New Photo - Wrongfully convicted Michigan dad sues: 'They did me wrong'

Wrongfully convicted Michigan dad sues: 'They did me wrong' Tresa Baldas, Detroit Free Press December 1, 2025 at 2:04 PM 7 Behind prison walls, they called him "Baby Killer." It was a torturous nickname for Michael Griffin, who was serving a life sentence for the death of his infant daughter — a crime he adamantly denies. He said she fell from a baby swing inside their home in Flint, Michigan, and died the next day from a failed surgery. But the police, he said, were hellbent on blaming him for her death, accusing him of abusing her, and trying to bully a confession out of him.

- - Wrongfully convicted Michigan dad sues: 'They did me wrong'

Tresa Baldas, Detroit Free Press December 1, 2025 at 2:04 PM

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Behind prison walls, they called him "Baby Killer."

It was a torturous nickname for Michael Griffin, who was serving a life sentence for the death of his infant daughter — a crime he adamantly denies. He said she fell from a baby swing inside their home in Flint, Michigan, and died the next day from a failed surgery. But the police, he said, were hell-bent on blaming him for her death, accusing him of abusing her, and trying to bully a confession out of him.

"'Tell us what you did or the doctors won't help your daughter,'" Griffin recalled the police telling him during a three-hour-long interrogation as his daughter clung to life. He described it as a futile back-and-forth:

"I'm telling you the truth."

Michael Griffin, 35, of Flint, sits on a couch with his wife, Kalesha Journeay, 33, in the living room of their home in Flint on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

"No, you're not."

"She fell out of her swing."

"No, she didn't."

"They kept telling me I was lying," recalled Griffin, who at 19 would get charged, convicted at trial and sent to prison, where the "Baby Killer" taunts would tear his guts out for years, triggering fights with those who dared utter it.

"I had to keep telling myself, 'I didn't do it,' Even if the truth never came out," Griffin said in a recent, exclusive interview with the Free Press.

But the truth did eventually come out, Griffin said. In 2023 he was exonerated with the help of the Michigan Innocence Clinic and attorney Mike Morse. Two years into his freedom, he is now suing to hold those accountable for, as he puts it, framing him for a crime that he never committed, and robbing him of 14 years of his life.

'I kept telling myself — I know they did me wrong'

In a wrongful prosecution lawsuit unfolding in U.S. District Court, Griffin alleges that his daughter's death was caused by a failed surgical procedure, and that police, doctors and forensic officials conspired to transform a "tragic household accident into a fabricated homicide." Specifically, the suit alleges, investigators and medical personnel built a false narrative of child abuse, coerced a confession through fear and deceit, then falsified police and medical reports and altered autopsy findings to match their story.

"When I was locked up, I kept telling myself, 'I know they did me wrong,' " Griffin said. "But I didn't think it could be proven."

Griffin's lawsuit is against the city of Flint, Genesee County, two Flint police officers, three doctors, three officials with the medical examiner's office and the Hurley Medical Center where his daughter was taken for treatment. Through multiple lawyers and agency officials, all declined comment for this article.

Among the lawsuit's allegations:

There was no physical evidence of blunt force trauma, yet the police and doctors pushed this theory, and a medical examiner listed it as cause of death on the autopsy report, which also noted the existence of a prior head injury, a bruise on the baby's face and the occurrence of an unsuccessful craniotomy. Yet, "without any evidence" that the injuries were caused by the dad as opposed to the failed craniotomy, the medical examiner determined that cause of death was "Blunt Force Injury of the Head" and the manner of death was "homicide."

In the middle of Griffin's trial, the autopsy report was changed after a doctor testified that no evidence existed to support a finding of "Blunt Force Trauma." A medical examiner then sent the prosecution an "" autopsy report, changing the cause of death to "Abusive Head Injury." A doctor testified that this phrase is used when there is no way to determine how injuries occur, and "admitted" that it was used "to reflect that the doctors did not know what happened to Naviah."

A doctor had discovered a prior head injury in the baby, yet the jury was never informed about how the baby's fall could have reinjured that previous injury. As it turned out, a CT scan showed a new brain bleed had developed, which triggered the need for the surgery that ultimately failed.

The police report stated that Griffin's interrogation was videotaped. The prosecutor also said the same at trial, yet the videotape has never been produced. Griffin's lawyers filed a Freedom of Information Act request for it, but the city of Flint said the video doesn't exist.

Griffin was arrested without a warrant.

A medical examiner testified that she performed an autopsy on the child at 9 a.m., but the baby was still in surgery at that time, and was not pronounced dead until 1:10 p.m.

An investigator with the medical examiner's office lied in his written report — and later to jurors — when he claimed that the mom told him that she believed her daughter had been abused by the father. The mom testified that this never happened.

"There were desperate measures taken here to ensure that Michael would be blamed for the death of his daughter," said attorney Adam Akeel, who is representing Griffin in the lawsuit. He noted the prosecution "showed a shaken-baby video to the jury" when there was no evidence supporting this theory.

"It's them pushing this false narrative to pin it on the dad," Akeel said, "when they all admit that they had no facts to support that it was caused by him."

How Griffin went from grieving parent to murder suspect in 24 hours

According to court records, trial testimony, interviews with lawyers and Griffin, these are the events that unfolded in the fall of 2009, when Griffin's daughter wound up in the Emergency Room at Hurley Medical Center in Flint with a bruise under her eye:

On Sept. 30, 2009, Griffin was home with his daughter while the baby's mom walked to a corner market to buy snacks at about 5 p.m. Both parents were just 19, living in a two-story apartment in Flint with baby Naviah, whose dad had placed her in a motorized infant swing upstairs while her mom went out. He secured her with the attached tray that latched across her lap. He did not use the seat belt. He then went downstairs and played video games, when eventually, he heard a loud thump. He said he thought it might be the neighbors.

But when he went upstairs, he said he found the baby face down on the hardwood floor.

Michael Griffin, center, 33, of Flint, has his hands massaged by his then-fiancée, Kalesha Journeay, 31, while sitting on the front porch of his mother's house on Flint's west side on Friday, May 5, 2023, shortly after Griffin was released from prison on bond. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

"I panicked and picked her up," Griffin recalled. "I remember this clear as day — as soon as I picked her up, her head went limp on my shoulder. She wasn't crying."

Griffin said he set her on the bed when he heard a knock at the door. It was Naviah's mom. He ran downstairs with the baby and opened the door. Before he could say what had happened, the mom grabbed the baby, who had stopped breathing, ran out the front door and yelled for help. An apartment security guard performed CPR on the baby and resuscitated her before the ambulance arrived and transported her to Hurley Medical Center.

When she got to the hospital, she had a bruise under her right eye and no other external injuries. But the parents would learn overnight that her brain had swollen, and that she would need surgery. A CT scan had revealed a "tiny" and "thin" bleed on the left side of Naviah's brain, and a cystic hygroma — or benign tumor — was discovered on the right side of her brain. This meant that a prior injury had occurred and healed, but was "dangerously susceptible to reinjury," the lawsuit states.

After discovering the existence of the cystic hygroma, hospital officials contacted Child Protective Services and the Flint police, who would interrogate both parents at the police station. Mom went first, telling police that she and Griffin had a good relationship, that he treats her and the baby well and had never abused either of them; and that she had no reason to believe that he would harm their child.

Mom also informed the officers that Naviah had a tendency to kick up the latched tray and pull herself up and out of her swing, and that she had previously done so on multiple occasions.

The police, though, allegedly criticized the mom for trusting the dad, telling her the doctors did not believe Griffin's story about the swing fall, and neither did they.

Fifteen years later, Naviah's mom — who said she initially "didn't want to believe" that Griffin could have hurt their child — says after years of researching the case and rethinking the details, the medical testimony and Griffin's story, she doesn't believe Griffin is telling the truth. And though she testified for the prosecution at his trial — at times providing favorable testimony for the dad — she said she believes Griffin did something that caused her child's death, and is hiding something.

