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The nation’s largest health insurer, fearing massive financial losses, announced Tuesday that it plans to pull back from ObamaCare in a big way and cut its participation in the program’s insurance exchanges to just a handful of states next year – in the latest sign of instability in the marketplace under the law.

UnitedHealth CEO Stephen Hemsley said the company expects losses from its exchange business to total more than $1 billion for this year and last.  

Despite the company expanding to nearly three dozen state exchanges for this year, Hemsley said the company cannot continue to broadly serve the market created by the Affordable Care Act's coverage expansion due partly to the higher risk that comes with its customers.

UnitedHealth Group Inc. said it now expects to lose $650 million this year on its exchange business, up from its previous projection for $525 million. The insurer lost $475 million in 2015, a spokesman said.

UnitedHealth has already decided to pull out of Arkansas, Georgia and Michigan in 2017, and Hemsley told analysts during a Tuesday moing conference call that his company does not want to take the financial risk from the exchanges into 2017.

"We continue to remain an advocate for more stable and sustainable approaches to serving this market," he said.

The state-based exchanges are a key element behind the Affordable Care Act's push to expand insurance coverage. But insurers have struggled with higher-than-expected claims from that business.

A recent study by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association detailed how many new customers nationwide under ObamaCare are higher-risk. It found new enrollees in individual health plans in 2014 and 2015 had higher rates of hypertension, diabetes, depression, coronary artery disease, HIV and Hepatitis C than those enrolled before ObamaCare.

 

On the heels of Tuesday's announcement, Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., said in a statement it’s a sign of “the President’s broken promise that families would have more choices under ObamaCare.”

The Kaiser Family Foundation, in an analysis on the prospect of United's exit, said “the effect on insurer competition could be significant in some markets – particularly in rural areas and southe states” if it is not replaced.

In the most extreme scenario, “If United were to leave the exchange market overall, 1.8 million Marketplace enrollees would be left with two insurers, and another 1.1 million would be left with one insurer as a result of the withdrawal,” the analysis said.  

UnitedHealth had moved slowly into the newly created market by participating in only four exchanges in their first year, 2014. But the company then expanded to two dozen exchanges last year and said in October it would add to that total. It currently participates in exchanges in 34 states and covers 795,000 people

A month after announcing its latest exchange expansion, UnitedHealth started voicing second thoughts. The insurer said in November that it would decide by the first half of this year whether to even participate in the market for 2017.

Insurers say they have struggled, in particular, with customers who have signed up for coverage outside regular enrollment windows and then dumped expensive claims on their books, a problem the govement has said it would address.

A dozen nonprofit health insurance cooperatives created by the ACA to sell coverage on the exchanges have already folded, and the survivors all lost millions last year.

Other publicly traded insurers like Aetna have said that they have lost money on this business as well. But some companies, like Molina Healthcare, have said they have managed to tu a profit from the exchanges.

Analysts expect other insurers to also trim their exchange participation in 2017, especially if they continue to struggle with high costs.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Authorities in Texas were searching for a man dressed in SWAT gear after a fitness trainer and mother of three was found murdered inside a church Monday.

Terri Bevers, 45, was found at around 5 a.m. local time at the Creekside Church of Christ in Midlothian, about 25 miles southwest of Dallas. Bevers was scheduled to teach an early-moing fitness class at the church and one of her students found her body. 

Midlothian Police Chief Carl Smith told reporters that the church's motion-activated surveillance cameras captured a suspect walking around inside the church before Bevers' body was found. Smith said the man was wearing full tactical gear with a heavy vest, helmet, shin guards, gloves and ‘POLICE’ on the front.

"He is designed to look like a police officer," Smith said. "His intent was to look like a police officer."

The suspect was first seen on the cameras at around 3:50 a.m. Bevers is first seen on the cameras about 30 minutes later, as she arrives to prepare to teach the 5 a.m. fitness class.

Police said the suspect appeared to be carrying a tool used to either break windows or force doors. Investigators found several signs of forced entry, but nothing was reported taken from the church.

"It's just an odd random situation that they would actually happen to come into a building that was being burglarized on a Monday moing,” said Smith. "This is an extremely unusual situation for the city of Midlothian. We have a very safe community. In fact, it’s going to be the first event of my tenure here in almost ten years. Nothing like this happened here before."

Investigators also have not ruled out that Bevers was the victim of a targeted attack. The Dallas County medical examiner will determine exactly how Bevers died. 

She was very passionate about transforming people's lives, physically and mentally,” Bevers' husband, Brandon, told KDFW. “She transformed herself into a very fit person and her desire was to do that for others."

Click for more from Fox4News.com.

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FILE - In this Monday, Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, a grizzly bear looks up from foraging, in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska.

FILE - In this Monday, Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, a grizzly bear looks up from foraging, in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska. (AP Photo/Becky Bohrer, File)

An assistant college professor was mauled by a bear while teaching a mountaineering course in the Alaska Panhandle Monday, a university spokeswoman said.

Forest Wagner, 35, of Fairbanks, was with a group of 12 University of Alaska Southeast students on Mount Emmerich near Haines when he was attacked. A student hiked down the mountain to get cell reception and call for help.

Wagner was in stable condition at an Anchorage hospital, according to a university statement sent to KTUU. None of the students were harmed. 

According to a police report, Wagner was removed from the mountain via helicopter and put on another LifeMed helicopter before being taken him to the hospital.

According to Wagner's teaching schedule, he was part of a Mountaineering 101 class that was scheduled to come down off of the mountain by Tuesday. He has been coordinating and teaching in the outdoor studies program at the university since 2006, according to his biography. He teaches rock and ice climbing, backcountry navigation, glacier travel and mountaineering.

The bear was sighted again after the mauling and Bausler said the 12 students in the mountaineering class were taken down from the mountain and are spending the night in Haines with another professor. They are scheduled to take the ferry back to Juneau on Tuesday, she said.

It's the second mauling reported in Alaska within days.

A 77-year-old bear hunter is recovering from injuries suffered when he was mauled by a grizzly in interior Alaska.

Troopers on Monday said hunter Glenn Bohn of Wasilla was attacked by the bear near Mile 68 of the Denali Highway just after 1:30 p.m. on Friday.

The 135-mile road runs east to west and connects the Richardson and Parks highways east of Denali National Park.

Bohn's hunting partner killed the bear. Bohn was driven by snowmobile to the Denali Highway where a LifeMed Alaska helicopter flew him to an Anchorage hospital.

Wildlife troopers, employees of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and friends of Bohn removed the bear from the field Saturday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Armed militants in Afghanistan stormed a key govement security agency in the capital Tuesday moing as part of a coordinated assault, killing at least 28 people and wounding more than 320.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, which included a suicide car bombing. It appeared to have targeted an agency similar to the U.S. Secret Service, providing personal protection for high-ranking govement officials.

Gen. