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Pakistani Firm Shipped Fentanyl Analogs, Scams to US

A Texas firm recently charged with conspiring to distribute synthetic opioids in the United States is at the center of a vast network of companies in the U.S. and Pakistan whose employees are accused of using online ads to scam westerners seeking help with trademarks, book writing, mobile app development and logo designs, a new investigation reveals.

In an indictment (PDF) unsealed last month, the U.S. Department of Justice said Dallas-based eWorldTrade “operated an online business-to-business marketplace that facilitated the distribution of synthetic opioids such as isotonitazene and carfentanyl, both significantly more potent than fentanyl.”

Launched in 2017, eWorldTrade[.]com now features a seizure notice from the DOJ. eWorldTrade operated as a wholesale seller of consumer goods, including clothes, machinery, chemicals, automobiles and appliances. The DOJ’s indictment includes no additional details about eWorldTrade’s business, origins or other activity, and at first glance the website might appear to be a legitimate e-commerce platform that also just happened to sell some restricted chemicals.

A screenshot of the eWorldTrade homepage on March 25, 2025. Image: archive.org.

However, an investigation into the company’s founders reveals they are connected to a sprawling network of websites that have a history of extortionate scams involving trademark registration, book publishing, exam preparation, and the design of logos, mobile applications and websites.

Records from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) show the eWorldTrade mark is owned by an Azneem Bilwani in Karachi (this name also is in the registration records for the now-seized eWorldTrade domain). Mr. Bilwani is perhaps better known as the director of the Pakistan-based IT provider Abtach Ltd., which has been singled out by the USPTO and Google for operating trademark registration scams (the main offices for eWorldtrade and Abtach share the same address in Pakistan).

In November 2021, the USPTO accused Abtach of perpetrating “an egregious scheme to deceive and defraud applicants for federal trademark registrations by improperly altering official USPTO correspondence, overcharging application filing fees, misappropriating the USPTO’s trademarks, and impersonating the USPTO.”

Abtach offered trademark registration at suspiciously low prices compared to legitimate costs of over USD $1,500, and claimed they could register a trademark in 24 hours. Abtach reportedly rebranded to Intersys Limited after the USPTO banned Abtach from filing any more trademark applications.

In a note published to its LinkedIn profile, Intersys Ltd. asserted last year that certain scam firms in Karachi were impersonating the company.

FROM AXACT TO ABTACH

Many of Abtach’s employees are former associates of a similar company in Pakistan called Axact that was targeted by Pakistani authorities in a 2015 fraud investigation. Axact came under law enforcement scrutiny after The New York Times ran a front-page story about the company’s most lucrative scam business: Hundreds of sites peddling fake college degrees and diplomas.

People who purchased fake certifications were subsequently blackmailed by Axact employees posing as government officials, who would demand additional payments under threats of prosecution or imprisonment for having bought fraudulent “unauthorized” academic degrees. This practice created a continuous cycle of extortion, internally referred to as “upselling.”

“Axact took money from at least 215,000 people in 197 countries — one-third of them from the United States,” The Times reported. “Sales agents wielded threats and false promises and impersonated government officials, earning the company at least $89 million in its final year of operation.”

Dozens of top Axact employees were arrested, jailed, held for months, tried and sentenced to seven years for various fraud violations. But a 2019 research brief on Axact’s diploma mills found none of those convicted had started their prison sentence, and that several had fled Pakistan and never returned.

“In October 2016, a Pakistan district judge acquitted 24 Axact officials at trial due to ‘not enough evidence’ and then later admitted he had accepted a bribe (of $35,209) from Axact,” reads a history (PDF) published by the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers.

In 2021, Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) charged Bilwani and nearly four dozen others — many of them Abtach employees — with running an elaborate trademark scam. The authorities called it “the biggest money laundering case in the history of Pakistan,” and named a number of businesses based in Texas that allegedly helped move the proceeds of cybercrime.

A page from the March 2021 FIA report alleging that Digitonics Labs and Abtach employees conspired to extort and defraud consumers.

The FIA said the defendants operated a large number of websites offering low-cost trademark services to customers, before then “ignoring them after getting the funds and later demanding more funds from clients/victims in the name of up-sale (extortion).” The Pakistani law enforcement agency said that about 75 percent of customers received fake or fabricated trademarks as a result of the scams.

The FIA found Abtach operates in conjunction with a Karachi firm called Digitonics Labs, which earned a monthly revenue of around $2.5 million through the “extortion of international clients in the name of up-selling, the sale of fake/fabricated USPTO certificates, and the maintaining of phishing websites.”

According the Pakistani authorities, the accused also ran countless scams involving ebook publication and logo creation, wherein customers are subjected to advance-fee fraud and extortion — with the scammers demanding more money for supposed “copyright release” and threatening to release the trademark.

Also charged by the FIA was Junaid Mansoor, the owner of Digitonics Labs in Karachi. Mansoor’s U.K.-registered company Maple Solutions Direct Limited has run at least 700 ads for logo design websites since 2015, the Google Ads Transparency page reports. The company has approximately 88 ads running on Google as of today. 

Junaid Mansoor. Source: youtube/@Olevels․com School.

Mr. Mansoor is actively involved with and promoting a Quran study business called quranmasteronline[.]com, which was founded by Junaid’s brother Qasim Mansoor (Qasim is also named in the FIA criminal investigation). The Google ads promoting quranmasteronline[.]com were paid for by the same account advertising a number of scam websites selling logo and web design services. 

Junaid Mansoor did not respond to requests for comment. An address in Teaneck, New Jersey where Mr. Mansoor previously lived is listed as an official address of exporthub[.]com, a Pakistan-based e-commerce website that appears remarkably similar to eWorldTrade (Exporthub says its offices are in Texas). Interestingly, a search in Google for this domain shows ExportHub currently features multiple listings for fentanyl citrate from suppliers in China and elsewhere.

