Last-known images of missing mom Jermain Charlo are caught on tape. Will they lead to a break in the Montana case?
CBSN
On Highway 93, en route to Missoula, it's hard to miss this billboard and Jermain Charlo's haunting gaze. NEWS REPORT | JILL VALLEY | KPAX: Missoula police are concerned that a missing Dixon woman might be held somewhere against her will tonight. They are continuing to investigate the disappearance of 23-year-old Jermain Charlo who also goes by the name "Liz." I'm home alone for two more weeks. So, every day, blog will probably be only me until my boyfriend/fiancé gets home from work.
Missoula police detective Guy Baker has been searching for Jermain for more than six years. I usually don't do much. I'm just … supposed to be a housewife.
Det. Guy Baker: When I see that billboard … I'm frustrated. … We've … just time and time again, come up empty handed …

Air travelers faced hundreds of flight cancellations and thousands of delays on Tuesday in the wake of powerful storms that struck the Midwest and Eastern Seaboard. Many airports also continue to struggle with disruption from reduced staffing at often-jammed security checkpoints amid a partial government shutdown that has lasted more than a month. Mark Strassmann contributed to this report. In:

The race to fill the seat of retiring Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin has been heating up in the days leading up to Tuesday's 2026 Democratic primary and could set the tone for other midterm primaries on issues like President Trump's deportation policies and outside spending. And another factor in the race is Gov. JB Pritzker's attempt at powerbrokering: he's given his endorsement and millions in campaign funds to his lieutenant governor, Julianna Stratton. In:

A man who was accused of planting pipe bombs outside the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee headquarters on the eve of the Jan. 6 attack in 2021 is asking a judge to dismiss the criminal charges against him, arguing he is covered by President Trump's sweeping pardons of alleged Jan. 6 rioters.

The Cuban government is planning to allow Cuban nationals who live abroad — including in the U.S. — to invest in companies on the island, a top government official told NBC News in an interview that aired Monday, as the country faces economic collapse and immense pressure from the Trump administration.