Mom: 'Something happened at that house … that he's not taking accountability for'

For 36-year-old Alecia Patton, Naviah's mother, the pain, sadness and trauma of losing a child has never gone away. Though grateful for the experience to become a mom again — she now has a 10-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter — she still grieves Naviah everyday, she said. And the memory of what happened that tragic day still haunts her, in part, because she believes Griffin is hiding something.

"Something happened at the house that caused her to go to the hospital that he's not taking accountability for," Patton said in a recent interview with the Free Press.

That hospital visit was especially traumatic for Patton, who also lost her father that day. He had come to the hospital to be with her after learning about Naviah, when he died suddenly of a health issue inside his car in the parking lot, just 10 minutes after Naviah died.

"He didn't want her to be alone — that's what I tell myself to keep going," Patton said.

With back-to-back tragedies to contend with, Patton would get hit with another major event in just a matter of days. Her baby's father would be charged with murder.

"I didn't want to believe it," said Patton, who recalled going through a mix of emotions: Anger. Confusion. Sadness. But as time passed, she said, and she had a chance to research the case and process the medical information, she came to a conclusion:

"I was faced with reality — that he's the reason behind her being deceased," said Patton, who cut off all ties with Griffin shortly after her daughter's death.

Patton said she didn't believe Griffin's "she fell out of the swing" explanation: "It just didn't make sense. It never did make sense."

Patton, who is now a certified nursing assistant, said she also doesn't believe that her daughter died from a failed surgery, maintaining that it was Griffin who caused her daughter to be in the hospital in the first place.

"If, whatever happened at the house hadn't happened, then the doctors would not have had to try to get the fluid off her brain," Patton said. "I asked them to do what they could do to try to save her, and they did the best they could do."

'I want to know the truth ... She didn't deserve what happened to her'

It's been more than 10 years since Patton has spoken to Griffin. Their last conversation was a prison phone call.

"I asked him to tell me the truth of what happened," recalled Patton, who said Griffin told her that if she came in person to see him in prison, "he would tell me what happened."

But that prison visit never occurred. Patton said her application to visit him was denied, and she didn't pursue the matter further.

Still, she said, she has never stopped wondering what happened.

"I want to know the truth," she said. "Something happened. … I'm the mother. And I don't know what happened to my first-born child. It's not fair. She didn't deserve what happened to her."

When Griffin was exonerated, Patton said she was blindsided.

"I went into a dark hole. … I wasn't expecting it," Patton said, later adding: "Everybody is saying he deserves a second chance. I feel like, 'leave well enough alone.' "

As for second chances, Patton said: "I'm not God. I can't say what nobody deserves. … But I would be more comfortable if he were in prison. Justice was served before he got out."

As for Griffin's lawsuit, she said: "He's going for money, and all I want is the truth."

Dad says police bullied him with threats to get a false confession

Griffin maintains he has been truthful from the start, and that he was railroaded by police when they first took him in for questioning while his daughter fought for her life. According to Griffin, trial transcripts, and court records, here's what happened:

At the start of the interrogation, the officers closed the door, according to official reports. Then they reportedly told Griffin that both they and the doctors believed he had intentionally abused his daughter and caused her injuries, either with blunt force or shaking her. Griffin protested, but the officers wouldn't let up, allegedly telling him that unless he confessed to harming her, the doctors wouldn't be able to treat her, that they would terminate his parental rights, and that she could die.

Griffin told the officers that a couple of weeks earlier, Naviah had fallen on the metal post of the swing and there was a bruise and suggested that this could have happened again, records show. But the officers would not relent. They wanted more, telling him his daughter will die "because he wasn't man enough to tell the truth," and that they suspected he lost his temper with the mom and took it out on the baby.

Griffin continued to deny hurting his child, but the intense questioning continued, according to reports, with police telling him "they were starting to believe he was a monster," that doctors will remove his daughter's brain should she die and determine she could have been saved had her dad been truthful about hurting her.

After accusing Griffin of not wanting to help his daughter, reports show, they told him he could leave — but threatened that he would likely not be able to see Navia again for at least 18 months, and that parental termination proceedings were imminent.

Desperate and afraid, Griffin caved.

"Given the coercive pressure being placed on (Griffin) ... and in a desperate attempt to satisfy the officers' relentless demands, (Griffin) stated that he sometimes taps Naviah on the back of the head, but he never does it hard and he plays with her that way," the lawsuit states, adding the dad also told the officers that he "sometimes throws her up and down, but also just to play with her and that he has never and would never hurt her."

At 1:10 p.m., on Oct. 1, seven hours after his interrogation, his daughter was pronounced dead following an unsuccessful craniotomy.

Five days later, Griffin was arrested and charged with felony murder and first-degree child abuse. At trial, he took the stand in his own defense and broke down crying when they showed him a photo of his deceased daughter. But he was unable to convince a jury that he was innocent.

Mom testifies at trial

During trial, jurors also heard from Patton, whose testimony largely focused on her relationship with Griffin, his parenting skills, and the events that transpired after she came home and found her daughter limp in Griffin's arms. She was never asked at trial whether she believed Griffin's explanation for how their daughter got hurt.

During her testimony, Patton said that she never had any concerns about Griffin appropriately caring for their daughter, that she never saw him lose his patience with her, that he was her primary caretaker while she attended a work program, and that the two did not have disagreements about how he cared for her.

She also pushed back on the prosecution's claims that she nodded her head yes when a medical examiner investigator asked her whether she believed Griffin had abused their daughter. She testified that she did not remember that.

"Did he love her?" the defense asked her on cross-examination.

"Yes," she answered.

Patton also testified that the baby once rolled off the sofa while in the dad's care. She took the baby to the hospital out of caution, she said, but there were no injuries. She also testified that he once broke a window in their home after arguing, but that the dispute was not about the baby.

According to Patton's testimony, here is what happened on the tragic day in question, when she returned home from a walk to a corner store and found her daughter limp in her father's arms:

"I grabbed her from him," she told the jury. "I thought she was gone."

She then ran out of the house, yelled for help. An apartment security guard resuscitated her daughter then grabbed a phone from the dad and called 911. An ambulance arrived and drove the mom and baby to the hospital. Dad was in a car behind them, with his mom.

At the hospital, the mom testified, Griffin would tell her the baby fell from the swing, and that he found her on the floor when he went upstairs to change her diaper. She said they waited for about two hours in the hospital waiting room, but got no answers about the condition of their child. At that point, she said, two police officers showed up and took her to the police station for questioning.

Michael Griffin, 33, of Flint, and his then-fiancée, Kalesha Journeay, 31, take a walk through a neighborhood on Flint's west side with his nephew Jacquees Griffin on Wednesday, May 10, 2023, after Michael Griffin was released from prison on bond. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

Patton did not testify about the interrogation, but said she went back to the hospital after questioning, and eventually learned that her daughter would need surgery. Five hours later, the doctors would give her the gut-wrenching news: her daughter didn't make it.

Meanwhile, the police would begin building a case against Griffin, using the "illegally elicited" statements he made during his interrogation against him, his lawsuit states. Those same statements would later be used to persuade a jury to convict him. The prosecution also used the statements to convince the court of appeals to uphold his conviction.

It wasn't until the Michigan Innocence Clinic and prominent plaintiff attorney Mike Morse intervened that he was exonerated.

'His court-appointed attorney was a disaster'

In securing Griffin's freedom, the Michigan Innocence Clinic and Morse argued that Griffin had an ineffective lawyer, noting the prosecution brought in seven doctors to testify against Griffin, while his public defender brought in none.

"There are lots of causes of wrongful convictions, but most of these cases have one thing in common: Bad or overworked lawyers, or public defenders. And this is one of the main reasons Mr. Griffin was wrongfully convicted," Morse said during a 2023 news conference when Griffin was released. "His court-appointed attorney was a disaster. He called no expert witnesses, despite the fact that the state called seven."

