorado.

Trust Women, which operates two of the clinics in Kansas, said it will continue providing abortion care while also working to expand access throughout the state.

“We cannot be content with the status quo,” the organization said. “The loss of Roe has brought with it an unprecedented and manufactured health care crisis that is not solved by this election.”

Abortion opponents say they are not done

Kansans For Life, a major political group that opposes abortion rights, said in a news release that the vote is a temporary setback and the organization remains dedicated to continuing its work opposing abortion.

“While the outcome is not what we hoped for, our movement and campaign have proven our resolve and commitment,” the organization said. “We will not abandon women and babies.”

But it’s unclear what else can be done to further restrict abortion in Kansas.

Republican state Sen. Molly Baumgardner, who supported sending the amendment to voters, said abortion opponents will need to look at new restrictions to try to decrease the number of abortions in the state.

“The defeat this evening is disappointing,” she said. “That struggle for truth, and the struggle for life, is going to continue in the state of Kansas.”

Republicans, for the most part, remained quiet before Tuesday and wouldn’t say how far they wanted to restrict abortion access if the amendment passed.

Kansas’ abortion restrictions already include limiting abortions after 22 weeks of pregnancy to cases where the pregnant person’s life is in danger. The state also requires an ultrasound before a procedure.

Those restrictions would have remained in place whether the amendment passed or failed. The vote in this red state may be a sign of what’s to come in other abortion votes around the country later this year.

Categories
Business

Expert names ASX share to buy for long-term fortunes

A woman standing on the street looks through binoculars.

Image source: Getty Images

It might be counterintuitive, but sometimes investors might be best served to ignore an earnings downgrade.

That’s because if the business is still in a position to take off in the long run, a one-off downgrade may not matter that much.

In fact, it might even present a juicy buying opportunity as skittish shareholders sell off their holdings and bring the price down.

Fortunately for us, Red Leaf Securities chief executive John Athanasiou reckons he’s found an ASX share that’s just in that situation.

‘A dominant position in an industry with high barriers to entry’

The share price for Cleanaway Waste Management Ltd (ASX: CWY) has dropped almost 17% since 21 April.

The movement down wasn’t helped by an update to the market in May.

“The company downgraded earnings due to floods and higher fuel and labor costs,” Athanasiou told The Bull.

But this is a temporary hiccup, and the analyst feels like the structural advantages for Cleanaway are still in play.

“The waste management company has a dominant position in an industry with high barriers to entry,” said Athanasiou.

“The bulk of the company’s revenues are generated from recurring multi-year contracts.”

Athanasiou would buy the stock now for holding over an extended period.

“Despite lag in cost recoveries, Cleanaway’s longer term outlook is bright.”

Cleanaway is scheduled to report its preliminary numbers on 19 August.

Recurring revenues with pricing power to fight inflation

Back in June, Wilsons head of investment strategy David Cassidy also spruiked Cleanaway’s long-term potential, calling it a “quality” ASX share with inflation protection.

“The majority of Cleanaway’s revenue is contracted and therefore recurring,” he said at the time.

“Multi-year contracts provide steady volumes and recurring revenues and include appropriate price adjustment mechanisms.”

The wider analyst community is somewhat divided over the waste management provider.

According to CMC Markets, seven out of 14 analysts currently recommend Cleanaway shares as a buy, with five ratings it as a hold.

Categories
Entertainment

JoJo Siwa’s mother Jessalynn weighs in on Candace Cameron Bure drama

JoJo Siwa’s mother Jessalynn Siwa weighed in on the recent controversy surrounding her daughter and actress Candace Cameron Bure.

Siwa, 47, posted a video in which she explained the interaction her daughter allegedly had with Bure when she was 11-years-old. The exchange ultimately led to JoJo, 19, calling the Fuller House actress the ‘rudest celebrity’ she had ever met in a now-viral TikTok video.

‘I talked about this on my podcast a while back,’ she posted to Instagram. ‘The recent story told wasn’t quite right so here is the real version. At the end of the day this story, it’s not about a simple photo it’s about how you treat people.

'It's not about a simple photo it's about how you treat people': JoJo Siwa's mother Jessalynn Siwa weighed in on her daughter's controversy with Candace Cameron Bure;  pictured 2018

‘It’s not about a simple photo it’s about how you treat people’: JoJo Siwa’s mother Jessalynn Siwa weighed in on her daughter’s controversy with Candace Cameron Bure; pictured 2018

‘Real, genuine kindness always goes a long way. It’s super easy to quote a Bible verse when everyone is looking at you but morals are what you have when no one is looking,’ she added.