The CEO of Digitonics Labs is Muhammad Burhan Mirza, a former Axact official who was arrested by the FIA as part of its money laundering and trademark fraud investigation in 2021. In 2023, prosecutors in Pakistan charged Mirza, Mansoor and 14 other Digitonics employees with fraud, impersonating government officials, phishing, cheating and extortion. Mirza’s LinkedIn profile says he currently runs an educational technology/life coach enterprise called TheCoach360, which purports to help young kids “achieve financial independence.”

Reached via LinkedIn, Mr. Mirza denied having anything to do with eWorldTrade or any of its sister companies in Texas.

“Moreover, I have no knowledge as to the companies you have mentioned,” said Mr. Mirza, who did not respond to follow-up questions.

The current disposition of the FIA’s fraud case against the defendants is unclear. The investigation was marred early on by allegations of corruption and bribery. In 2021, Pakistani authorities alleged Bilwani paid a six-figure bribe to FIA investigators. Meanwhile, attorneys for Mr. Bilwani have argued that although their client did pay a bribe, the payment was solicited by government officials. Mr. Bilwani did not respond to requests for comment.

THE TEXAS NEXUS

KrebsOnSecurity has learned that the people and entities at the center of the FIA investigations have built a significant presence in the United States, with a strong concentration in Texas. The Texas businesses promote websites that sell logo and web design, ghostwriting, and academic cheating services. Many of these entities have recently been sued for fraud and breach of contract by angry former customers, who claimed the companies relentlessly upsold them while failing to produce the work as promised.

For example, the FIA complaints named Retrocube LLC and 360 Digital Marketing LLC, two entities that share a street address with eWorldTrade: 1910 Pacific Avenue, Suite 8025, Dallas, Texas. Also incorporated at that Pacific Avenue address is abtach[.]ae, a web design and marketing firm based in Dubai; and intersyslimited[.]com, the new name of Abtach after they were banned by the USPTO. Other businesses registered at this address market services for logo design, mobile app development, and ghostwriting.

A list published in 2021 by Pakistan’s FIA of different front companies allegedly involved in scamming people who are looking for help with trademarks, ghostwriting, logos and web design.

360 Digital Marketing’s website 360digimarketing[.]com is owned by an Abtach front company called Abtech LTD. Meanwhile, business records show 360 Digi Marketing LTD is a U.K. company whose officers include former Abtach director Bilwani; Muhammad Saad Iqbal, formerly Abtach, now CEO of Intersys Ltd; Niaz Ahmed, a former Abtach associate; and Muhammad Salman Yousuf, formerly a vice president at Axact, Abtach, and Digitonics Labs.

Google’s Ads Transparency Center finds 360 Digital Marketing LLC ran at least 500 ads promoting various websites selling ghostwriting services . Another entity tied to Junaid Mansoor — a company called Octa Group Technologies AU — has run approximately 300 Google ads for book publishing services, promoting confusingly named websites like amazonlistinghub[.]com and barnesnoblepublishing[.]co.

360 Digital Marketing LLC ran approximately 500 ads for scam ghostwriting sites.

Rameez Moiz is a Texas resident and former Abtach product manager who has represented 360 Digital Marketing LLC and RetroCube. Moiz told KrebsOnSecurity he stopped working for 360 Digital Marketing in the summer of 2023. Mr. Moiz did not respond to follow-up questions, but an Upwork profile for him states that as of April 2025 he is employed by Dallas-based Vertical Minds LLC.

In April 2025, California resident Melinda Will sued the Texas firm Majestic Ghostwriting — which is doing business as ghostwritingsquad[.]com —  alleging they scammed her out of $100,000 after she hired them to help write her book. Google’s ad transparency page shows Moiz’s employer Vertical Minds LLC paid to run approximately 55 ads for ghostwritingsquad[.]com and related sites.

Google’s ad transparency listing for ghostwriting ads paid for by Vertical Minds LLC.

VICTIMS SPEAK OUT

Ms. Will’s lawsuit is just one of more than two dozen complaints over the past four years wherein plaintiffs sued one of this group’s web design, wiki editing or ghostwriting services. In 2021, a New Jersey man sued Octagroup Technologies, alleging they ripped him off when he paid a total of more than $26,000 for the design and marketing of a web-based mapping service.

The plaintiff in that case did not respond to requests for comment, but his complaint alleges Octagroup and a myriad other companies it contracted with produced minimal work product despite subjecting him to relentless upselling. That case was decided in favor of the plaintiff because the defendants never contested the matter in court.

In 2023, 360 Digital Marketing LLC and Retrocube LLC were sued by a woman who said they scammed her out of $40,000 over a book she wanted help writing. That lawsuit helpfully showed an image of the office front door at 1910 Pacific Ave Suite 8025, which featured the logos of 360 Digital Marketing, Retrocube, and eWorldTrade.

The front door at 1910 Pacific Avenue, Suite 8025, Dallas, Texas.

The lawsuit was filed pro se by Leigh Riley, a 64-year-old career IT professional who paid 360 Digital Marketing to have a company called Talented Ghostwriter co-author and promote a series of books she’d outlined on spirituality and healing.

“The main reason I hired them was because I didn’t understand what I call the formula for writing a book, and I know there’s a lot of marketing that goes into publishing,” Riley explained in an interview. “I know nothing about that stuff, and these guys were convincing that they could handle all aspects of it. Until I discovered they couldn’t write a damn sentence in English properly.”

Riley’s well-documented lawsuit (not linked here because it features a great deal of personal information) includes screenshots of conversations with the ghostwriting team, which was constantly assigning her to new writers and editors, and ghosting her on scheduled conference calls about progress on the project. Riley said she ended up writing most of the book herself because the work they produced was unusable.

“Finally after months of promising the books were printed and on their way, they show up at my doorstep with the wrong title on the book,” Riley said. When she demanded her money back, she said the people helping her with the website to promote the book locked her out of the site.

A conversation snippet from Leigh Riley’s lawsuit against Talented Ghostwriter, aka 360 Digital Marketing LLC. “Other companies once they have you money they don’t even respond or do anything,” the ghostwriting team manager explained.