According to Griffin, it was Morse who ultimately secured his release by finding and bringing in doctors who explained to the court how the baby's death likely occurred. Morse, who had never before handled a criminal case and took this one pro bono, also argued that the scientific consensus around short fall and other head injuries had evolved since 2010, evidence that was not readily available when Griffin was convicted.

Using these arguments, Morse convinced Genesee County Circuit Court Judge Elizabeth Kelly to vacate Griffin's convictions in March 2023, release him on bond, and order a new trial.

But there was no retrial. After reevaluating the case, the Genesee County Prosecutor's Office opted not to retry it, dropped all charges and dismissed the case on Sept. 13, 2023.

When asked to explain this decision, Assistant Prosecutor John Pothbury declined comment, citing pending litigation.

On its website, the Mike Morse Law Firm commended the prosecutor's office, stating: "Throughout this entire process, the Genesee County Prosecutor's Office has been extremely professional and respectful to Mr. Griffin and his legal counsel. It is abundantly clear that Genesee County Prosecutor Mr. David Leyton and his staff care about doing their job the right way and only prosecuting cases when they have a good faith basis for believing the available evidence will support a conviction. "

A fresh start, a wife, and a new baby

Since his release, Griffin, who now runs a cleaning business, has embraced his freedom with new hope and purpose. He is a father again, and a husband. He married a woman he met years ago while he was in prison. The two now have a 1-year-old boy named Nash.

"He looks just like his sister," said Griffin, noting his son makes him smile again.

Michael Griffin, center, 33, of Flint, is hugged by family members as they come to visit him outside of his mother's house on Flint's west side on Wednesday, May 10, 2023, shortly after Griffin was released from prison on bond. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

And a lot of the anger is gone.

"I ended up letting it go," Griffin said. " I had to let go of all the emotions."

Following his exoneration, Griffin received $435,000 from the state for the years he spent in prison. The payout was supposed to be $696,000, or $50,000 for every year he was in prison. But he said he didn't get the entire amount because authorities said his daughter had been hurt before, and so they decided against giving him the full amount.

It didn't make sense to Griffin, who has long maintained he never harmed his daughter. But he said he's moving on from that, too, shifting his focus to his lawsuit, and working to hold all those accountable for the nightmare he was put through.

Losing a child was hard enough, he said. But then being blamed for her death was another matter.

"I wish nobody would ever go through this," said Griffin, noting he couldn't watch baby commercials for a long time. "I dealt with a lot of pain."

And now he wants the civil justice system to hold the police, doctors, medical examiners and others responsible for it.

"The whole time I was locked up I knew something crazy had happened," Griffin said. "I just kept saying, 'I didn't do it.' I believed the hospitals did something, the cops covered stuff up."

It took more than a year for Griffin to pursue a lawsuit. He said he "had an epiphany."

"I woke up my wife ... I said, 'If I'm sitting here, who is responsible for killing my daughter?' " Griffin recalled, noting he has never received an apology for his ordeal. "Nothing was ever said. Not an 'I'm sorry.' They locked me up for it and said 'I've done it.' "

"But now that I'm out," he added, he's intent on answering this question: "Who did it?"

Contact Tresa Baldas: [email protected]

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Flint dad Michael Griffin exonerated in daughter's death sues

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Wrongfully convicted Michigan dad sues: 'They did me wrong'

Wrongfully convicted Michigan dad sues: 'They did me wrong' Tresa Baldas, Detroit Free Press December 1, 2025 at 2:...
New Photo - Publisher condemns 'violent' use of Franklin the Turtle after Pete Hegseth's boat strike post

Publisher condemns 'violent' use of Franklin the Turtle after Pete Hegseth's boat strike post Raquel Coronell UribeDecember 2, 2025 at 5:11 AM 0 The publisher of Franklin the Turtle released a statement Monday condemning the "violent" use of the children's book character after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted an image with the title "Franklin Targets Narco Terrorists." "Franklin the Turtle is a beloved Canadian icon who has inspired generations of children and stands for kindness, empathy, and inclusivity," the publishing house Kids Can Press wrote in a statement on X.

- - Publisher condemns 'violent' use of Franklin the Turtle after Pete Hegseth's boat strike post

Raquel Coronell UribeDecember 2, 2025 at 5:11 AM

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The publisher of Franklin the Turtle released a statement Monday condemning the "violent" use of the children's book character after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted an image with the title "Franklin Targets Narco Terrorists."

"Franklin the Turtle is a beloved Canadian icon who has inspired generations of children and stands for kindness, empathy, and inclusivity," the publishing house Kids Can Press wrote in a statement on X.

"We strongly condemn any denigrating, violent, or unauthorized use of Franklin's name or image, which directly contradicts these values," the statement read.

Chief Defense Department spokesperson Sean Parnell responded to the publisher in a statement, saying: "We doubt Franklin the Turtle wants to be inclusive of drug cartels… or laud the kindness and empathy of narco-terrorists."

In the image Hegseth posted, Franklin stands on a helicopter and aims a machine gun at a boat. The post followed news reports that the Pentagon carried out a second strike on an alleged drug boat on Sept. 2, which the White House confirmed Monday.

Rep. Adam Smith of Washington, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, blasted Hegseth over the post.

"I've read books to my children, but not that one apparently. This is serious business. I mean, even if it's justified, even if it's right, seriously, you're killing people. And this is your response to tweet out some joke about a cartoon turtle," Smith told reporters.

"I mean, we need a secretary of defense who understands the seriousness and the importance of the job that he has. We don't have one," he added.

Smith put out a joint statement over the weekend with Armed Services Committee chair Mike Rogers, R-Ala., in which they said the panel would provide "rigorous oversight of the Defense Department's military operations in the Caribbean."

The top Republican and Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee — Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Jack Reed, D-R.I. — said in a similar statement that they would conduct "vigorous oversight to determine the facts related to these circumstances."

The White House said Monday that the strike was ordered by Adm. Frank M. Bradley, who was overseeing the operation and at the time and was in charge of the Joint Special Operations Command. Some lawmakers and legal experts say the second attack, which reportedly killed the survivors of an initial strike, could constitute a war crime.

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Publisher condemns 'violent' use of Franklin the Turtle after Pete Hegseth's boat strike post

Publisher condemns 'violent' use of Franklin the Turtle after Pete Hegseth's boat strike post Raquel Cor...
New Photo - Kristi Noem calls for new travel ban after National Guard shooting

Kristi Noem calls for new travel ban after National Guard shooting Zoë RichardsDecember 2, 2025 at 5:28 AM 0 Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Monday she is recommending a "full travel ban" from countries that are "flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies." "I just met with the President. I am recommending a full travel ban on every damn country that's been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies," Noem wrote on X.

- - Kristi Noem calls for new travel ban after National Guard shooting

Zoë RichardsDecember 2, 2025 at 5:28 AM

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Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Monday she is recommending a "full travel ban" from countries that are "flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies."

"I just met with the President. I am recommending a full travel ban on every damn country that's been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies," Noem wrote on X.

"Our forefathers built this nation on blood, sweat, and the unyielding love of freedom—not for foreign invaders to slaughter our heroes, suck dry our hard-earned tax dollars, or snatch the benefits owed to AMERICANS.WE DON'T WANT THEM. NOT ONE," she added.

The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment about which countries Noem was referring to Monday night.

President Donald Trump shared her X post on Truth Social but did not comment on it.

A makeshift memorial outside the Farragut West Metro station in Washington on Monday. (Heather Diehl / Getty Images)

Trump has intensified his administration's crackdown on immigration in the wake of last week's shooting of two National Guard members on patrol in Washington, which left one guard member dead and the other in critical condition.

The Department of Homeland Security identified the suspect as an Afghan national who entered the United States legally in September 2021 after the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.

"We must now re-examine every single alien who has entered our country from Afghanistan under Biden, and we must take all necessary measures to ensure the removal of any alien from any country who does not belong here or add benefit to our country," Trump said in remarks hours after the shooting.