In the video, Jessalyn recounted the exchange between her daughter and Bure. The two briefly interacted at the Fuller House premiere when JoJo asked Bure, who played DJ Tanner on the show, for a photo.

‘JoJo ran into DJ and was like, “Oh, my God, I love you so much. Can we please take a selfie?”‘ Jessalynn said. ‘And she was like, “Not now. Maybe later.” Word for word, “Not now, maybe later.”‘ she explained.

‘Fast forward, we go on the Kelly Clarkson show, who was on the day JoJo… I go, “If she even asks for a picture, please say not now maybe later. Just kidding, don’t say that.” ‘

'Real, genuine kindness always goes a long way': Siwa, 47, posted video in which she explained the interaction between her daughter and Bure which ultimately led to Siwa calling the Fuller House actress the 'rudest celebrity' she had ever met in a now-viral TikTok video

‘Real, genuine kindness always goes a long way’: Siwa, 47, posted video in which she explained the interaction between her daughter and Bure which ultimately led to Siwa calling the Fuller House actress the ‘rudest celebrity’ she had ever met in a now-viral TikTok video

Asked if there was any interaction that day, she said, ‘No, she just couldn’t be bothered,’ she explained. ‘And you know what, maybe she was having an emergency and her kid was crying and she was trying to get a hold of the babysitter, I do not know what was going on, but it’s funny when you don’t know and somebody treats you like that? Not now, maybe later?

And it’s hard to be a celebrity, I’ll give it to you, but that was so long ago. I can’t even tell you and I still remember it.’

The JoJo-Candace controversy erupted last week after the former Dance Moms star called the Fuller House actress the ‘rudest celebrity’ she had ever met in a now-viral TikTok clip.

Bure revealed in a subsequent Instagram post she ended up calling Siwa over the matter, who explained why exactly she publicly bashed the actress as ‘rude.’

Center of controversy: The JoJo-Candace controversy erupted earlier last week after the former Dance Moms star called the Fuller House actress the 'rudest celebrity' she had ever met in a now-viral TikTok clip;  Bure pictured in 2019

Center of controversy: The JoJo-Candace controversy erupted earlier last week after the former Dance Moms star called the Fuller House actress the ‘rudest celebrity’ she had ever met in a now-viral TikTok clip; Bure pictured in 2019

The Full House star said Siwa told her the comment stemmed from an incident when the pair met on a red carpet when the former Dance Moms star was just 11 years old. Siwa claimed she asked Bure for a photo at the time—but that Bure told her ‘not right now,’ and then she never returned for the photo despite moving on to take photos with others.

Bure, who is a devout Christian, admitted that the teenager’s story ‘broke her heart’, and revealed that she offered up an apology to Siwa, telling her: ‘I broke your 11-year-old heart. Please know that as a mom that it breaks my heart that I made you feel that way.’

‘All good on the JoJo front,’ Candace said after summarizing their conversation.

Stepping out: Bure was spotted out in Los Angeles on Monday

Stepping out: Bure was spotted out in Los Angeles on Monday

But in video obtained by Page Six, JoJo alleged the actress ‘didn’t share all the details of the meeting’.

‘It’s one of those memories that little 11-year-old me was just stuck with. And it was at the after party that she didn’t want to take a picture with me,’ she explained last week.

‘And I was okay with that, but then I turned around, and when I looked back, she was taking pictures with other kids. And that’s what made me really, really upset.

‘It’s just one of those memories that whenever you’re little, somebody says something to you and you just like never forget it for as long as you live.’

‘We had about a 10 minute conversation and it was sweet. She apologized and we talked and it was cool. It was nice,’ she added.

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Categories
Sports

North Melbourne considering immediate AFL return for cancer survivor Ben Cunnington

The prospect of throwing cancer survivor Ben Cunnington straight into the North Melbourne team to play Sydney this weekend is “really exciting” and would serve as a huge source of motivation against the top-four contenders, according to caretaker coach Leigh Adams.

Cunnington hasn’t played a senior game since round 19 last year after battling two bouts of testicular cancer that required a tumor to be surgically removed and a nine-week course of chemotherapy respectively.

The star on-baller’s return was further delayed recently by a calf strain and a bout of Covid.

While he’s more likely to line up in the VFL this weekend, if Cunnington gets through training on Thursday, he will be considered for a senior return against the Swans at Marvel Stadium on Sunday.