Riley decided to sue, naming 360 Digital Marketing LLC and Retrocube LLC, among others.  The companies offered to settle the matter for $20,000, which she accepted. “I didn’t have money to hire a lawyer, and I figured it was time to cut my losses,” she said.

Riley said she could have saved herself a great deal of headache by doing some basic research on Talented Ghostwriter, whose website claims the company is based in Los Angeles. According to the California Secretary of State, however, there is no registered entity by that name. Rather, the address claimed by talentedghostwriter[.]com is a vacant office building with a “space available” sign in the window.

California resident Walter Horsting discovered something similar when he sued 360 Digital Marketing in small claims court last year, after hiring a company called Vox Ghostwriting to help write, edit and promote a spy novel he’d been working on. Horsting said he paid Vox $3,300 to ghostwrite a 280-page book, and was upsold an Amazon marketing and publishing package for $7,500.

In an interview, Horsting said the prose that Vox Ghostwriting produced was “juvenile at best,” forcing him to rewrite and edit the work himself, and to partner with a graphical artist to produce illustrations. Horsting said that when it came time to begin marketing the novel, Vox Ghostwriting tried to further upsell him on marketing packages, while dodging scheduled meetings with no follow-up.

“They have a money back guarantee, and when they wouldn’t refund my money I said I’m taking you to court,” Horsting recounted. “I tried to serve them in Los Angeles but found no such office exists. I talked to a salon next door and they said someone else had recently shown up desperately looking for where the ghostwriting company went, and it appears there are a trail of corpses on this. I finally tracked down where they are in Texas.”

It was the same office that Ms. Riley served her lawsuit against. Horsting said he has a court hearing scheduled later this month, but he’s under no illusions that winning the case means he’ll be able to collect.

“At this point, I’m doing it out of pride more than actually expecting anything to come to good fortune for me,” he said.

The following mind map was helpful in piecing together key events, individuals and connections mentioned above. It’s important to note that this graphic only scratches the surface of the operations tied to this group. For example, in Case 2 we can see mention of academic cheating services, wherein people can be hired to take online proctored exams on one’s behalf. Those who hire these services soon find themselves subject to impersonation and blackmail attempts for larger and larger sums of money, with the threat of publicly exposing their unethical academic cheating activity.

A “mind map” illustrating the connections between and among entities referenced in this story. Click to enlarge.

GOOGLE RESPONDS

KrebsOnSecurity reviewed the Google Ad Transparency links for nearly 500 different websites tied to this network of ghostwriting, logo, app and web development businesses. Those website names were then fed into spyfu.com, a competitive intelligence company that tracks the reach and performance of advertising keywords. Spyfu estimates that between April 2023 and April 2025, those websites spent more than $10 million on Google ads.

Reached for comment, Google said in a written statement that it is constantly policing its ad network for bad actors, pointing to an ads safety report (PDF) showing Google blocked or removed 5.1 billion bad ads last year — including more than 500 million ads related to trademarks.

“Our policy against Enabling Dishonest Behavior prohibits products or services that help users mislead others, including ads for paper-writing or exam-taking services,” the statement reads. “When we identify ads or advertisers that violate our policies, we take action, including by suspending advertiser accounts, disapproving ads, and restricting ads to specific domains when appropriate.”

Google did not respond to specific questions about the advertising entities mentioned in this story, saying only that “we are actively investigating this matter and addressing any policy violations, including suspending advertiser accounts when appropriate.”

From reviewing the ad accounts that have been promoting these scam websites, it appears Google has very recently acted to remove a large number of the offending ads. Prior to my notifying Google about the extent of this ad network on April 28, the Google Ad Transparency network listed over 500 ads for 360 Digital Marketing; as of this publication, that number had dwindled to 10.

On April 30, Google announced that starting this month its ads transparency page will display the payment profile name as the payer name for verified advertisers, if that name differs from their verified advertiser name. Searchengineland.com writes the changes are aimed at increasing accountability in digital advertising.

This spreadsheet lists the domain names, advertiser names, and Google Ad Transparency links for more than 350 entities offering ghostwriting, publishing, web design and academic cheating services.

KrebsOnSecurity would like to thank the anonymous security researcher NatInfoSec for their assistance in this investigation.

For further reading on Abtach and its myriad companies in all of the above-mentioned verticals (ghostwriting, logo design, etc.), see this Wikiwand entry.

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American ice skater Anton Spiridonov 'was not on' the plane that collided with an Army helicopter

U.S. ice skater Anton Spiridonov refuted claims suggesting he was on board the commercial jet that collided in midair with an Army helicopter Wednesday night near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

"Russian news outlets have included me on a list of presumed people on the flight from Wichita to Washington D.C.," the skater shared on Instagram

"I was NOT on this flight, thank you for everyone’s concern for my safety. My heart goes out to all the families affected by this tragedy." 

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Spiridonov won the silver medal at the World University Games in 2023. He also finished sixth at the U.S. Championships that same year. Spiridonov also paid tribute to his father's former "skating partner," Inna Volyanskaya. 

"Dads skating partner," he wrote on a post to his Instagram story. "Rest in peace, Inna."

LIVE UPDATES: AMERICAN AIRLINES PLANE, ARMY HELICOPTER COLLIDE OUTSIDE REAGAN NATIONAL AIRPORT NEAR WASHINGTON DC

Flight 5342 carried 60 passengers and four crew members, according to a statement from American Airlines. The flight took off from an airport in Wichita, Kansas.

Authorities confirmed there were three U.S. service members aboard the Army Black Hawk helicopter when the aircraft departed Davison Army Airfield at Fort Belvoir in Virginia. The airfield is located about 15 miles southwest of Reagan Washington National.

The passenger jet and the military helicopter both crashed into the Potomac River as the commercial plane was approaching one of the airport runways. In a news conference Thursday morning, officials confirmed that 27 bodies from the plane and one from the Black Hawk helicopter had been pulled from the frigid waters.

U.S. Figure Skating released a statement confirming that "several members of our skating community" were aboard the flight. The organization said they were returning home from a development camp after the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita, Kansas, which concluded Sunday.