The following day, Trump said on social media that he planned to "permanently pause" all immigration from what he described as "third world countries."

The proposed travel ban is the latest in the Trump administration's efforts to restrict immigration to the United States.

Trump signed a proclamation in June banning nationals from 12 countries — including Afghanistan, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen — from entering the United States.

In October, the administration drastically reduced the annual refugee admissions cap to 7,500 — the lowest on record. The admissions numbers would "primarily be allocated" to white South Africans, according to a Federal Register memo.

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Kristi Noem calls for new travel ban after National Guard shooting

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New Photo - Experts explain what the law says about killing survivors of a boat strike

Experts explain what the law says about killing survivors of a boat strike BEN FINLEY and KONSTANTIN TOROPIN December 1, 2025 at 11:25 PM 59 Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth arrives at a a pardoning ceremony for the national Thanksgiving turkey Gobble in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson) () WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military would have committed a crime if it killed the survivors of an attack on an alleged drug boat, legal experts say. It doesn't matter whether the U.S.

- - Experts explain what the law says about killing survivors of a boat strike

BEN FINLEY and KONSTANTIN TOROPIN December 1, 2025 at 11:25 PM

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Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth arrives at a a pardoning ceremony for the national Thanksgiving turkey Gobble in the Rose Garden of the White House, Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson) ()

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military would have committed a crime if it killed the survivors of an attack on an alleged drug boat, legal experts say.

It doesn't matter whether the U.S. is in "armed conflict" with drug cartels as the Trump administration asserts. Such a fatal second strike would have violated peacetime laws and those governing armed conflict, the experts say.

"I can't imagine anyone, no matter what the circumstance, believing it is appropriate to kill people who are clinging to a boat in the water," said Michael Schmitt, a former Air Force lawyer and professor emeritus at the U.S. Naval War College. "That is clearly unlawful."

The White House confirmed Monday that a second strike was conducted in September against a vessel accused of trafficking drugs off the coast of Venezuela and insisted it was done "in self-defense" and in accordance with the laws of armed conflict.

A news report about that attack spawned a new level of scrutiny from lawmakers and added to a growing debate about whether service members can refuse to follow illegal orders, which some Democratic lawmakers recently encouraged.

Here's what to know about the strikes and laws of armed conflict:

What set off the debate

The Washington Post reported last week that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued a spoken directive to "kill everybody" on a boat targeted on Sept. 2, the first vessel hit in what the Trump administration calls a counterdrug campaign that has grown to over 20 known strikes and more than 80 dead.

Two men survived that first attack, which killed nine others, and were clinging to the wreckage, the newspaper reported. The commander in charge, Adm. Frank Bradley, ordered a second strike to comply with Hegseth's instructions, killing the two men, the Post reported.

Hegseth called it "fake news" on social media, saying the boat strikes are "in compliance with the law of armed conflict — and approved by the best military and civilian lawyers, up and down the chain of command."

President Donald Trump said Sunday that the administration "will look into" it but added that "I wouldn't have wanted that — not a second strike." He noted that Hegseth told him "he did not order the death of those two men."

White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters Monday that Bradley had ordered the second strike and "was well within his authority to do so." She denied that Hegseth said to leave no survivors.

The administration has justified the attacks as a necessary escalation to stem the flow of drugs into the United States and asserted the U.S. is engaged in an "armed conflict" with drug cartels, similar to the war against al-Qaida following the Sept. 11 attacks.

What the law allows during armed conflict

A second strike killing survivors would have been illegal under any circumstance, armed conflict or not, Schmitt said.

He said the U.S. is not in a legitimate armed conflict with drug cartels, which would have to be committing high levels of violence against the country, not just trafficking drugs that kill Americans.

Even if it was, "it has been clear for well over a century that you may not declare what's called 'no quarter' — take no survivors, kill everyone," Schmitt said.

Whether an armed conflict is taking place likely would not be settled by an international body like the International Criminal Court, to which the U.S. is not a party, said Matthew Waxman, a Columbia University law professor who was a national security official in the George W. Bush administration.

The U.S., however, could face blowback from allies, which may decline to share information for military operations that are illegal under their own laws or international law, said Waxman, who served in the State and Defense departments and on the National Security Council under Bush.

America's armed conflict against al-Qaida received support from the U.N. Security Council, NATO and U.S. allies, he said.

The legal threat posed to US military personnel

If the U.S. is not in an armed conflict, that means it violated international human rights law, which governs how countries treat individuals, Schmitt said.

"You can only use lethal force in circumstances where there is an imminent threat," Schmitt said. "And that wasn't the case."

Brian Finucane, a senior adviser with the International Crisis Group and a former State Department lawyer, agreed that the U.S. is not in an armed conflict with drug cartels.

"The term for a premeditated killing outside of armed conflict is murder," Finucane said, adding that U.S. military personnel could be prosecuted in American courts.

"Murder on the high seas is a crime," he said. "Conspiracy to commit murder outside of the United States is a crime. And under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 118 makes murder an offense."

The Pentagon's own manual on the laws of war describes a scenario similar to the Sept. 2 boat strike when discussing when service members should refuse to comply with unlawful orders.

"For example," the manual says, "orders to fire upon the shipwrecked would be clearly illegal."

What Congress has said about what comes next

Leaders of the Armed Services committees in both the House and Senate have opened investigations.

Republican Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, chairman of the Senate's committee, and its top Democrat, Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, said the committee "will be conducting vigorous oversight to determine the facts related to these circumstances."

Concern about the second strike comes after a group of Democratic lawmakers — all veterans of the armed services and intelligence community — released a video calling on U.S. military members to defy "illegal orders."

Among them was Sen. Mark Kelly, an Arizona Democrat and former Navy fighter pilot who has questioned the use of the military to attack the alleged drug boats. The Pentagon says it's investigating Kelly over possible breaches of military law tied to the video.

Kelly said Monday that "if what seems to have happened, actually happened, I'm really concerned about our service members."

Senate Majority Leader John Thune has defended the boat strikes as stopping the flow of narcotics into the U.S. and said to wait for the outcome of the reviews.

"Obviously, if there was a direction to take a second shot and kill people, that's a violation of an ethical, moral or legal code. We need to get to the bottom of it," said Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican.

___

writers Stephen Groves, Lisa Mascaro and Joey Cappelletti contributed to this report.

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Experts explain what the law says about killing survivors of a boat strike

Experts explain what the law says about killing survivors of a boat strike BEN FINLEY and KONSTANTIN TOROPIN December...
New Photo - Your guide to 2025 movie release dates

Your guide to 2025 movie release dates EW's handy calendar for theatrical and streaming movie premiere dates. By Gerrad Hall :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/Gerrad413fcf02541834f43bb26c0de8fe66f66.jpg) Gerrad Hall is an editorial director at , overseeing movie, awards, and music coverage. He is also host of The Awardist podcast, and has cohosted EW's live Oscars, Emmys, SAG, and Grammys red carpet shows. He has appeared on Good Morning America, The Talk, Access Hollywood, Extra!, and other talk shows, delivering the latest news on pop culture and entertainment.

Your guide to 2025 movie release dates

EW's handy calendar for theatrical and streaming movie premiere dates.

By Gerrad Hall

Gerrad

Gerrad Hall is an editorial director at **, overseeing movie, awards, and music coverage. He is also host of *The Awardist* podcast, and has cohosted EW's live Oscars, Emmys, SAG, and Grammys red carpet shows. He has appeared on *Good Morning America*, *The Talk*, *Access Hollywood*, *Extra!*, and other talk shows, delivering the latest news on pop culture and entertainment.

EW's editorial guidelines

on December 1, 2025 4:13 p.m. ET

Summer movie season is officially one for the record books, thanks to big releases including *Superman* and Disney's live-action remake of *Lilo & Stitch*. *The Fantastic Four: First Steps*, *Freakier Friday*, Brad Pitt's *F1*, *Jurassic World Rebirth*, and *A Minecraft Movie* have all lured audiences into movie theaters.

