New Photo - Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's 'The Drama' Rom-Com Marketing Draws Backlash for Hiding Dark Twist

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's 'The Drama' RomCom Marketing Draws Backlash for Hiding Dark Twist Kaitlin SimpsonFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:14 PM UTC 0 A24 /Courtesy Everett Collection Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's new movie, The Drama, is facing criticism for its marketing method while hiding the dark twist of the film. Warning: Spoilers for The Drama below. The Drama follows engaged couple Charlie (Pattinson) and Emma (Zendaya), who are gearing up to walk down the aisle.

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's 'The Drama' Rom-Com Marketing Draws Backlash for Hiding Dark Twist

Kaitlin SimpsonFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:14 PM UTC

0

A24 /Courtesy Everett Collection

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's new movie, The Drama, is facing criticism for its marketing method while hiding the dark twist of the film.

Warning: Spoilers for The Drama below.

The Drama follows engaged couple Charlie (Pattinson) and Emma (Zendaya), who are gearing up to walk down the aisle. However, days before their nuptials, the pair and a group of friends get together and reveal the worst thing they've ever done. While it was teased in the trailer that Emma's secret causes outrage amongst the group, details are not shared..

After the film hit theaters on Friday, April 3, it was revealed that Emma planned to commit a school shooting as a teenager but ultimately decided not go through with it.

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's 'The Drama' Is a Black Comedy With a Killer Twist: Movie Review

Since details of The Drama's twist have circulated online, many have condemned the film for its light-hearted and wedding-themed marketing plan, suggesting that the movie should be open and sensitive about the twist.

Zendaya and Pattinson have attended several press events together to speak about the film, in which the actress has worn bridal-themed outfits. For The Drama's various premieres, she's debuted looks that represent the timeless practice of something old, borrowed, new and blue for a bride. Both Zendaya and Pattinson have also been asked questions about marriage and weddings in multiple interviews, causing some to feel like the overall tone of the film has been marketed as a straight romance or comedy.

Additional promotional endeavors for The Drama have included a social campaign that used the style of a classic wedding invitation as well as a one-day wedding chapel in Las Vegas back in March.

On Thursday, April 2, gun control advocacy group March for Our Lives slammed The Drama's marketing plan as the sensitive topic has not been addressed.

"The film may be attempting to engage real questions about accountability and change, but A24's marketing does not meet it there," the organization wrote via Instagram. "With a subject this serious, especially in the U.S., that conversation cannot begin and end on screen. It has to carry through in how the film is presented."

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Alyson Michalka and AJ Michalka, who make up the duo Aly and AJ, agreed in the comments section of March for Our Lives' post. (The sisters survived a mass shooting outside one of their concerts in 2022.)

"Couldn't agree more," read a reply from the singers' joint account. "The marketing made us sick when we found out the plot twist."

Additional users also slammed The Drama for not being forthcoming about the twist.

"Thank you for this 'spoiler.' It is marketed as a cute rom com. I was going to see it. If I had found out this plot point in the theater I would have walked out," one fan wrote. "This is not casual conversation. Now I will not be going to see this. Do they give any sort of warning about this plot point in [the] opening credits or anything?"

Everything to Know About Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's Movie 'The Drama': Plot, Cast, More

Another person responded, "Bro, it's about a girl who planned a school shooting? All of the marketing has been like a young adult rom com. Wtf?"

While some fans criticized the movie's quietness about the plot, others defended it.

"I definitely don't think it was ever labeled as a romantic rom com. And I also don't think the plot is not far off from how a lot of kids may have felt/feel," one user wrote in the comments. "It brings awareness to the societal context we are raising our children in."

Another retorted, "You people are so anti art it's insane. Sometimes art has to make you uncomfortable."

Us Weekly has reached out to A24 for comment.

The Drama is in theaters now.

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Zendaya and Robert Pattinson’s ‘The Drama’ Rom-Com Marketing Draws Backlash for Hiding Dark Twist

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson's 'The Drama' RomCom Marketing Draws Backlash for Hiding Dark Twist Kaitlin ...
New Photo - Brian Cox Mocks Margot Robbie's Accent, Slams Quentin Tarantino and More Stars in Interview

Brian Cox Mocks Margot Robbie's Accent, Slams Quentin Tarantino and More Stars in Interview Elise NelsonFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:56 PM UTC 0 Getty Images (3) Succession star Brian Cox shared his unfiltered thoughts on Margot Robbie and several other celebrities in a scathing new interview. "Margot Robbie is far too beautiful for that role in [Wuthering Heights]," Cox, 79, told The Times in an interview published on Friday, April 3. "I mean, I think there should be something more of the Gypsy about her, but it's wrong of me to judge. It may be a brilliant film.

Brian Cox Mocks Margot Robbie's Accent, Slams Quentin Tarantino and More Stars in Interview

Elise NelsonFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:56 PM UTC

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Getty Images (3)

Succession star Brian Cox shared his unfiltered thoughts on Margot Robbie and several other celebrities in a scathing new interview.

"Margot Robbie is far too beautiful for that role in [Wuthering Heights]," Cox, 79, told The Times in an interview published on Friday, April 3. "I mean, I think there should be something more of the Gypsy about her, but it's wrong of me to judge. It may be a brilliant film."

Robbie, 35, stars opposite Jacob Elordi as Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, respectively, in the adaptation of Emily Brontë's famous novel. Both the Barbie actress, who was also a producer on the film, and Elordi, 28, previously received backlash for their casting, as fans argued that they did not match the physical descriptions of their characters. (Both Catherine and Heathcliff are meant to be teenagers in the novel.)

Cox also mocked Robbie's Australian accent while discussing the role, quipping, " 'Keith Cliff! It's me, Cathy!' 'How ya doing, Keith? Awright?' 'Yeah, I'm awright!' "

Jeremy Strong Seemingly Claps Back at Kieran Culkin and Brian Cox's Critiques of His Method Acting

Elsewhere in the interview, Cox took aim at Quentin Tarantino, President Donald Trump and Kevin Spacey.

"[When directing] I like to honor the actor's performance. With a Quentin Tarantino film, what you see is all Quentin Tarantino. That's not me. I don't want to do that," Cox said of the famous director, 63, calling Tarantino "meretricious" — defined as "apparently attractive but having in reality no value or integrity."

Cox called Spacey, 66 — his costar in the 1994 film Iron Will — a "stupid, stupid man." Of Trump, 79, the Manhunter actor added, "Trump doesn't give a s*** about the people. He's only interested in the oil [in Iran]. There's just sheer f***g greed motivating him, nothing else. The idea he's liberating people is nonsense."

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The Times article also included previous quotes on Johnny Depp and Edward Norton, which Cox's reps clarified were from his 2022 autobiography, Putting the Rabbit in the Hat, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Sarah Snook Says 'Succession' Costar Brian Cox Had 'Terrifying' Diabetic Rages on Set

In the book, Cox said he turned down a role in Pirates of the Caribbean because he didn't want to work with Depp, 62, calling the actor "so overblown, so overrated." (He later admitted that he "regretted" making the comment about Depp and "was just being harsh.")

Meanwhile, he called Norton, 56, "a pain in the arse." (Cox and Norton costarred in the 2002 drama 25th Hour, directed by Spike Lee.)

Cox has made headlines for years with his candid assessments of fellow Hollywood stars. Back in 2024, he slammed Joaquin Phoenix's performance in Napoleon, calling it "truly terrible." He has also frequently spoken out against "f***ing annoying" method acting, particularly when done by Succession costar Jeremy Strong.

Cox was again asked about Strong, 47, in his interview with The Times.

"I don't want to go on about Jeremy, because I've got into a lot of problems and he's begged me to stop talking about him. He's a good actor, Jeremy," Cox told the outlet.

When asked by the outlet if his opinions on Hollywood talent have cost him anything, Cox responded, "Well, I don't know yet if it's caused me problems. I mean, my wife [Nicole Ansari-Cox] keeps saying, 'Brian, be careful. Brian, be careful.' I think, 'F*** it, I don't want to be careful anymore! I'll be 80 this year. F*** I'm gonna say what I want to say.'"