Fox News' Paulina Dedaj contributed to this report.

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Marianne Faithfull, singer and Rolling Stones muse, dead at 78

Singer and actress Marianne Faithfull has died. She was 78.

"It is with deep sadness that we announce the death of the singer, songwriter and actress Marianne Faithfull. Marianne passed away peacefully in London today, in the company of her loving family. She will be dearly missed," a spokesperson for Faithfull confirmed to Fox News Digital. 

This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates. 

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Rory Sykes, former child star, dead at 32 from California fires

Former child actor Rory Callum Sykes died Wednesday, Jan. 8, a victim of the Palisades Fire, according to his mother, Shelley Sykes. He was 32.

Rory, an Australian actor who was born blind and with cerebral palsy, starred on the British television show "Kiddy Kapers." In addition to his work in front of the camera, Rory also served as a motivational speaker and helped form the Happy Charity organization with his mom.

Sykes attempted to evacuate their Malibu home when the Palisades Fire ignited, only to have difficulty retrieving emergency services due to limited resources, including power.

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"He was my baby, and he died needlessly," Sykes told Australia's 10 News First

Sykes said her son lived in a guest house on the family's 17-acre Malibu canyon property. As the Palisades Fire encroached on the community, she had no form of communication with the outside world. 

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES: ESSENTIAL PHONE NUMBERS FOR LOS ANGELES-AREA RESIDENTS AND HOW YOU CAN HELP THEM

"Guess what didn't work? 911 – all the phone lines were down," she said. "He said, ‘Mom, leave me,’ and no mom can leave their kid. I've got a broken arm; I couldn't lift him. I couldn't move him."

In an attempt to evacuate, she drove to her local fire station for help, and was told they had "no water."

"I said, 'Oh my God, my son is locked in his room," Sykes recalled. "When the fire department brought me back, his cottage was burnt to the ground."

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The British-born Sykes moved to Australia as a child. He wrote a book, "Callum's Cure," which detailed his determination to not only walk one day, but also see.

"He died with carbon monoxide poisoning rather than burning," Sykes said she was told by firefighters. "I didn't want any pain for my baby."

Sykes is contemplating a class action suit, and is staying in place for the time being.

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"I'm not going to move," Sykes said. "That's going to be the place, a special place for Rory and I, and we'll make it even more beautiful than it already was."

The Department of Forestry and Fire Protection reported Sunday that the Palisades Fire burned 23,713 acres and is now 11% contained. Five fatalities have been reported since the fire ignited on Tuesday, Jan. 7.

Less than 30 miles away, the Eaton Fire, which also ignited on Jan. 7 in Altadena, burned 14,117 acres and is now 27%.  Eleven fatalities have been confirmed.

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Garth Brooks, Trisha Yearwood’s friendship with President Carter spanned years: ‘They’ve inspired us’

Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood paid their respects to former President Carter and honored their friendship with the American leader Thursday.

Brooks and Yearwood dressed in all black while singing John Lennon's "Imagine" at the end of Carter's funeral at Washington National Cathedral Jan. 9. The couple maintained a friendship with the former president throughout the years.

"President Carter, the legacy you and Rosalynn have left us is as beautiful as the life you lived," Brooks said in a statement shared shortly after Carter's death. 

"Thank you for your lifetime of service to our country and the world. You inspired us not just by what you said, but by what you built. We love you."

AN 'EXTRAORDINARY MAN': FORMER PRESIDENT CARTER LIES IN STATE AT CAPITOL AHEAD OF STATE FUNERAL

The former president had reportedly requested that Brooks and Yearwood perform the song at the funeral. Fox News Digital reached out to the Carter Center for comment.

Brooks and Yearwood performed the same duet at Rosalynn Carter's funeral in November 2023. Rosalynn's service was held at Emory University's Glenn Memorial Church in Atlanta. The couple dressed in all black for the somber occasion.

At the time, Brooks spoke highly of Rosalynn and shared how close the former first lady and his wife had become over the years.

"They were inseparable," he explained at a press conference, according to "Today." "Miss Yearwood called her 'quiet warrior.''

He shared his own admiration for Carter's wife, telling reporters, "If you ever got to hang around her, President Carter always steals the show, and then when it comes time for her to speak, she’ll walk to the mic. What she says is very quiet but yet very powerful."

AMERICANS FLOCK TO THE CAPITOL TO PAY RESPECTS TO FORMER PRESIDENT CARTER AHEAD OF FUNERAL: ‘JOB WELL DONE’

Brooks and Yearwood met the Carters working for Habitat for Humanity. The former president and his wife first began working with the charity in 1984. The couple led a renovation project on a 19-unit apartment building in New York City.

The country music stars became involved with Habitat for Humanity years later, after Hurricane Katrina left destruction in New Orleans.

"After Katrina in '07, we fell in love with Habitat for Humanity. We knew we loved the Carters, and we fell more in love with them just getting a chance to work alongside them," Yearwood told People magazine in 2023. "We love what Habitat for Humanity is about — spreading love. It is about creating community.

"To whom much is given, much is expected," she added. "We’ll never fill their shoes, but we’re doing the best we can."

Brooks and Yearwood were also "inspired" by Carter and Rosalynn's 77-year marriage.

"They’ve inspired us in a lot of ways, in the ways you expect — humanity, humbleness, work ethic. But they’ve also inspired us by their example as husband and wife," Brooks told People in 2023.

"We worked beside them for the last 15 years, and you notice right away they bicker back and forth about the right way to do things. That kind of works for us too!"

In 2019, Brooks and Yearwood performed at the Grand Ole Opry with Carter as part of a Habitat for Humanity project. Carter and his wife were in Nashville to build houses with the organization.

"We get more out of Habitat than we’ve ever put into it," the former president said during the closing ceremony at the Opry, according to Opry.com. It was one of Carter's last visits to the legendary Ryman Auditorium.

Carter wasn't only close with Brooks and Yearwood. The former leader of the United States had a handful of celebrity confidants. He spent time with Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Greg Allman, Johnny Cash and Jimmy Buffett, to name a few.