But the year isn't done: Still to come in 2025 are some guaranteed hits, including *Wicked: For Good*, the second part of the movie musical starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, *Avatar: Fire and Ash*, the third movie in James Cameron's groundbreaking and box-office-shattering franchise.

And likely Oscar contenders will hit theaters, from the devastating Shakespeare family drama *Hamnet*, Dwayne Johnson as *The Smashing Machine*, Paul Thomas Anderson's *One Battle After Another*, and Sydney Sweeney in the boxing biopic *Christy*, to Timothée Chalamet in *Marty Supreme*, Jennifer Lopez in the musical *Kiss of the Spider Woman*, Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen in *Deliver Me From Nowhere*, and many more.

Mark your calendars, and check back as we update this article throughout the year.

collage of Anthony Mackie in Captain America: Brave New World; Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan for Freakier Friday; Cynthia Erivo in Wicked: For Good; M3GAN

Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan in 'Freakier Friday'; Anthony Mackie in 'Captain America: Brave New World'; 'M3GAN 2.0'; Cynthia Erivo in 'Wicked'.

Marvel; Universal Pictures; Disney

**DEC. 3*****Oh. What. Fun.* - Prime Video**

**DEC. 5*****100 Nights of Hero* - In theaters***Five Nights at Freddy's 2* - In theaters***Jay Kelly* - Netflix

**DEC. 10*****Merv* - Prime Video**

**DEC. 12*****Atropia* - In theaters***Dead Man's Wire* - In select theaters***Dust Bunny* - In theaters***Ella McCay *- In theaters***Goodbye June* - In select theaters ***Hamnet* - In theaters (wide release)***Scarlet* - In theaters***Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery* - Netflix**

**DEC. 19*****Avatar: Fire and Ash* - In theaters***Is This Thing On?* - In theaters***The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants* - In theaters***Zero A.D. *- In theaters

**DEC. 24*****Goodbye June* - Netflix***Father Mother Sister Brother* - In theaters***The Plague* - In select theaters**

**DEC. 25*****Anaconda* - In theaters***The Housemaid* - In theaters***Marty Supreme* - In theaters***No Other Choice* - In select theaters***Song Sung Blue* - In theaters***The Testament of Ann Lee* - In select theaters**

The 25 best movies on Netflix

Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in 'Frankenstein'; Song Kang-ho as Kim Ki-taek in 'Parasite'; Christoph Waltz as Hans Landa in 'Inglourious Basterds'

The 26 best Disney+ movies for adults

Daryl Hannah as Madison and Tom Hanks as Allen Bauer in 'Splash'; Julia Stiles as Kat Stratford in '10 Things I Hate About You'; Whoopi Goldberg as Delores in 'Sister Act'

**JAN. 3*****The Damned* - In theaters***Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl* - Netflix

**JAN. 10*****Better Man* - In theaters (wide release)***Den of Thieves 2: Pantera* - In theaters***Diane Warren: Relentless* (doc) - In theaters***Hard Truths* - In theaters (wide release)***The Last Showgirl* - In theaters (wide release)**

**JAN. 16*****Unstoppable* - Prime Video

**JAN. 17*****Back in Action* - Netflix***I'm Still Here* - In select theaters***One of Them Days* - In theaters***The Room Next Door* - In theaters (wide release)***September 5* - In theaters (wide release)***Wish You Were Her*e - In theaters***Wolf Man* - In theaters**

**JAN. 24*****Brave the Dark* - In theaters***Flight Risk* - In theaters***Inheritance* - In theaters***Presence* - In theaters**

**JAN. 30*****You're Cordially Invited* - Prime Video

**JAN. 31*****Companion* - In theaters***Love Me* - In theaters

**FEB. 5*****Kinda Pregnant* - Netflix

**FEB. 7*****Heart Eyes* - In theaters***Love Hurts* - In theaters***Parthenope* - In theaters

**FEB. 13*****Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy* - Peacock

**FEB. 14*****Captain America: Brave New World* - In theaters***The Gorge* - In theaters***Paddington in Peru* - In theaters**

**FEB. 21*****The Monkey* - In theaters***Old Guy* - In theaters***The Unbreakable Boy* - In theaters**

**FEB. 28*****In the Lost Lands* - In theaters***Last Breath* - In theaters***The Legend of Ochi* - In theaters***My Dead Friend Zoe* - In theaters***Riff Raff* - In theaters

**MARCH 6*****Picture This* - Prime Video**

**MARCH 7*****Mickey 17* - In theaters***Night of the Zoopocalypse* - In theaters***Plankton: The Movie* - Netflix***The Rule of Jenny Pen* - In theaters

**MARCH 13*****Control Freak* - Hulu***The Parenting* - Max**

**MARCH 14*****The Actor* - In theaters***Black Bag* - In theaters***Borderline* - In theaters***The Electric State* - Netflix***The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie* - In theaters***Novocaine* - In theaters***O'Dessa* - In theaters**

**MARCH 21*****Alto Knights* - In theaters***Ash* - Shudder***The Assessment* - In theaters***Bob Trevino Likes It* - In theaters***Locked* - In theaters***Magazine Dreams* - In theaters***Snow White* (live-action) - In theaters

**MARCH 27*****Holland* - In theaters**

**MARCH 28*****Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Road Trip* - Disney+***The Ballad of Wallis Island *- In theaters***Death of a Unicorn* - In theaters***The Friend* - In theaters (limited release)***The Penguin Lessons* - In theaters***The Woman in the Yard* - In theaters***A Working Man* - Prime Video**

**MARCH 30*****The Life List* - Netflix

**APR. 4*****Eric LaRue* - In theaters***Freaky Tales* - In theaters***The Friend* - In theaters (wide release)***Minecraft* - In theaters***A Nice Indian Boy* - In theaters**

**APR. 10*****G20* - Prime Video**

**APR. 11*****The Amateur* - In theaters***Drop* - In theaters***Sacramento* - In theaters***Warfare* - In theaters**

**APR. 18*****Hell of a Summer* - In theaters***The Shrouds* - In theaters***Sinners* - In theaters***Sneaks* - In theaters***The Wedding Banquet* - In theaters

**APR. 20*****It Feeds* - In theaters

**APR. 24*****Superboys of Malegaon* - In theaters**

**APR. 25*****The Accountant 2* - Prime Video***Havoc* - Netflix***On Swift Horses* - In theaters***Until Dawn* - In theaters

**MAY 1*****Another Simple Favor* - Prime Video**

**MAY 2*****Rust* - In theaters***The Surfer* - In theaters***Thunderbolts** - In theaters***Words of War* - In theaters**

**MAY 9*****Fight or Flight* - In theaters***Friendship* - In theaters (limited release) ***Juliet & Romeo* - In theaters***Lilly* - In theaters***Nonnas* - Netflix**

**MAY 16*****Final Destination: Bloodline*s - In theaters***Hurry Up Tomorrow* - In theaters**

**MAY 23*****Fear Street: Prom Queen* - Netflix***Fountain of Youth* - Apple TV***Jane Austen Wrecked My Life* - In select theaters***Lilo & Stitch* (live-action remake) - In theaters***Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning* - In theaters**

**MAY 30*****Bring Her Back* - In theaters***Karate Kid: Legends* - In theaters***The Phoenician Scheme* - In theaters

**JUNE 6*****Ballerina* - In theaters***Dangerous Animals* - In theaters***I Don't Understand You* - In theaters***The Life of Chuck* - In theaters***Predator: Killer of Killers* - Hulu***The Ritual* - In theaters***Straw* - Netflix

**JUNE 12*****Deep Cover* - Prime Video**

**JUNE 13*****Echo Valley *- In theaters***Elio* - In theaters***How to Train Your Dragon* (live-action) - In theaters***Materialists* - In theaters***The Unholy Trinity* - In theaters**