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Brian Cox Mocks Margot Robbie’s Accent, Slams Quentin Tarantino and More Stars in Interview

Brian Cox Mocks Margot Robbie's Accent, Slams Quentin Tarantino and More Stars in Interview Elise NelsonFri, Apr...
New Photo - Swae Lee says Trump once offered him $90K to perform after Kamala dig

Swae Lee says Trump once offered him $90K to perform after Kamala dig Amaris Encinas, USA TODAYFri, April 3, 2026 at 11:32 PM UTC 0 Rapper Swae Lee is neither a Donald Trump nor a Kamala Harris fan. The "Sunflower" singer, and onehalf of the hiphop duo Rae Sremmurd, set the record straight about his political views nearly two years after facing backlash for telling fans not to vote for Harris, the former vice president, and then the Democratic frontrunner in the 2024 presidential election. "I don't hate Kamala Harris, but like I ain't never announced my solidarity with no politician.

Swae Lee says Trump once offered him $90K to perform after Kamala dig

Amaris Encinas, USA TODAYFri, April 3, 2026 at 11:32 PM UTC

0

Rapper Swae Lee is neither a Donald Trump nor a Kamala Harris fan.

The "Sunflower" singer, and one-half of the hip-hop duo Rae Sremmurd, set the record straight about his political views nearly two years after facing backlash for telling fans not to vote for Harris, the former vice president, and then the Democratic frontrunner in the 2024 presidential election.

"I don't hate Kamala Harris, but like I ain't never announced my solidarity with no politician. Like some people think I'm a Trump supporter," Lee said in a recent interview with "The Breakfast Club." "You ain't never seen me with no MAGA hat, nothing."

American rapper Swae Lee arrives for the Pharrell Williams Pre-Fall Louis Vuitton menswear show in Hong Kong on November 30, 2023.

The "Unforgettable" singer added, "I don't support really no politicians. ... I do my research, see what they really gonna do for the people. Like, what are they gonna do that's gonna affect my everyday life."

Lee says he understood why some might have assumed he was a Trump supporter after his Harris post went viral, but says that all he wanted was for people to "have their eyes open" and "just really know what they voting for."

"This is a new candidate. That's why I was like, 'Kamala is... like, don't think it's just Disneyland," Lee said. "You honestly got to look at what this person is pushing. You know what I'm saying?"

1 / 0Trump, Nicki Minaj hold hands at DC summit

Nicki Minaj has become one of Hollywood's most outspoken Trump supporters, even calling herself his "No. 1 fan." See the rapper and singer-songwriter hold hands with President Donald Trump on stage during the U.S. Treasury Department's Trump Accounts Summit in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 28, 2026.

Swae Lee says he could have 'got paid' by Trump

Swae Lee performs during the opening ceremony during a group stage match of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup on June 14, 2025.

Lee says he could have "got paid" by the Trump administration, but ultimately decided against it.

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"I ain't standing with that [expletive], either. Like, I don't want people to think I'm standing with none of that [expletive]," he said. "I'm looking for a real political candidate that's going to bring some real positive change. And it's rare."

A couple of offers to perform were extended, one before the Harris post and one after the post, Lee told host Charlamagne Tha God.

"One time it was like 90 bands (thousand) just to come perform or some [expletive] like," Lee said. "But all money ain't good money. And it's not good money. And I don't support that."

USA TODAY contacted the White House on April 3 to ask about whether it offered Lee $90,000 to perform in the past, but did not receive an immediate response.

How to watch Swae Lee's 'The Breakfast Club' interview

Fans can catch Swae Lee's full "The Breakfast Club" interview on Netflix.

"The Breakfast Club" full-length and long-form content was moved to Netflix after iHeartMedia announced in December an exclusive partnership with the streamer that brought over more than 15 video podcasts.

In addition to "The Breakfast Club", these other podcasts were moved to Netflix through the deal:

Bobby Bones Presents: The Bobbycast (Bobby Bones)

Joe and Jada (Fat Joe and Jadakiss)

My Favorite Murder (Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark)

Dear Chelsea (Chelsea Handler)

This is Important (Adam Devine, Anders Holm, Blake Anderson)

Behind the Bastards (Robert Evans)

Stuff They Don't Want You to Know (Matt Frederick, Ben Bowlin, Noel Brown)

Stuff You Missed in History Class (Holly Frey, Tracy Wilson)

Stuff To Blow Your Mind (Robert Lamb, Joe McCormick)

New Rory & MAL (Jamil 'Mal' Clay, Rory Farrell)

3 and Out with John Middlekauff (John Middlekauff)

Buried Bones (Kate Winkler Dawson, Paul Holes)

The Psychology of Your 20s (Jemma Sbeg)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Swae Lee alleges Trump offered him $90K to perform after Kamala dig