“Pretty sure I know what his preference will be and the coach’s preference, it’ll just be what’s best for his body going forward,” Adams said at Arden Street on Wednesday.

“But at this time of year, it’s a great story for us, for the motivation of the group and the footy club, really.

“It’s been an amazing journey which will hopefully be capped off very soon.

“The last thing we want to do is put him in there and he breaks down and then he’s out for the rest of the year.

“We’re thinking it’s probably going to be the VFL even though we’d probably love it to be straight back in (the senior team).

“Deep down I know he’d love to play seniors, particularly being a game in Melbourne this weekend and we travel next weekend, so to have his support network and his family that have been through so much with him to be at the game would be fantastic.

“But … it’s only an hour flight to Adelaide (for the game against the Crows in round 22), take his family over there so it’s not too far.”

Adams admitted Cunnington had left a void in the North Melbourne midfield for the past 12 months that the Roos had struggled to fill. The bottom-ranked club remains on course for back-to-back wooden spoons for the first time in 87 years.

Paul Curtis and Aaron Hall are pressing for senior recalls after missing last week due to Covid, but Jack Mahony and Lachie Young will be line ball as they entered protocols on Sunday, which means they would exit them on game day.

Super coach Alastair Clarkson continues to be linked to North’s vacant senior coaching position for next season and Adams was excited by the possibility of the four-time premiership mentor signing on.

“The credibility as a footy club that would be gained by bringing in someone like him would be fantastic,” Adams said.

The future of Cam Zurhaar remains under a cloud after the out-of-contract forward put off talks until the end of the season, and Adams said the club would “love” the talented 24-year-old to stay at Arden Street.

“He’s obviously a fantastic player for us and a little bit of a barometer when we’re playing well,” Adams said.

And the North caretaker had similar feelings about Todd Goldstein, who is strongly rumored to be joining another club next season.

“I’ve got a soft spot for ‘Goldy’, I got drafted the same year as ‘Goldy’,” Adams said.

“I’d just love to see him be a one-club player.”

North/s 1996 premiership players will be in attendance on Sunday, and Adams said their presence would give the players an extra boost.

“It’ll be awesome,” Adams said. ”It’s exciting to have such great footy people around our footy club to impart some knowledge to our younger boys.”

Read related topics:MelbourneSydney

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Categories
Australia

Greens will vote with Labor on climate bill, leader Adam Bandt announces

the Greens will vote with Labor to pass the government’s climate bill, leader Adam Bandt has confirmed.

Speaking at the National Press Club in Canberra, Bandt said: “The Greens have improved a weak climate bill, but the fight to stop Labor opening new coal and gas mines continues.

“And in this parliamentthe only obstacle to greater climate ambition is Labor.

“People need to be clear-eyed about the importance of this bill and that this government is bringing a bucket of water to a house fire.

Greens leader Adam Bandt has confirmed his party will vote with Labor to pass the government's climate bill.
Greens leader Adam Bandt has confirmed his party will vote with Labor to pass the government’s climate bill. (Sydney Morning Herald)

“Worse, even this smallest of steps on the road to tackling the climate emergency could be wiped out by just one of the 114 new coal and gas projects in the government’s investment pipeline.

“The fight begins now to get Labor to stop opening coal and gas mines.”

The bill updates Australia’s obligations under the Paris Agreement – committing to a 43 per cent emissions reduction by 2030 and net zero by 2050.

It hands authority back to the Climate Change Authority to monitor Australia’s progress, and also requires the Minister for Climate Change, Chris Bowen, to report annually to Parliament on Australia’s progress towards these targets.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he is “very confident” the bill will pass through the lower house following Bandt’s announcement.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. (9News)

“This is an opportunity to end the climate wars,” Albanese said.

He urged the Coalition to agree to the climate bill so the “whole of parliament can be on the right side of history.”

“If the Coalition decides to break with their rhetoric and actually come to the table and listen to the business community who are saying that what we need is investment certainty… investment in clean and cheap energy,” Albanese said.

Albanese also said the Coalition is “obsessed by nuclear reactors” but is ignoring “the biggest nuclear reactor of all” which he says is the sun.

“They are stuck in the past, they are frozen in time while the world warms around them,” he said.

“We will not be held hostage to that behaviour, we will continue to advance our agenda.”

On Tuesday, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said the Coalition would push for a debate about pivoting to nuclear energy after deciding to vote against the government’s climate bill.

What sea level rise will look like around the globe

The opposition said it was “high time” to have a debate about nuclear energy.

Dutton claimed nuclear energy could contribute to Australia’s energy security and reduce rising power prices.