**JUNE 20*****28 Years Later* - In theaters***Bride Hard* - In theaters***Everything's Going to Be Great* - In theaters***Inside* - In theaters***KPop Demon Hunters* - Netflix**

**JUNE 27*****F1* - In theaters***Ice Road 2* - In theaters***M3GAN 2.0* - In theaters***Ponyboi* - In theaters***Sorry, Baby* - In theaters

**JULY 2*****40 Acres* - In theaters***Heads of State* - Prime Video***Jurassic World Rebirth* - In theaters***The Old Guard 2* - Netflix**

**JULY 11*****Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight* - In theaters***Sovereign* - In theaters***Superman* - In theaters***Tyler Perry's Madea's Destination Wedding* - Netflix**

**JULY 18*****Eddington* - In theaters***Guns Up* - In theaters***I Know What You Did Last Summer* - In theaters***Smurfs* - In theaters

**JULY 25*****The Fantastic Four: First Steps* - In theaters***Happy Gilmore 2* - Netflix***The Home* - In theaters***Oh, Hi!* - In theaters***Shoshana* - In theaters**

**JULY 30*****Together* - In theaters

**AUG. 1*****The Bad Guys 2* - In theaters***My Oxford Year* - Netflix***The Naked Gun* - In theaters***She Rides Shotgun* - In theaters**

**AUG. 6*****The Pickup* - Prime Video***Sketch* - In theaters**

**AUG. 8*****Freakier Friday* - In theaters***My Mother's Wedding* - In theaters***Weapons* - In theaters**

**AUG. 15*****Americana* - In theaters***Clika* - In theaters***East of Wall* - In theaters***Highest 2 Lowest* - In select theaters***Night Always Comes* - Netflix***Nobody 2* - In theaters***Red Sonja* - In theaters***Went Up the Hill* - In theaters

**AUG. 20*****The Map That Leads to You* - Prime Video**

**AUG. 22*****Eden* - In theaters***Honey Don't!* - In theaters***Ne Zha 2* - In theaters***Relay* - In theaters***Splitsville* - In select theaters**

**AUG. 28*****The Thursday Murder Club* - Netflix**

**AUG. 29*****Caught Stealing* - In theaters***Love, Brooklyn* - In theaters***The Roses* - In theaters***The Toxic Avenger* - In theaters

**SEPT. 5*****The Baltimorons* - In select theaters***The Conjuring: Last Rites* - In theaters***The Cut* - In theaters***Hamilton* (filmed stage musical) - Disney+***Highest 2 Lowest* - Apple TV***Lurker* - In theaters***Preparation for the Next Life* - In theaters***Splitsville* - In theaters (wide release)***The Threesome* - In theaters***Twinless* - In theaters**

**SEPT. 12*****Code 3* - In theaters***Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle* - In theaters***Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale* - In theaters***The History of Sound* - In theaters***The Long Walk* - In theaters***Looking Through Water* - In theaters***Spinal Tap 2: The End Continues* - In theaters***Tin Soldier* - In theaters**

**SEPT. 19*****Adulthood* - In select theaters***A Big Bold Beautiful Journey* - In theaters***Doin' It* - In theaters***Him* - In theaters***London Calling* - In theaters***The Lost Bus* - In select theaters***The Man in My Basement* - In select theaters***Plainclothes* - In theaters***The Senior* - In theaters***The Summer Book* — In theaters***Swiped* - Hulu***Waltzing With Brando* - In theaters***The Wrong Paris* - Netflix**

**SEPT. 26*****All of You* - In select theaters, Apple TV***Gabby's Dollhouse: The Movie* - In theaters***Dead of Winter* - In theaters***Eleanor the Great* - In theaters***Long Shadows* - In theaters***I Really Love My Husband* - In theaters***One Battle After Another* - In theaters***The Strangers — Chapter 2* - In theaters

**OCT. 1*****Play Dirty* - Prime Video**

**OCT. 3*****Anemone* - In theaters***The Lost Bus* - Apple TV***The Smashing Machine* - In theaters***Steve* - In theaters

**OCT. 8*****Maintenance Required* - Prime Video**

**OCT. 10*****After the Hunt* - In select theaters***A House of Dynamite* - In select theaters***If I Had Legs I'd Kick You* - In theaters***Kiss of the Spider Woman* - In theaters***Roofman* - In theaters***Soul on Fire* - In theaters***Tron: Ares* - In theaters***Urchin* - In theaters***The Woman in Cabin 10* - Netflix**

**OCT. 15*****Ballad of a Small Player* - In select theaters***It Was Just an Accident* - In theaters**

**OCT. 17*****After the Hunt* - In theaters (expands wide)***Black Phone 2* - In theaters***Blue Moon* - In select theaters***Frankenstein* - In select theaters***Good Fortune* - In theaters***The Mastermind* - In theaters***Truth & Treason* - In theaters**

**OCT. 22*****The Hand That Rocks the Cradle* - Hulu/Disney+***Hedda* - In select theaters**

**OCT. 24*****Blue Moon* - In theaters (wide release)***Bugonia* - In theaters***Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc* - In theaters***Deliver Me From Nowhere* - In theaters***A House of Dynamite *- Netflix***Last Days* - In theaters***Regretting You* - In theaters***Shelby Oaks* - In theaters**

**OCT. 29*****Ballad of a Small Player* - Netflix***Hedda* - Prime Video***Stitch Head* - In theaters**

**OCT. 31****Nouvelle Vague - In select theaters***The Thing With Feathers* - In theaters

**NOV. 7*****Bugonia* - In theaters***Christy* - In theaters***Die My Love* - In theaters***Frankenstein* - Netflix***Nuremberg* - In theaters***Peter Hujar's Day* - In theaters***Predator: Badlands* - In theaters***Train Dreams* - In select theaters***We Forgot to Break Up* - In theaters

**NOV. 11*****Sentimental Value* - In theaters

**NOV. 12*****Playdate* - Prime Video**

**NOV. 14*****Arco * - In select theaters***The Carpenter's Son* - In theaters***Come See Me in the Good Light* - Apple TV***In Your Dreams* - Netflix***Jay Kelly* - In select theaters***Keeper* - In theaters***Nouvelle Vague* - Netflix***Now You See Me: Now You Don't* - In theaters***Rebuilding* - In theaters***The Running Man* - In theaters***Sirāt* - In theaters***Trap House* - In theaters**

**NOV. 21*****The Family Plan 2* - Apple TV***Rental Family* - In theaters***SISU* sequel - In theaters***Train Dreams* - Netflix***Wicked: For Good* - In theaters

**NOV. 26*****Eternity* - In theaters***The Secret Agent* - In select theaters***Zootopia 2* - In theaters

**NOV. 27*****Hamnet* - In theaters (limited release)

**NOV. 28*****The Thing With Feathers* - In theaters

- Movie Reviews & Recommendations

- Movie Industry

- Film Distribution

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Source: "EW Film"

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Source: Film

Published: December 02, 2025 at 05:38AM on Source: RED MAG

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Your guide to 2025 movie release dates

Your guide to 2025 movie release dates EW's handy calendar for theatrical and streaming movie premiere dates . By G...
New Photo - Why future Office star was fired from Back to the Future after Michael J. Fox replaced Eric Stoltz

Fox details the domino effect that his replacing Stoltz weeks into production had on the '80s classic in his new memoir, &34;Future Boy.&34; Why future Office star was fired from Back to the Future after Michael J. Fox replaced Eric Stoltz Fox details the domino effect that his replacing Stoltz weeks into production had on the '80s classic in his new memoir, &34;Future Boy.&34; By Ryan Coleman :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/RyanColemanauthorphoto0081ce8f0254478080f35972c433877b.

Fox details the domino effect that his replacing Stoltz weeks into production had on the '80s classic in his new memoir, "Future Boy."

Why future Office star was fired from Back to the Future after Michael J. Fox replaced Eric Stoltz

Fox details the domino effect that his replacing Stoltz weeks into production had on the '80s classic in his new memoir, "Future Boy."