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Swae Lee says Trump once offered him $90K to perform after Kamala dig

Swae Lee says Trump once offered him $90K to perform after Kamala dig Amaris Encinas, USA TODAYFri, April 3, 2026 at 1...
New Photo - Meryl Streep's $745 Rich Woman Handbag Fits Everything — Get the Look for Just $37

This article contains affiliate links; if you click such a link and make a purchase, we may earn a commission.Meryl Streep's $745 Rich Woman Handbag Fits Everything — Get the Look for Just $37 Olivia Hanson Fri, April 3, 2026 at 9:31 PM UTC 0 Aeon/GC Images Leave it to Meryl Streep to make a practical handbag feel impossibly chic. The The Devil Wears Prada actress stepped out carrying a structured tophandle style that instantly reads 'rich woman' — and yes, it fits absolutely everything.

This article contains affiliate links; if you click such a link and make a purchase, we may earn a commission.Meryl Streep's $745 Rich Woman Handbag Fits Everything — Get the Look for Just $37

Olivia Hanson Fri, April 3, 2026 at 9:31 PM UTC

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Aeon/GC Images

Leave it to Meryl Streep to make a practical handbag feel impossibly chic. The The Devil Wears Prada actress stepped out carrying a structured top-handle style that instantly reads 'rich woman' — and yes, it fits absolutely everything. The best part? You don't need a movie star budget to get the look because this $37 version delivers the same polished effect.

Spotted on April 1 in New York City, Streep styled the black carryall with an oversized leopard top, tapered trousers, pointed pumps and sleek cat-eye sunglasses. The bag tied the entire outfit together, adding that refined, put-together finish. While her exact version is a $745 style from DeMellier, we found a nearly identical option that nails the same luxe feel for way less.

SEE IT!

Get the Donnain Top-Handle Satchel Tote Bag for $37 (was $74) at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication, April 3, 2026, but are subject to change.

This Donnain satchel bag nails Streep's designer look, thanks to the structured silhouette, top handle and subtle belted accent. The high-end details give the bag an unmistakable rich woman polish, which instantly elevates even the simplest outfits. Crafted from full-grain cowhide leather, this on-sale pick feels soft yet durable and has an expensive-looking finish you'd expect from a much pricier bag.

Sharon Stone's Polished Trench Coat Look Is the Definition of Rich Mom Spring Style

And yes, it's just as practical as it is polished. The spacious interior has room for all your daily essentials, including your phone, wallet, makeup bag and laptop. Translation: It works just as well for everyday errands as it does for the office. Plus, the tote bag comes with a crossbody strap, making it easy to go hands-free when you're commuting, traveling or just on the go.

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Styling-wise, this bag works with just about everything in your closet. Carry it with tailored trousers and pumps for a polished, office-ready look, or style it with jeans, a tee and flats for something more casual. You can even throw it on with a flowy spring dress to instantly make the outfit feel more structured and put together.

Whether you've been eyeing a spring bag upgrade or just want Streep's rich woman look, this one does both. It's polished, practical and fits everything (yes, everything), making it a bag you'll reach for on repeat. And with it being 50% off on Amazon, grabbing it now feels like a win.

Donnain Top Handle Satchel Tote Bag

SEE IT!

Love the look of Streep's structured carryall? Keep scrolling for more chic options worth adding to your lineup.

Shop more black top-handle tote bags that we love:

Chicarousal PU Leather Crossbody Tote — was $43, now $30!

Covelin Retro Suede Leather Top-Handle Tote Bag — was $40, now $30!

Lovevook Faux Leather Tote Bag — $49!

Tantomi Vegan Leather Tote Bag — $24!

Kalidi Large Vegan Leather Tote Bag — was $33, now $27!

Not your style? Explore more top handle bags here and don't forget to check out all of Amazon's Daily Deals for more great finds!

Lea Michele's Tailored Trouser Shorts Are Spring's Chicest Alternative to Classic Work Pants

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Meryl Streep’s $745 Rich Woman Handbag Fits Everything — Get the Look for Just $37

This article contains affiliate links; if you click such a link and make a purchase, we may earn a commission. Meryl Streep...
New Photo - Trump directs Homeland Security to issue shutdown back-pay to all employees, White House says

Trump directs Homeland Security to issue shutdown backpay to all employees, White House says ReutersFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:09 PM UTC 0 FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One on a flight back to Washington March 15, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo WASHINGTON, April 3 (Reuters) U.S. President Donald Trump on ‌Friday directed the Department ‌of Homeland Security to pay "each and ​every" employee the equivalent of compensation and benefits lost during U.S.