Following today’s developments, Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen said today is a “good day for Australia”, the economy and “the future” as the government embarks on passing its climate bill.

“The climate wars may not be over, but they are certainly in retreat,” Bowen said.

Bowen echoed Albanese’s confidence that the bill will pass through the lower house after Greens leader Bandt confirmed the party would vote with Labor.

“We do not need this legislation to get on with the agenda but we wanted the legislation to send the message to the world that Australia is open to business when it comes to renewable energy,” he said.

Categories
US

Water levels ‘nearing the brim’ as sea level rise brings higher tides

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Business

Mum Lisa Fulmore defends are held over shooting of McDonald’s worker

The mum of a man held in the shooting of a New York City McDonald’s worker over cold fries says that her son told her he did what he had to do.

Lisa Fulmore, 40, revealed her 20-year-old son’s chilling comments to the New York Post while describing exactly what led up to Monday night’s shooting that left a 23-year-old fast-food employee clinging to life.

“I talked to my son with the cops. My son is just saying that he gotta do what he gotta do and the [victim] came after him and whatever happened, happened,” she said.

The mother of three boys said the incident unfolded after she ordered McDonald’s on her mobile app and went to the Bedford-Stuyvesant eatery in Brooklyn around 7pm to pick up her food, which included fries.

“The fries were cold,” Fulmore said. “I asked the girl to change the French fries because the fries were cold. She went to the French fry machine for maybe 10 seconds and brought back fries, so I thought they were new fries, so I had left.

“So I taste the fries, and after I got to the third one, it was a cold fry still. So I went back to take the food back.

“I asked her, ‘Why would you give me the same fries and just put one or two on top to make me think that you gave me new fries?’ She started laughing, and all of them started laughing, acting like it’s funny,” Fulmore said.

“I was like, ‘What’s funny? I paid for food and I should get what I asked for.’ They laughed at me.

“One of them was like, ‘All of this over fries?’ So now I’m arguing with them back and forth.”

Referring to the worker who was later shot, Fulmore said: “The boy where they cook the food at was like, ‘You got all this food in your teeth.’

“So I said, ‘You wanna take it out? You’re saying I got all this food in my teeth, you wanna take it out?’”

Fulmore said she asked to speak to their boss and the workers said the manager had stepped out.

“Everybody started laughing again,” she said.

“This is when I was on the phone with my son. I was like, ‘They in this McDonald’s playing with me.’ I was like, I got kids their age, I’m not going to sit here and keep arguing with these little kids. He was like, ‘I’m coming down the block.’

“I was like, ‘Alright.’ … Then I told him, ‘No, don’t come to McDonald’s because I don’t want you to get in trouble.’”

But she said her son was already at the restaurant.

“He was like, ‘I’m coming in.’ So I came in. I heard them saying stuff to me, so he was like, ‘You all gotta back off my mother.’

Again referring to the worker later shot, Fulmore said: “My son said, ‘come outside’ to the boy in the back.”

The employee did not exit the restaurant at that point and Fulmore said she then told her son to just leave “because I didn’t want him to get in trouble”.

“So I’m thinking my son was gone,” she said. “I’m thinking it was over because my son left the store.”

According to Fulmore, 10 or 15 minutes later the male worker came over to her asking: “Where your son at?”

She said she told him her son left and to mind his own business.

“He went looking for my son,” she said. “The next thing you know, maybe like 10 minutes later, you hear a gunshot. So I ran to the door. I said, ‘Who’s shooting?’”

She said someone replied, “Your son.”

“I looked, and I saw a boy on the ground, and then I saw my son running the other way. I called 911 and then I sat there and waited.”

When asked if her son had a gun, Fulmore said she didn’t know, adding, “I don’t even know if my son did that,” referring to the shooting.

“The only thing I know is that my son was arguing with the boy and the boy did go out looking for my son.”

She said the victim changed his shirt at one point, “and he had something under the blue shirt, that’s why he put the big blue shirt on”.

Law-enforcement sources said the victim had no prior arrests and there was no indication he was carrying a weapon when he was killed.

But Fulmore, referring to the critically injured worker, said: “There was no reason for him to go outside looking for somebody. Whatever happened outside, you caused that to happen.”

Fulmore’s son is in police custody but has not been charged in the shooting.

He has been previously arrested several times, including for grand larceny in 2019 and assault and theft of service in 2018, police sources said. He also has numerous sealed arrest cases, they said.

Additional reporting by Larry Celona and Kate Sheehy

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

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