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Brooks and Yearwood recently attended the 2024 Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Work Week Project to celebrate Carter's 100th birthday in St. Paul, Minnesota. Habitat for Humanity hosted the week-long event, which focused on building houses and raising awareness for affordable housing.

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"He definitely wants to know that we're working, and this is why we're here. He has a legacy of service, and he never stopped serving," Yearwood told People magazine in October. 

"He's not physically standing here building, swinging a hammer. But we feel his presence and Ms. Rosalynn’s presence strongly. We're just two volunteers, but everybody who's on this site feels that responsibility to make them proud."

Carter entered hospice care in February 2023 and died Dec. 29, 2024.

The former president died surrounded by his family roughly 22 months after entering hospice care at his home in Georgia. Carter battled metastatic melanoma in 2015. His skin cancer was treated with surgery, radiation and immunotherapy at the age of 90.

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Peter Yarrow, singer from Peter, Paul and Mary folk trio, dead at 86

Peter Yarrow, known as part of the folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, has died.

Yarrow passed away Tuesday in New York, according to publicist Ken Sunshine. The musician had spent the last four years battling bladder cancer.

"Our fearless dragon is tired and has entered the last chapter of his magnificent life. The world knows Peter Yarrow the iconic folk activist, but the human being behind the legend is every bit as generous, creative, passionate, playful, and wise as his lyrics suggest," his daughter Bethany said in a statement.

HOLLYWOOD STARS WHO DIED IN 2024

Yarrow was one-third of Peter, Paul and Mary, alongside fellow musicians Noel Paul Stookey and Mary Travers. The trio lost Travers in 2009 during her battle with Leukemia. She died following complications associated with chemotherapy.

"Being an only child, growing up without siblings may have afforded me the full attention of my parents, but with the formation of Peter, Paul and Mary, I suddenly had a brother named Peter Yarrow," Stookey said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. "He was best man at my wedding and I at his. He was a loving ‘uncle’ to my three daughters. And, while his comfort in the city and my love of the country tended to keep us apart geographically, our different perspectives were celebrated often in our friendship and our music. 

"I was five months older than Peter – who became my creative, irrepressible, spontaneous and musical younger brother – yet at the same time, I grew to be grateful for, and to love, the mature-beyond-his-years wisdom and inspiring guidance he shared with me like an older brother," he added. "Politically astute and emotionally vulnerable, perhaps Peter was both of the brothers I never had…and I shall deeply miss both of him."

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Peter, Paul and Mary gained popularity after forming in 1961. The trio brought notoriety to folk music in America. Throughout the 1960s, the group released six Billboard Top 10 singles, two No. 1 albums and won five Grammys.

The band's first album, "Peter, Paul and Mary," reached No. 1 on the Billboard chart. Their second, "In the Wind," reached No. 4 and their third, "Moving," put them back at No. 1.

Yarrow, Stookey and Travers took an eight-year hiatus to focus on their individual careers, but reunited in 1978 for an anti-nuclear-power concert. "Survival Sunday" was organized by Yarrow in Los Angeles. The moment brought the trio back together until Travers' death in 2009. Since then, Stookey and Yarrow have performed both together and separately.

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The singer-songwriter was born in New York. Yarrow was introduced to music at a young age, first learning violin and then guitar. He later graduated from Cornell University in 1959.

"I saw these young people at Cornell who were basically very conservative in their backgrounds opening their hearts up and singing with an emotionality and a concern through this vehicle called folk music," he said. "It gave me a clue that the world was on its way to a certain kind of movement, and that folk music might play a part in it and that I might play a part in folk music."

Yarrow is survived by his wife, Marybeth, son Christopher, daughter Bethany and granddaughter Valentina.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Mike Rinder, co-host of 'Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath,' dead at 69

Mike Rinder, the co-host of the A&E show, "Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath," died on Sunday. He was 69.

Mike's wife, Christie Collbran, shared a post on Instagram over the weekend to share the news. The family photo included their son Jack and Collbran's son, Shane.

"Rest in peace, my sweet, beautiful husband," Collbran wrote. "I speak for so many when I say the sadness and pain we feel mirror the depth of our unwavering love for you. Your courage, bravery, and integrity are unmatched and will forever inspire us."

She continued, "You have been the pillar of stability in our lives, filling our days with your strength, wisdom, love, laughter and devotion. The world will remember you. My best friend, my hero, my love, Michael John Rinder."

LEAH REMINI SUES CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY AND DAVID MISCAVIGE FOR ALLEGED HARASSMENT, STALKING AND DEFAMATION

Collbran went on to share "these last words as per Mike’s wishes," which were also posted in a final blog post titled, "Farewell." The post went live on his website on Sunday.

Rinder said his website has "been a labor of love," before adding, "I have been lucky — living two lives in one lifetime. The second one the most wonderful years anyone could wish for with all of you and my new family!"

He continued, "My only real regret is not having achieved what I said I wanted to — ending the abuses of Scientology, especially disconnection, and seeing Jack into adulthood. If you are in any way fighting to end those abuses please keep the flag flying — never give up."

LEAH REMINI DISAGREES WITH HOW LAURA PREPON LEFT SCIENTOLOGY: ‘NOT EVERYBODY WHO HAS A VOICE USES IT’

At the end of the post, Rinder wrote, "Let the flowers grow and look to the future … With that said, I rest in peace." His final words were a quote from Cicero: "The life of the dead is placed in the memory of the living."

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A cause of death wasn't given for Rinder, but in a blog post shared in June 2023, he announced that he was diagnosed with advanced esophageal cancer. In October, Rinder announced that his "latest scan did not show any cancer" and the "treatment is working."

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Rinder was a member of the Church of Scientology from the age of five, but left the church in 2007, per his website's bio.

He has written a memoir, "A Billion Years: My Escape From a Life in the Highest Ranks of Scientology," as well as co-hosting his show and a podcast with "The Kings of Queens" actress Leah Remini.