Trump directs Homeland Security to issue shutdown back-pay to all employees, White House says

ReutersFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:09 PM UTC

0

FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters aboard Air Force One on a flight back to Washington March 15, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

WASHINGTON, April 3 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on ‌Friday directed the Department ‌of Homeland Security to pay "each and ​every" employee the equivalent of compensation and benefits lost during U.S. lawmakers' partial shutdown ‌of the ⁠agency, according to a memo published by ⁠the White House.

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Trump said the funds would have a "reasonable ​and logical ​nexus" ​to DHS functions, ‌a possible allusion to legal questions surrounding the potential reallotment of funds appropriated by Congress for specific purposes. ‌Lawmakers have failed ​to agree on ​legislation to ​fund the agency ‌in the wake of ​deadly ​shootings by immigration agents earlier this year.

(Reporting by Ismail ​Shakil ‌in Ottawa and Douglas ​Gillison in Washington; Editing ​by Edmund Klamann)

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Source: Breaking

Published: April 3, 2026 at 06:54PM on Source: PRIME TIME

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Trump directs Homeland Security to issue shutdown back-pay to all employees, White House says

Trump directs Homeland Security to issue shutdown backpay to all employees, White House says ReutersFri, April 3, 202...
New Photo - A death wish and a catfish: How an IRS agent lured his wife and an unsuspecting man to their murders

A death wish and a catfish: How an IRS agent lured his wife and an unsuspecting man to their murders Tim StellohFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:38 PM UTC 0 Brendan Banfield during his double murder trial on Jan. 14, in Fairfax, Va. (Tom Brenner / Pool via AP) (Tom Brenner) On a Friday morning three years ago, a horrific scene unfolded in a Northern Virginia home: A pediatric ICU nurse, Christine Banfield, was mortally wounded in her bedroom. She'd been repeatedly stabbed. With her was 39yearold Joseph Ryan. He'd been fatally shot.

A death wish and a catfish: How an IRS agent lured his wife and an unsuspecting man to their murders

Tim StellohFri, April 3, 2026 at 10:38 PM UTC

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Brendan Banfield during his double murder trial on Jan. 14, in Fairfax, Va. (Tom Brenner / Pool via AP) (Tom Brenner)

On a Friday morning three years ago, a horrific scene unfolded in a Northern Virginia home: A pediatric ICU nurse, Christine Banfield, was mortally wounded in her bedroom. She'd been repeatedly stabbed. With her was 39-year-old Joseph Ryan. He'd been fatally shot.

The nurse's husband — IRS special agent Brendan Banfield — told authorities he killed Ryan, a stranger, after the man attacked his wife.

What prosecutors say actually happened inside the Banfields' Fairfax County home was the result of something far more convoluted and sinister — a deadly catfishing scheme that was motivated by an affair and relied on a fetish website to lure an unsuspecting man to his death.

The plot, they said, was planned and executed by Brendan Banfield and his mistress, the family's Brazilian au pair.

For more on the story, tune it to "Temptation" on "Dateline" at 9 ET/8 CT tonight.

Brendan Banfield has maintained his innocence and called the allegations "absolutely crazy." After a three-week trial earlier this year, he was convicted of aggravated murder and is set to be sentenced to a mandatory term of life in prison term next month.

The au pair, Juliana Peres Magalhaes, cooperated with authorities and pleaded guilty to manslaughter. She was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

The murder

On the morning of Feb. 24, 2023, Brendan Banfield told a 911 operator that he'd come upon that terrifying scene inside his home in Herndon, a suburban community near Washington, D.C. Authorities found him in the primary bedroom kneeling over his wife, Christine Banfield, 37, with one of his hands on her neck, Fairfax County homicide detective Thomas Gadell told "Dateline."

She'd been stabbed multiple times and was later pronounced dead.

On a dog bed in the corner, Gadell said, they found Ryan. In the basement was the couple's 4-year-old daughter. She was unharmed.

In a statement to police, Peres Magalhaes walked authorities through what happened: The au pair was preparing to go to the National Zoo with the Banfields' daughter when she saw an unfamiliar SUV pull into the family's driveway. So she called Brendan Banfield, who was at a nearby McDonald's getting breakfast.

