Michael Cohen Pleads Guilty to Eight Counts, Suspect Arrested in the Murder of Mollie Tibbetts, Paul Manafort Found Guilty on 8 out of 18 Counts, and APA Proposes Contract for APD

Former Trump Attorney Michael Cohen outside of Federal court

Hour one of the Todd and Don Show:  

• Austin police have tied a former Lyft driver accused of kidnapping two women in June to a third case from 2017

• Police say a teenager was assaulted and shot in northeast Austin last week by three people after he thought he was meeting a girl for sex

• The city of Austin is looking for feedback on the dockless scooters in Austin after a picture of a woman in a wheelchair who could not pass several Bird scooters has gone viral


Hour two of the Todd and Don Show:

• Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former personal attorney, pleaded guilty in Manhattan federal court Tuesday to eight criminal counts and implicated Trump in using campaign funds to cover up affairs before the 2016 campaign

• TECH NEWS:

– Google assistant now has a feature called ‘Tell Me Something Good’ where users can hear just the good news

– A federal judge said at a Seattle hearing Tuesday that the controversial issue of 3D-printed guns should be decided by the president or Congress

– Facebook shuts 652 Iran-backed accounts linked in global disinformation campaign

• Cristhian Bahena Rivera, a 24 year old illegal immigrant, has been arrested in the murder of missing Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts whose body had been found in a corn field


Hour three of the Todd and Don Show:

• Parents at the Leander ISD want air conditioning installed in school buses

• Hays county school board has decided if students are caught using their cell phones inappropriately they will be confiscated to be returned for $10

• Paul Manafort has been found guilty of 8 out of the 18 federal felonies he faced


Hour four of the Todd and Don Show:

• Restaurants around the nation, including some in Austin, are taking tipping off the table

• The union representing police officers has presented the city with a proposed contract, as well as a study by Angelou Economics challenging the city’s assertion that Austin officers are paid more than officers in other Texas cities. Ron DeLord, attorney representing the Austin Police Union, calls in to talk about the fate of the proposed APD contract

 

(Photo credit: Yana Paskova/Getty Images)

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