By Ryan Coleman

Ryan Coleman author photo

Ryan Coleman

Ryan Coleman is a news writer for with previous work in MUBI Notebook, Slant, and the LA Review of Books.

EW's editorial guidelines

November 28, 2025 8:30 p.m. ET

Claudia Wells and Michael J. Fox. on the set of "Back to the Future"

Claudia Wells and Michael J. Fox in 'Back to the Future'. Credit:

Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty

- *Back to the Future *star Michael J. Fox recounted in his new memoir about the making of the film, *Future Boy*, how his replacing Eric Stoltz six weeks into production led to another recasting.

- Melora Hardin, who'd already shot a number of scenes as protagonist Marty McFly's girlfriend Jennifer Parker, was ultimately recast by Claudia Wells after being deemed too tall for Fox.

- "Bob Zemeckis thought perhaps the audience could look past our height difference, but when he quickly surveyed the female members of the crew, they assured him that the tall pretty girl in high school rarely picks the cute short guy," Fox wrote.**

Hollywood can be brutal. Sometimes you lose a promising part in an upcoming film because you're deemed the wrong fit, but you can even lose your part because your *scene partner *is deemed the wrong fit.

Melora Hardin, the future star of *The Office*, found herself on the wrong end of such a casting decision after she'd already shot weeks of footage for the 1985 sci-fi comedy classic *Back to the Future*. Franchise star Michael J. Fox recounted the series of dominoes that fell, eventually toppling Hardin's chance at her first big break, in his new memoir of the making of the film, *Future Boy*.

"My goal as a child was self-­preservation. Bullies often ridiculed my height, an easy target. I suffered the indignity of short jokes and prejudice against my smallness," he wrote. Fox found that his diminutive stature "worked in my favor when I was a teenage actor playing a younger kid, but it turned against me as an adult, when I went up for romantic leads opposite taller actresses."

That sword proved to be double-edged, however, when Fox replaced Eric Stoltz as the lead in Robert Zemeckis and Steven Spielberg's time-traveling romp six weeks into production. Suddenly, it wasn't Fox who was too short, but Hardin, cast to play protagonist Marty McFly's girlfriend Jennifer Parker, who was too tall.

Elizabeth Shue back to the future 2

Elisabeth Shue in 'Back to the Future Part II'.

"I regret that this prejudice inadvertently affected another cast member in *Back to the Future *- Melora Hardin, the talented actress who had played Marty's girlfriend, Jennifer, opposite the perfectly tall Eric Stoltz," Fox explained. "Melora, several inches taller than me, was replaced in the movie after I took over as Marty. Initially, Bob Zemeckis thought perhaps the audience could look past our height difference, but when he quickly surveyed the female members of the crew, they assured him that the tall pretty girl in high school rarely picks the cute short guy."

Though he'd won one of the most coveted roles of the year among younger leading men, Fox, primarily known as the conservative wise guy Alex P. Keaton on the the NBC sitcom *Family Ties*, wasn't yet regarded as a true star. "No one asked for my opinion, but I would have risen to Melora's defense," he lamented.

Michael J. Fox opens up about being 'treated like s---' before 'Back to the Future' success

Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Amblin Entertainment/Universal Pictures/Kobal/Shutterstock (5886092f) Lea Thompson, Michael J. Fox Back To The Future - 1985 Director: Robert Zemeckis Amblin Entertainment/Universal Pictures USA Scene Still Scifi Retour vers le futur

Great Scott, 'Back to the Future' is 40! See where the stars of the sci-fi classic are now

Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly and Christopher Lloyd as Doc Brown in Back to the Future'

Hardin was ultimately replaced by Claudia Wells, Zemeckis' first choice for the role, and Wells was replaced by Elisabeth Shue in *Back to the Future Part II *and *Back to the Future Part III*. So Hardin's breakout was delayed — but not for long. A role in the core cast of the short-lived *Dirty Dancing *TV series eventually led to memorable parts in series like *Cover Me*, *Monk*, and the series that would provide her signature role, *The Office*.

The actress has revisited her *Back to the Future *sliding doors moment in the past. Earlier this year on *The Joe Vulpis Podcast*, Hardin explained that "everyone knew" her casting in the film was "a big deal," as she had signed up for a two-picture deal, which guaranteed a spot in any subsequent sequel, depending on the film's success.

"I went and did some promotional pictures and stuff. And then [weeks] into filming, they fired Eric and brought in Michael J. Fox," she recalled. "When they did that, it was apparently the two female executives at the time that thought that it was emasculating for their lead character male to be in scenes with a woman that was taller than him."

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.*****

Though Hardin has come to accept the executives' decision due to the pressures of the era ("The '80s was a really really hard time for women to be executives — I think they felt that they had to think in a masculine way because that was what was running Hollywood."), it wasn't easy to accept at the outset of her career. "At the time, at 17 years old, that was crushing for me, and very, very upsetting. Whatever! If I had done it, I'm sure it would have all gone in a different way. I wouldn't have done *The Office*."

The Office Jenna Fischer as Pam Beesly, Melora Hardin as Jan Levinson and Steve Carell as Michael Scott

Jenna Fischer, Melora Hardin, and Steve Carell on 'The Office'. Justin Lubin/NBCU Photo Bank

Wells too has reflected on the rounds of casting musical chairs that led to her finally stepping in as *Back to the Future*'s Jennifer.

"When I had to let it go, I had no qualms. And normally, if I didn't get a part that I wanted, I would have a lot of anxiety. But for some reason, I just felt a sense of peace," Wells told PEOPLE in 2015. The actress was initially sought for the role, but turned it down due to a prior commitment to the 1984 series *Off the Rack*.

By the time Fox replaced Stoltz, and producers went looking for a new Jennifer, however, the series had wrapped, leaving Wells free to reconsider. "I'm 5'3½", and Michael's 5'4", so I got my part back! How cool is that? It's absolutely fate."****

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Why future Office star was fired from Back to the Future after Michael J. Fox replaced Eric Stoltz

Fox details the domino effect that his replacing Stoltz weeks into production had on the '80s classic in his new memoir, ...

"The Chair Company" ending explained: Who's behind Red Ball Market Global? Randall ColburnDecember 1, 2025 at 11:33 PM 0 Tim Robinson as Ron in the season 1 finale of 'The Chair Company'Key Points The Chair Company is an HBO series about a project manager who spirals down a conspiracy rabbit hole after an embarrassing incident at work. Tim Robinson, Lake Bell, Sophia Lillis, and Joseph Tudisco lead the cast. The season 1 finale promises an even darker and more circuitous second season.

- - "The Chair Company" ending explained: Who's behind Red Ball Market Global?

Randall ColburnDecember 1, 2025 at 11:33 PM

0

Tim Robinson as Ron in the season 1 finale of 'The Chair Company'Key Points -

The Chair Company is an HBO series about a project manager who spirals down a conspiracy rabbit hole after an embarrassing incident at work.

Tim Robinson, Lake Bell, Sophia Lillis, and Joseph Tudisco lead the cast.

The season 1 finale promises an even darker and more circuitous second season.

TV is awash in elaborate criminal networks and conspiracies these days, but no show is leaping into the rabbit hole quite like The Chair Company.

The HBO series, which Entertainment Weekly's Kristen Baldwin lauded as "wonderfully weird," was created by Tim Robinson and Zach Kanin, the duo behind Netflix hit I Think You Should Leave. Robinson leads the gonzo comedy as Ron Trosper, a project manager for the Fisher Robay development firm who stumbles upon a vast conspiracy after his chair breaks during a work presentation.

The Chair Company's first season saw Ron investigating chair manufacturer Tecca and its parent company, Red Ball Market Global (RBMG), which he suspects of refashioning old chairs and selling them as brand new. His obsession brings him face-to-face with several shady characters affiliated with Tecca and RBMG, all while putting his job and family at risk.