"I don't know who is that," she described telling Brendan Banfield, body camera video shows. "Please come here. I'm scared."

They put the girl in the basement with a tablet, Peres Magalhaes said, then went upstairs and heard what she described as "spanking."

In the bedroom, she said, they saw Christine Banfield on the floor and a man with a knife above her. Brendan Banfield pleaded with the man to drop the blade, she said, but the man refused and started stabbing her.

"I think Brendan shot him," Peres Magalhaes said.

She told police that she shot the man as well.

Brendan Banfield declined to provide a statement to police.

The plea deal

In the months after the killings, authorities came to doubt the au pair's account. A prosecutor in the case, Eric Clingan, told "Dateline" that it didn't make sense — Ryan had a knife and Brendan Banfield had a gun, yet Ryan refused to drop his weapon.

Nor had Peres Magalhaes provided a satisfactory explanation for a second 911 call made from her phone on the morning of Feb. 24, Clingan said. In that call, which was made 13 minutes before the one that summoned police to the family's home, the person on the line said nothing and hung up after only a few seconds, he said. But a male voice could be heard moaning in the background.

"A person was in an injured state, and yet it still took 13 minutes" for the other call to be placed, the prosecutor said. "It made no sense."

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Other 'Dateline' cases -

An exonerated Idaho man finally had his freedom. What came next was 'incomprehensible.'

A secret room and a jarring first date: Gilgo Beach murders suspect set off alarm bells

A killer known for his 'zombie hunter' costume is on death row, but some suspect he has another victim.

His wife was killed the day before their eviction. A decade later, he faced another foreclosure — and a murder charge.

Peres Magalhaes had already confessed to shooting Ryan while he was in what Clingan described as a prone, unthreatening position; in October 2023, authorities arrested and charged her with his murder. Nearly a year later, after the completion of a blood pattern analysis that pointed to Brendan Banfield as the person who'd held the knife inside the bedroom, authorities arrested him, too.

He pleaded not guilty to charges of aggravated murder and was held without bail.

Peres Magalhaes had also pleaded not guilty to the murder charge. But in the weeks after Brendan Banfield's arrest, she told authorities she wanted to cooperate, Clingan said, and in a four-hour statement, she detailed her affair with Brendan Banfield and his plan to kill his wife, whom he described as "lazy" and "not a good mother," a video of her statement shows.

Juliana Peres Magalhães is escorted into the courtroom before continuing her testimony, during the double murder trial for Brendan Banfield in Fairfax County Circuit Court on Jan. 14 in Fairfax, Va. (Tom Brenner / AP file) (Tom Brenner)

Peres Magalhaes confirmed what some of the investigators had come to believe about the killings: it was a catfishing scheme. In the statement, she said they'd created a fake user profile on a fetish-focused social network — FetLife.com — using Christine Banfield's laptop and posing as "Annastasia9," a person seeking to act out a violent sexual fantasy with a stranger in her home.

Brendan Banfield wanted to find someone who liked to "play violent" and could be blamed for Christine Banfield's murder, Peres Magalhaes said.

Ryan was that person, she said.

Authorities had learned that Ryan met other women through FetLife, but they described Ryan as a person who respected boundaries and wasn't violent, Patrick Brusch, a retired captain with the Fairfax County Police Department, told "Dateline."

Ryan, Brusch said, "was baited and hunted."

Ryan agreed to bring restraints, rope and a knife to the Banfields' home. Brendan Banfield planned on stabbing his wife with that blade after he shot Ryan, Peres Magalhaes told authorities.

She agreed to plead guilty to the lesser crime of manslaughter and testify against Brendan Banfield. In exchange for her cooperation, prosecutors would recommend she be sentenced to time served.

The conviction

Brendan Banfield's trial began in a Fairfax County courtroom in January, nearly three years after the killing of Christine Banfield and Ryan. Peres Magalhaes testified for the prosecution, telling the jury about her affair with Brendan Banfield, his plan to kill Christine Banfield and the horrific scene on the morning of Feb. 24.

Brendan Banfield's attorney grilled Peres Magalhaes, questioning why she took so long to provide her account to authorities and pointing to an offer she received from a streaming outlet for an interview. In an email presented in court, she told her mother she'd been offered $10,000 but believed she could negotiate a fee of more than twice that.