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Remini shared a post on Instagram over the holidays, visiting the Rinder family. She shared a photo, hugging Mike while he laid in bed, and wrote, "I am so moved by the outpouring of love and care shown to Mike and his family." 

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"Christie Collbran is an angel. While managing her household, two boys, and doting over her husband, she shows a strength and grace that is a wonder to behold," she wrote in her caption.

Remini mentioned Rinder's sons: "Shane and Jack, you have been so wonderful and strong for your dad/stepdad. I know this hasn’t been easy, and we are all so proud of you." 

"As many of you know, Mike has been courageously battling cancer, and your messages of love truly lift his spirits. Please keep Mike, Christie, and their two boys in your prayers. Surround them with all the love and strength they so deserve," her post concluded.

"Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath," debuted in 2016 and won a Creative Arts Emmy award for outstanding hosted nonfiction series or special in 2020.

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Aubrey Plaza’s director, writer husband Jeff Baena dead at 47

Director and writer Jeffrey Baena, husband of Hollywood actor Aubrey Plaza, has died. He was 47.

Baena died on January 3 at his home, according to the Los Angeles Medical Examiner's Office. 

A cause of death has not been revealed. 

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Reps for Baena and Plaza did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. 

Baena was born on June 29, 1977, and raised in Miami, Florida. He attended film school at New York University and then moved to Los Angeles to begin his career. 

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Baena co-wrote the 2004 film, "I Heart Huckabees," which starred Jason Schwartzman, Jude Law and Naomi Watts. 

He went on and made his directorial debut, as he wrote and directed the 2014 zombie comedy film, "Life After Beth," which starred his wife, Plaza. 

The filmmaker is additionally known for his work on the film "Horse Girl." He co-wrote the movie with actor Alison Brie, as she additionally starred in the film. "Horse Girl" premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2020. 

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Baena created an anthology series for Showtime titled "Cinema Toast" in 2021. The show also marked Plaza’s directorial debut.

His other film credits include "Joshy," "Spin Me Round," "Digging for Fire" and "The End of Love."

Baena was married to "The White Lotus" star Plaza. The two began dating in 2011 and kept their relationship private, according to People. The couple never announced their engagement or nuptials

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In May 2021, the "Parks and Recreation" actress referred to Baena as her "darling husband" in a social media post. 

"So proud of my darling husband @jeffbaena for dreaming up another film that takes us to italia to cause some more trouble," Plaza wrote on Instagram, accompanied by a photo of the two. 

Plaza has not posted anything regarding her husband’s death recently on social media.

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‘Seinfeld,’ ‘Ace Ventura’ actor John Capodice dead at 83

John Capodice, best known for his appearances in popular shows and movies including "Seinfeld," "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective" and "General Hospital," has died. He was 83. 

Capodice died on Dec. 30, an obituary posted by the Pizzi Funeral Home in Northvale, New Jersey, announced.  

A cause of death was not disclosed. 

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"John was a devoted husband, father and grandfather and will be missed by all who had the pleasure to meet him," the obituary stated. 

Capodice was born in Chicago in 1941. He served in the U.S. Army from 1964 to 1966.

Beginning in the 1970s, Capodice began his acting career and had recurring roles in shows such as "Ryan’s Hope," "Diagnosis Murder," "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," "Law & Order," "Living Single," "Melrose Place," "Ellen," "Mad About You," "Boy Meets World" and "Will & Grace," according to iMDB. The prolific actor was featured in more than 150 film and television projects from 1978 to 2024.

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"Seinfeld" fans may remember the actor from the episode "The Revenge," which aired in 1991. Capodice portrayed the owner of a laundromat that the character Kramer attempted to sabotage. Capodice's character was hilariously accused of stealing $1,500 from a laundry bag in the popular television sitcom. 

Capodice’s film credits include "Wall Street," "Family Business," "The Doors," "Speed" and "Independence Day." In "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective," the actor played a police officer who poked fun at Jim Carrey’s character. 

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He was additionally a "proud member" of the fraternal organization, the Blauvelt Sons of Italy, Rockland Lodge 2176.

Capodice is survived by his wife, Jane, and daughters, Tessa De Pierro and Cassandra Hansen. He was a "proud grandfather" to four grandchildren -- David, Jake, Frankie and Giuliana. 

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The Osmond Brothers founding member Wayne Osmond dead at 73

Wayne Osmond, brother of Donny and Marie Osmond, has died at the age of 73.

"Wayne Osmond, beloved husband and father, passed away peacefully last night surrounded by his loving wife and five children," the Osmond family said in a statement posted Thursday on the Facebook page of Wayne's daughter, Amy Osmond Cook. 

"His legacy of faith, music, love, and laughter have influenced the lives of many people around the world."

"He would want everyone to know that the gospel of Jesus Christ is true, that families are forever, and that banana splits are the best dessert," the family added. "We love him and will miss him dearly."

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On Thursday, Merrill Osmond confirmed that his brother Wayne died of a massive stroke on New Year's Day. 

"When I learned that my dear brother Wayne had a massive stroke my immediate response was to fall to my knees and pray for him to receive the assurance that his mission had been accomplished, and he was successful in this endeavor in many ways," he wrote on Facebook. "I immediately drove to the hospital in SLC to see him and I was able to say my goodbyes.

"My brother was a saint before he came into this world, and he will leave as an even greater saint than he came in," Merrill added. "I’ve never known a man that had more humility. A man with absolute[ly] no guile. An individual that was quick to forgive and had the ability to show unconditional love to everyone he ever met."

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"His departure from this earth will be a sad moment for some, but for those who are waiting for him on the other side, there will be a massive celebration beyond anything we can imagine. My brother Wayne endured much. He gave it his all. His legacy will go down as someone who was not only a genius in his ability to write music, but was able to capture the hearts of millions of people and bring them closer to God," he continued.

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"I will miss him tremendously. I am so grateful to have grown up with one of heavenly father‘s greatest sons." 

Donny took to Instagram to pay tribute to his older brother. 

"My dear brother Wayne passed away peacefully last night from a stroke," Donny wrote. "I’m so grateful that I had the opportunity to visit him in the hospital before he passed. Wayne brought so much light, laughter, and love to everyone who knew him, especially me. He was the ultimate optimist and was loved by everyone."