The season 1 finale raised as many questions as it answered, revealing that Ron's supposed grasp of the conspiracy isn't as ironclad as he thought. Also, several of those in his orbit — like his boss, Jeff (Lou Diamond Phillips), and ally Mike (Joseph Tudisco) — contain secrets of their own that Ron will be forced to confront.

So, what happened in The Chair Company season 1 finale? Let's break it down.

Who is Alice Quintana?

Tim Robinson and Lake Bell in the season 1 finale of 'The Chair Company'

In the penultimate episode, Ron deduced that Alice Quintana (Kathryn Meisle), the Delaware City assistant purchasing director, was behind the fraud occurring at Tecca. The problem? Alice is also the primary investor in the business of Barb (Lake Bell), Ron's wife. To expose her would threaten Barb's livelihood.

As Ron sees it, Alice is only investing in Barb's business because she wants Ron to stop looking into Tecca and RBMG. That's enough to satisfy him, as it means his investigation meant something. He's even happier when he finds out from a friend that Barb knew about his efforts to expose Tecca, and was impressed by them. He feels like a hero.

The finale, however, throws him a few curveballs. The first? Alice isn't the mastermind he thought she was. When he finds paperwork listing out the executives behind RBMG, she's nowhere to be found. Secondly? Barb did know about his investigation, but she wasn't as smitten with his work as he was led to believe. In fact, she apologizes for making fun of him behind his back for "running around like a dumb detective."

No longer the hero, Ron is ready to burrow back into his rabbit hole. It's a clever and perceptive twist, as conspiratorial thinking is so often a refuge of the narcissist.

Who is behind Red Ball Market Global?

Lou Diamond Phillips as Jeff in the season 1 finale of 'The Chair Company'

Early in the season, Ron discovers the executives listed on RBMG's website are all fake, and that the individuals in their headshots are all actors. By the end of the finale, though, Ron learns who's really behind the shadowy conglomerate. One of them is a mysterious figure named Stacy Crystals (more on him later). The other is his boss, Jeff.

Coming into the finale, Ron and Jeff are on the outs after an enraged Ron pushed Jeff at a worksite, leading to him being suspended. Jeff is still seething about it, and it doesn't help that his employees characterize the incident as Ron "overpowering" Jeff and nearly "throwing him down a hill like a rag doll." Jeff is a man's man, and doesn't like not being perceived as an alpha.

As HR tries to determine whether this was an "isolated freak impulse" or a larger pattern of behavior, Jeff rebuffs recommendations that Ron be replaced as project manager for the Canton Marketplace at Bear Run development. He calls Ron, asking if they can "hash it over a beer" and figure out a way for Ron to return to the company. Ron is resistant, as Barb is encouraging him to forge a new path for himself that makes him happy, but he's also feeling financial pressure after his son Seth (Will Price) decides he wants to study stop-motion animation at the Rhode Island School of Design. He decides to meet with Jeff.

They link up at a karaoke bar, where Jeff has brought along his macho pal Grego (Tim Smallwood). The vibes are weird, with Jeff embarrassing himself after a failed attempt sing Bill LaBounty's "Livin' It Up." To prove to Ron he's a good singer, he forces Ron listen to some of his original songs. One of them sounds strangely familiar, and Ron realizes where he's heard it before: RBMG's hold music. It's an interpolation of Jeff's song, but the same melody and voice.

This prompts Ron to bail on karaoke and break into Jeff's office. There, he stumbles upon a secret file cabinet containing RBMG paperwork that lists Jeff as its chief financial officer. To Ron's dismay, Alice is nowhere to be found in the paper. Stacy Crystals, on the other hand, is...

Who is Stacy Crystals?

The Chair Company finale begins at the wedding of no one we've ever met before. There, the father of the bride gets too drunk and embarrasses himself. While drowning his sorrows at the hotel bar, he meets Stacy Crystals (Peter Reznikoff), a silver fox who gasses him up after learning that the sad sack writes and performs his own music. Stacy goes on to say that he knows some studio musicians in Los Angeles who could help him lay down some tracks.

It's clearly a scam, likely the kind of talent scouting scheme portrayed in Craig Zobel's fantastic Great World of Sound (2007). As he exits the hotel, a teenage boy pulls a 3D-printed gun on Stacy.

"You wrecked my dad's life," the kid says before shooting Stacy.

Later, Ron discovers a photo of Jeff posing with Stacy and a "movie star" named Danny Donovan. We also see Jeff getting a call about Stacy's attack.

"Does Danny know?" he asks.

The nature of this trio's relationship — and how RBMG factors in — is still murky, but it seems as if the conglomerate is involved in more than just manufacturing shoddy chairs.

Who is Baby's real owner?

In a strange detour, Ron loses his new dog, Baby, in the woods. He tracks her to a house, where a strange man informs Ron that Baby is actually his dog and that someone stole her from his yard. Her name isn't Baby, we learn, but Minnie Mouse.

He then asks Ron to come to his shed, where he reveals a "brand new shape" that's "never been done before." Ron is impressed, but when he turns around, the man — now with black paint around his eyes — bares his teeth menacingly and Ron passes out.

Ron wakes up on the man's couch, assuming what he saw was just a dream. He asks the man if he'll share on social media that Ron saved Minnie Mouse's life. He does, but Ron is horrified to read in the Instagram replies that people had actively tried to free Minnie Mouse because her owners "SCREAM AT HER EVERY NIGHT."

Who's the man in Mike's apartment?

Tim Robinson as Ron and Joseph Tudisco as Mike in the season 1 finale of 'The Chair Company'

The Chair Company ends with a chilling image: a man handcuffed to a toilet in the apartment of Mike, Ron's enemy turned ally. We don't know who he is, exactly, but we previously saw him in last week's episode trying to convince Mayor Greg Braccon (Tom Alan Robbins) to leave a campaign event.

Basically, Ron had a plan to confront the controversial mayor at the event with questions about the Tecca conspiracy, but got hung up at a party. He asked Mike to try and keep the mayor there until he could swing by, but another man was pressuring the mayor to leave so they could go in his hot tub. It appears, in his devotion to Ron, Mike kidnapped the hot tub guy and is now holding him hostage.

This revelation comes on the heels of Ron learning that Mike is more dangerous than he realized. Earlier in the episode, Ron learned from Mike's daughter, Lynette (Amy Zubieta), that she's not really his daughter, after all. Her real father donated his organs after dying, and Mike received his heart. But Mike became obsessed with Lynette and her mother, believing that having her real father's heart made him part of their family. His fixation resulted in them getting a restraining order against him.

"He's a scary man," she tells Ron. "Don't let him near your family."

Too late. And now Mike's fanatical devotion to Ron's conspiracy could lead to Ron having blood on his hands.

Who's the Unknown Caller?

Tim Robinson as Ron in the season 1 finale of 'The Chair Company'

Throughout season 1, Ron received several threatening phone calls from an unknown number. He'd assumed the caller was affiliated with RBMG, but in the finale we learn that's not the case. The caller turns out to be the boyfriend of Amanda (Amelia Campbell), Ron's mousy coworker.

When Ron finally meets the mystery man (Jeffrey Bean) in person, the caller removes a hockey mask to reveal an uncanny, heavily made-up face that evokes the mask from the 1976 slasher Alice, Sweet Alice.

The mystery man, credited as "Jason," claims that Ron didn't fall out of his chair by accident.

"This was all set in motion when you were a boy," he says, explaining that Amanda has long resented Ron for a time in high school when Ron spit a gummy bear into her cleavage. It was Amanda who broke Ron's chair, he declares, adding that she did it with her mind. Amanda, apparently, is telekinetic.

Or is she? The rabbit hole just gets deeper and deeper.

Where can I watch The Chair Company?

The Chair Company is now streaming on HBO Max.

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Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

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Source: Entertainment

Published: December 02, 2025 at 01:36AM on Source: RED MAG

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“The Chair Company” ending explained: Who's behind Red Ball Market Global?

"The Chair Company" ending explained: Who's behind Red Ball Market Global? Randall ColburnDecember 1, 2025...

 

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