"We do deserve something," she wrote in the message.

"What is it you deserve something for?" asked the attorney, John Carroll.

"For everything we've been through," she said on the stand.

Brendan Banfield also testified, acknowledging his affair with Peres Magalhaes but denying that he played a role in planning or executing his wife's murder. When he opened the door to his bedroom and saw Christine Banfield on the floor and a man behind her with a knife, he said he was "extremely terrified."

He shot Ryan after he saw him stab her, he said.

A witness for the prosecution was able to refute a key part of Brendan Banfield's account of that morning, however. In his testimony, Banfield said that he was on his way to a work meeting with his supervisor when he stopped at McDonald's and Peres Magalhaes called him about the unfamiliar SUV in the driveway.

But after that testimony, Brendan Banfield's supervisor told authorities that no meeting had been scheduled, lead prosecutor Jenna Sands told "Dateline." In court, the supervisor testified that he'd been in Baltimore on an undercover operation.

On Feb. 2, after nine hours of deliberation, a jury convicted Brendan Banfield of aggravated murder. Eleven days later, a judge sentenced Peres Magalhaes to the maximum penalty allowed for a manslaughter conviction — 10 years in prison.

"Your actions were deliberate, self-serving and demonstrated a profound disregard for human life," Circuit Court Chief Judge Penney Azcarate said. "That is the most serious manslaughter scenario that this court has ever seen."

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A death wish and a catfish: How an IRS agent lured his wife and an unsuspecting man to their murders

A death wish and a catfish: How an IRS agent lured his wife and an unsuspecting man to their murders Tim StellohFri, A...
New Photo - Forced from their homes by Israeli bombing, displaced Lebanese face uncertainty and sectarian tensions

Forced from their homes by Israeli bombing, displaced Lebanese face uncertainty and sectarian tensions Zoya AwkyFri, April 3, 2026 at 6:24 PM UTC 7 ZOUK MOSBEH, Lebanon — Almost made homeless during Israeli bombing that badly damaged her home in Tyre, southern Lebanon, two years ago, Rose El Khoury salvaged what she could and rebuilt. Two years later, the home in Tyre that she shared with her husband and three children is a pile of rubble.

Forced from their homes by Israeli bombing, displaced Lebanese face uncertainty and sectarian tensions

Zoya AwkyFri, April 3, 2026 at 6:24 PM UTC

7

ZOUK MOSBEH, Lebanon — Almost made homeless during Israeli bombing that badly damaged her home in Tyre, southern Lebanon, two years ago, Rose El Khoury salvaged what she could and rebuilt.

Two years later, the home in Tyre that she shared with her husband and three children is a pile of rubble.

"In 2024, it was livable, even though we didn't have the money to fix it," El Khoury, a housewife in her 30s whose husband is serving with the Lebanese army, told NBC News in a telephone interview earlier this week. Today, she said, "my house is on the ground. So there is no hope to return."

El Khoury and her children are among more than 1 million people who have been forcibly displaced from their homes in Lebanon, mainly in the south, amid a sweeping aerial and ground assault by Israeli forces as Israel looks to establish a "security zone" there.

'No place to go back'

Israel began its invasion after Iranian proxy group Hezbollah launched strikes on the country from Lebanon in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, which has escalated into a wider regional conflict.

In the weeks since, fears of a long-term occupation of southern Lebanon have grown, with Israel moving to establish a buffer zone in the area, leveling homes and destroying bridges over the Litani River, which connects the south to the rest of Lebanon, while taking control of what crossings remain.

An Israeli airstrike on a bridge over the Litani River in Qasmiyeh in southern Lebanon on March 22. (Ali Hashisho / Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images) (Ali Hashisho)

Israel says the buffer zone is necessary to keep the threat of Hezbollah's rockets away from its border, and its Defense Minister Israel Katz has warned that the hundreds of thousands of families displaced from the south will not be able to return to their homes, or what is left of them, until the safety of the residents of northern Israel can be guaranteed.

More than 1,300 people have been killed across Lebanon and over 4,000 injured since the current war began, according to the Lebanese government.

"It is devastating," said El Khoury, who is now living in a single room at a temporary shelter in Sehayleh in the Keserwan District, northeast of Beirut, with her three children, ages 8, 6 and 4. She says they have struggled to get access to enough food and basic supplies.

"There is no place to go back."

Dire circumstances

Humanitarian workers on the ground have described dire circumstances for hundreds of thousands of people displaced across the country, with many sleeping on city streets and in cars in and around the country's capital, Beirut, as aid groups call for more funding to prepare for the possibility of "long-term displacement."

"Even if there was some sort of ceasefire, we already know that there are some regions in the south that have been taken over," Dr. Tania Baban, the Lebanon country director for the Chicago-based nonprofit MedGlobal, told NBC News in a phone interview Friday.

"So, now you have the concern of people who will not be able to — I hope not — but possibly ever go back to their land," she said.

Abbas Bazoun, 46, said he, his wife and their four children have been living out of their van for weeks now after being displaced from their home in Deir Aames in southern Lebanon.

Awatef Bazoun, 6, with her dog. The family now live out of a tent after being displaced from their home in Deir Amess, southern Lebanon. (Courtesy of Abbas Bazoun) (Courtesy of Abbas Bazoun)

He said they were barred from bringing their family dog into shelters and, refusing to abandon their pet, had little choice but to sleep in their vehicle.

"My dog is very dear to me, and I cannot give him away," said Bazoun. He said his family still had yet to learn whether their home remained intact, but that his small shop selling fruits and vegetables had been destroyed in Israel's offensive.

He said his wife has been left traumatized and suffered a "nervous breakdown" from living through the Israeli fire. "We faced a lot of bombing before we left," he said.

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Sectarian tensions 'brewing'

Meanwhile, humanitarian groups have also warned of growing sectarian tensions, with displaced people being turned away from communities they have sought refuge in over fears they could potentially be Hezbollah members.

Multiple groups, including the United Nations and MedGlobal, previously told NBC News that they had heard of local municipalities seeking to discourage residents from renting homes to displaced people coming from the south over fears they could be targeted if suspected Hezbollah members were among them.

The New York Times separately reported this week that the Israeli military has told leaders of Christian and Druze communities in southern Lebanon that they can remain in evacuation zones, but has pressed them to force out any Lebanese from neighboring Shia Muslim communities seeking refuge in their communities.

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment from NBC News on the allegations.

"I think there's a lot of anxiety. There's a lot of concern," Imran Riza, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator in Lebanon, said in a phone interview on Friday.

"Compared to 2024, there is much more of a sense of insecurity and tension amongst both the host populations and the displaced population," he said.

Dany Makhlouf, a social activist from Achrafieh, a Christian neighborhood in Beirut, said people there did not want shelters set up in the area after past "issues" during previous rounds of conflict between Hezbollah and Israel.

He said in some instances, displaced people had "put Hezbollah flags in the schools, which created tensions among the residents."

"Remember, we belong to different political parties, and to us, Hezbollah dragged Lebanon into this war and previous wars," he said.

Israel occupied southern Lebanon until 2000 and has frequently launched attacks on the area in recent decades, striking out at Hezbollah, which was first founded in the 1980s when Israel occupied southern Lebanon following attacks between the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Israeli military. Hezbollah has long supported the destruction of Israel.

The Lebanese government vowed in 2024 to disarm the militant group as part of a U.N.-brokered effort to bring the previous conflict to an end, but there has been little progress in doing so since.

Bechara Gholam, the mayor of Rmeil, a Beirut neighborhood in the area of Achrafieh, said there were no shelters for displaced people there.

Gholam said that if displaced people do seek to rent apartments in the area, their names are sent to the government for confirmation that they are not known to be involved in "any activity related to Hezbollah." If they are cleared, Gholam said, "we don't have any problem."

"The security of our neighborhood is a priority to us," the mayor said.

Baban said she was growing increasingly concerned about the "local tension that is brewing" and by reports of Israel trying "to ignite that type of sectarian tension."

Meanwhile, she worried what would happen to displaced families if Israel does press on with a longer-term occupation of southern Lebanon.

"To be honest, we're all hoping for a miracle," she said.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Breaking"

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Source: Breaking

Published: April 3, 2026 at 06:54PM on Source: PRIME TIME

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Forced from their homes by Israeli bombing, displaced Lebanese face uncertainty and sectarian tensions

Forced from their homes by Israeli bombing, displaced Lebanese face uncertainty and sectarian tensions Zoya AwkyFri...

 

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