"I’m sure I speak on behalf of every one of us siblings when I state that we were fortunate to have Wayne as a brother," he continued. "Even though we are separated in this mortal life, I know that by the grace and resurrection of our Savior, Jesus Christ, we will have the opportunity to be with Wayne for eternity.

"I love you, Wayne." 

Wayne's daughter Amy wrote that she is having a hard time accepting her father's death but is grateful for the time spent with him. 

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"I am having a hard time expressing the depth of my sadness that I won't have my ‘twin’ in my life for a while," she wrote on Facebook. "But I am so grateful for the time I was able to spend with him. I am grateful for the incredible memories. I am grateful for his strength, loyalty to our family, incredible talent and energy, and most of all, his love. I look forward to the day when I can see him again on the other side. I love you, Dad."

The Osmond family has created a Wayne Osmond Celebration of Life Page on Facebook for fans to share memories, photos or a funny joke in remembrance of Wayne. 

Fox News Digital's Larry Fink contributed to this report. 

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Jimmy Carter spent nearly 2 years in hospice care before his death at 100

Jimmy Carter, the 39th president of the United States who died at the age of 100 on Sunday, Dec. 29, 2024, had been living in hospice care at his home since Feb. 2023.

Back in May, Carter's son, Jason Carter, said in a speech at the Carter Center in Georgia that his grandfather was "doing OK."

Jason Carter also praised the "outpouring of love" the Carter family received since the passing of the former first lady Rosalynn Carter in Nov. 2023.

JIMMY CARTER, 39TH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, DEAD AT 100

"He has been in hospice … for almost a year and a half now, and he really is, I think, coming to the end," Jason Carter said at the time.

"I’ve said before, there’s a part of this faith journey that is so important to him, and there’s a part of that faith journey that you only can live at the very end, and I think he has been there in that space," the grandson also said.

Carter had experienced multiple health issues in recent years.

Following liver surgery to remove a mass in 2015, the former president was diagnosed with melanoma, which had spread to multiple areas of his brain, according to reports.

After surgery and several months of treatment with radiation and immunotherapy, Carter’s cancer cleared.

Carter had since experienced a bout of dehydration and several falls that led to a broken hip, pelvic fracture and other injuries, per reports.

Carter’s wife of 77 years, Rosalynn Carter, also entered hospice in Nov. 2023 alongside her husband. She died just a few days later at the age of 96.

Some experts have praised the Carter family for sharing the details of the couple’s journey through aging, hospice care and death.

FORMER FIRST LADY ROSALYNN CARTER DEAD AT 96

"It’s been massive to have the Carters be so public," said Angela Novas, chief medical officer for the Hospice Foundation of America in Washington, D.C., according to an Associated Press report. 

"It has shed hospice in a new light, and it’s raised questions" for people to learn more, she added.

"Hospice is health care for people who are dying," Dr. Harold Braswell, associate professor of Health Care Ethics at St. Louis University and author of several books related to end-of-life issues, told Fox News Digital in November.

This type of medical care is "interdisciplinary," the doctor noted, including a mix of medical, psychosocial and spiritual support

It also includes assistance with day-to-day activities.

Hospice care focuses on managing symptoms and making patients as comfortable as possible rather than administering treatment for a disease or ailment.

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A person becomes eligible for hospice after receiving a medical diagnosis with six months or less to live, according to Braswell.

"Hospice is not curative care," said Braswell. "It is not oriented toward curing a patient's medical condition — and qualifying for hospice generally requires that a patient abandon curative interventions such as chemotherapy."

Hospice is also not seen as a replacement for nursing home care or other residential care, and is not intended to "hasten death," according to the Hospice Foundation of America (HFA)’s website.

It also does not encompass 24/7 care, the HFA noted. Instead, hospice team members generally visit the patient and family caregivers as needed.

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Most U.S. hospice patients receive care in an outpatient setting, such as their private home, a nursing home or a long-term care facility, Braswell told Fox News Digital. 

"Some hospices — a relatively small number — offer inpatient care, though this is only for a very short amount of time, generally for people who are actively dying," Braswell said.

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Charles Shyer, 'Father of the Bride' director and Oscar-nominated co-writer of 'Private Benjamin', dies at 83

Charles Shyer, who earned an Oscar nomination for co-writing "Private Benjamin" and directed hit movies including "Father of the Bride" and "Baby Boom," has died. He was 83.

On Saturday, a representative for Shyer confirmed the filmmaker's death to Fox News Digital. His daughter Hallie Meyers-Shyer, whom he shared with his former frequent collaborator and ex-wife Nancy Meyers, told the Hollywood Reporter that her father passed away Friday at Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai Medical Center following a brief illness.

"It’s with an indescribably heavy heart that we share the news of our beloved father, Charles Shyer’s passing," the Meyers-Shyer family wrote in a statement shared with Deadline. 

They continued, "His loss leaves an unfillable hole in our lives, but his legacy lives on through his children and the five decades of wonderful work he’s left behind. We honor the extraordinary life he led and know there will never be another quite like him."

‘PRIVATE BENJAMIN’ ACTRESS EILEEN BRENNAN DIES AT 80

In 1979, Shyer co-wrote the comedy "Private Benjamin" with Meyers and screenwriter Harvey Miller, which the trio co-produced with the movie's star, Goldie Hawn.

The film became a major box office success with Shyer, Meyers and Miller's script receiving the Writer's Guild of America Award for best original comedy and an Academy Award nomination for best original screenplay. 

Hawn's performance earned her a best actress Oscar nomination, while the late Eileen Brennen earned an Academy Award nod for best supporting actress. 

"Private Benjamin" premiered in 1980, and Shyer and Meyers tied the knot in Rome that same year. The former couple went on to team up again for the 1984 comedy-drama "Irreconcilable Differences," starring Ryan O'Neal, Shelley Long and Drew Barrymore. 

Shyer made his directorial debut with the film, which the duo co-wrote. 

