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News 5 NOW at 8:00am |Tuesday, June 10, 2025

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www.youtube.com – WKRG – 2025-06-10 08:20:10

SUMMARY: News 5 Now at 8:00 a.m. on June 10, 2025, covered major stories including California suing the Trump administration over National Guard deployment at immigration protests. Former Bay Labry officer BJ Squires was arrested for bond violations. Students from Navar and West Florida high schools raced custom electric go-karts in a STEM-focused event at Daytona International Speedway. Police investigated a jewelry store burglary at Tanganger Outlet Mall in Foley. Dmitri Hooper was found not guilty in the disappearance of his daughter, Britney Robinson. The broadcast also featured a fun poll about beach bag essentials and invited viewers to comment on social media.

Former Bayou la Batre Police officer is back in Metro Jail, accused of violating his bond agreement, a jewelry store break in at the Tanger Outlet Mall in Foley, and a not guilty verdict for a man who was charged with murder in the death of his daughter.

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News from the South - Alabama News Feed

Three kids face criminal charges after they were caught on camera vandalizing a Bay Minette city par

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www.youtube.com – WKRG – 2025-06-11 17:51:37

SUMMARY: Three Bay Minette kids, aged 13 and 14, face criminal charges after vandalizing Kids Park with spray paint, including obscene graffiti and threatening images. Despite cleanup efforts, vandals repeatedly defaced the park, prompting installation of security cameras that captured them in the act. Police Chief Al Tolbert stressed the severity of the crime, warning that parents could be held responsible if offenses continue. Authorities are also investigating another group vandalizing Rex Courtyard Park nearby. Police vow to identify, arrest, and prosecute all involved. This incident highlights the city’s firm stance against juvenile delinquency and vandalism.

Bay Minette police have had a few issues with kids vandalizing city parks

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Report: FBI leadership considering moving training academy to Huntsville

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alabamareflector.com – Anna Barrett – 2025-06-11 12:09:00


The FBI is considering relocating its National Academy training program from Quantico, Virginia, to Huntsville, Alabama. The 10-week National Academy trains law enforcement leaders worldwide, while other FBI programs and facilities would stay at Quantico. The move has drawn criticism, including from Sen. Mark Warner, who questions its necessity and cost, noting Quantico’s proximity to critical FBI assets. Huntsville already hosts an FBI explosives academy and employs about 1,500 bureau staff. Supporters argue the relocation would reduce political influence and duplication. FBI Director Kash Patel proposed moving up to 1,500 staff nationwide, including 500 to Huntsville’s Redstone Arsenal.

by Anna Barrett, Alabama Reflector
June 11, 2025

The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s leadership is considering moving one of its training programs for local, federal and international law enforcement from Quantico, Virginia, to Huntsville, according to the Washington Post.

Law enforcement agencies across the world nominate officers with leadership potential to participate in the 10-week training National Academy.

The FBI has a separate training program for new bureau hires. That program, and other parts of the FBI’s Quantico facilities, including the bureau’s laboratory division, would remain at the sprawling campus in Northern Virginia under FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino’s proposed pilot plan, people familiar with the discussions told the newspaper.

An FBI spokesperson said in a statement to States Newsroom that new facilities would be chosen based on cost and utility. Messages seeking comment were left Wednesday with the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency; Gov. Kay Ivey; U.S. Sens. Katie Britt, R-Alabama, and Tommy Tuberville, R-Alabama and U.S. Rep. Dale Strong, R-Huntsville were left on Wednesday morning. 

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Virginia, the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in a statement that Congress should be “deeply skeptical of any plan to uproot the FBI’s National Academy from its longtime home at Quantico and relocate it to Huntsville.”

“This move raises serious questions, starting with why such a relocation is even necessary, and at what cost?” the statement said. “Quantico is co-located with other critical FBI and national security assets and before we spend taxpayer dollars on a disruptive and potentially unnecessary move, the Bureau owes Congress and the American people a clear justification for this plan.”

In a statement, Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle said the city would welcome the FBI.

“Expanding law enforcement training capabilities at Redstone Arsenal has long been a part of the FBI’s master plan,” the statement said. “We look forward to welcoming more trainees to Huntsville.”

The FBI moved an explosives training academy to Huntsville in 2016 and employed about 1,500 people in the city at the start of 2023. Republicans in Congress have named the city as a possible place for a new FBI headquarters, claiming the FBI’s current location exposes it to political influence and leads to duplicated services.  

The push to move the National Academy to Huntsville has drawn criticism from some FBI personnel, who see little justification for the potentially costly move, the people told the Post. The FBI’s training facilities at Quantico were recently upgraded, and the people familiar with the discussions said critics do not think Huntsville would have comparable facilities without significant new funding.

President Donald Trump’s pick for the FBI’s director Kash Patel, has said that he would move up to 1,500 staff and agents out of the FBI’s downtown Washington headquarters to satellite offices across the country. Five hundred of those employees would go to Redstone Arsenal, the bureau’s large satellite headquarters in Huntsville.

States Newsroom reporter Jacob Fischler contributed to this report. Updated at 12:20 p.m. with statement from Sen. Mark Warner and at 2:32 p.m. with a statement from the FBI. 

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The post Report: FBI leadership considering moving training academy to Huntsville appeared first on alabamareflector.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This content presents information about an ongoing FBI facility relocation discussion, providing statements and perspectives from figures across the political spectrum, including Republicans advocating for the move and Democrats expressing concern. It avoids emotive or partisan language, focuses on factual reporting, and gives balanced attention to different viewpoints, reflecting a neutral, centrist editorial stance.

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News from the South - Alabama News Feed

News 5 NOW at 8 | June 11, 2025

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www.youtube.com – WKRG – 2025-06-11 08:25:45

SUMMARY: News 5 NOW at 8, June 11, 2025, covers key stories: A Mobile County school bus driver, Angela Weaver, accused of falling asleep before a February crash injuring six students, will remain as a bus aide but not a driver due to past speeding tickets. Mississippi’s first BIES convenience store opened near Pascagoula, featuring 126 fuel pumps and 165 toilets. Spanish Fort’s Aiden Shamburgger committed to South Alabama Jaguars for college football. Navar High won the Florida Power & Light Electrathon race series with electric go-karts. WKRG and LifeSouth are hosting a blood drive today (10 AM-5 PM) at News 5 studios with incentives.

A Mobile County school bus driver is reassigned, the first Buc-ees in Mississippi opens & WKRG and LifeSouth’s Blood Drive is back.

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