Shyer and Meyers' next collaboration was the 1987 romantic comedy, "Baby Boom," which starred Diane Keaton. The movie's script was co-written by the pair and directed by Shyer. "Baby Boom" was nominated for a Golden Globe for best comedy or musical, while Keaton received a nod for best actress.

Meyers and Shyer later created a sitcom of the same name based on the movie, which ran from 1988 to 1989. 

The former couple's streak of success continued when they remade Vincente Minnelli's 1950 comedy, "Father of the Bride." The hit 1990 version of "Father of the Bride," which starred Steve Martin, Keaton, Kimberly Williams and Martin Short, was directed by Shyer. He also co-wrote the screenplay with Meyers, Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett.

The former husband-wife duo collaborated on the 1994 movie "I Love Trouble," which the two wrote and Shyer directed.

Shyer and Meyers teamed up again for the 1995 sequel "Father of the Bride Part II." They shared writing credits and Shyer served as director. 

In 1998, Meyers made her directorial debut with the mega-hit romantic comedy "The Parent Trap," starring Lindsay Lohan as long-lost twin sisters who conspire to reunite their parents. Shyer produced the movie, which he also co-wrote with Meyers and David Swift.

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"The Parent Trap" would mark the final collaboration between Shyer and Meyers, who divorced in 1999.

Shyer went on to direct and co-produce the 2001 historical drama "The Affair of the Necklace," which starred Hilary Swank. 

He followed up with the 2004 remake of the 1966 movie "Alfie," which he wrote, directed and produced. The movie starred Jude Law in the titular role as well as Susan Sarandon and Sienna Miller. 

Shyer directed and co-wrote the 2022 Netflix Christmas romantic comedy "The Noel Diary. His most recent project was the 2023 Netflix holiday comedy "Best. Christmas. Ever!" which he co-wrote.

Born in Los Angeles on Oct. 11, 1941, Shyer was the son of production executive and director Melville Shyer, who co-founded the Director's Guild of America, and Lois Delaney. Shyer later attended the University of California, Los Angeles, and became an assistant to the producers of the TV show "The Odd Couple" Garry Marshall and Jerry Belson. He was later made the head writer and associate producer of the hit series.

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Shyer earned his first feature film writing credit for 1977's "Smokey and the Bandit," which starred Burt Reynolds. He co-wrote the screenplay for Jack Nicholson's 1978 movie "Goin' South," in which the actor starred and directed.

The filmmaker's first major accolade came when he earned a best screenplay WGA Award nomination after co-writing 1978's "House Calls."

Shyer was married to actress Debra Ewing from 1969 to 1974. After his marriage to Meyers ended, he was married to Deborah Lynn from 2004 to 2009.

Hallie Meyers-Shyer followed in her parents' footsteps, directing and co-writing the 2017 comedy "Home Again," starring Reese Witherspoon. Meyers and Shyer also shared a daughter, Annie Meyers-Shyer.

He is survived by Hallie and Annie as well as twins Jacob and Sophia, who he shared with Lynn.

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Model, actress Dayle Haddon dead at 76 after suspected carbon monoxide leak

Canadian actress and model Dayle Haddon has died. She was 76.

Haddon's cause of death was suspected carbon monoxide poisoning, the Solebury Township Police Department confirmed with Fox News Digital. 

"The investigation indicates a faulty flue and exhaust pipe on a gas heating system caused the carbon monoxide leak," the police report stated.

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The cause and manner of death will be "Pending Toxicology" until test results are returned and analyzed, the Bucks County Coroner’s Office shared with Fox News Digital.

The Solebury Township Police Department responded to a call on Friday, December 27, 2024, at approximately 6:31 a.m. 

Bucks County 9-1-1 Emergency Communications received a call from the resident that a man was lying down, passed out on the first floor of a detached office or in-law suite, according to the police report. 

New Hope Lambertville Rescue Squad was first to arrive at the scene and immediately removed a 76-year-old male from the building. Police confirmed the male who survived was Walter Blucas. He is in critical condition at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital.

Haddon was discovered unresponsive in bed on the second floor of the building and was pronounced dead.

New Hope Eagle Volunteer Fire Company was also on scene and detected a high level of carbon monoxide on the property, the police report stated.

Two medics were transported to Doylestown Hospital for carbon monoxide exposure and one Solebury Township Police Officer was treated at the scene. 

The home was owned by Haddon's daughter, Ryan Haddon, and Ryan's husband, Hallmark actor Marc Blucas, according to records.

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This case is currently under investigation by the Solebury Township Police Department. 

Authorities emphasized this tragic incident serves as a stark reminder of the importance of carbon monoxide safety precautions in homes.

Haddon was born on May 26, 1948, in Canada

At the age of 13, she was a member of the Les Grands Ballets Canadiens and became Miss Montreal at 18 years old.

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During her modeling career, Haddon signed contracts with four major cosmetic companies — Revlon, Max Factor, Estée Lauder and L’Oréal -- according to her website.

Haddon graced the cover of the 1973 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issue. She starred in movies including Disney’s "The World’s Greatest Athlete" and "North Dallas Forty" with Nick Nolte.

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She has also been featured on the covers of Vogue, Elle and Cosmopolitan during her career. 

The model and actress additionally wrote the books "Ageless Beauty" and "The 5 Principles of Ageless Living."

Haddon’s daughter, Ryan, paid tribute to her late mother in an emotional social media post. 

"The bright light that is Dayle has dimmed in this Earthly realm. Shining somewhere as radiantly as ever where it’s most needed, I have no doubt," Ryan penned on Instagram.

"She was a woman in her power, yet soft and attentive to all. Deeply creative and curious, gifted with beauty inside and out. Always kind and thoughtful," she wrote in part. 

Haddon’s daughter concluded the post with, "A pure heart. A rich inner life. Touching so many lives. A life well lived. Rest in Light, Mom."

Ryan accompanied her heartfelt tribute with a selection of photos of her mom's magazine covers in addition to her work as an ambassador for the humanitarian aid organization UNICEF.

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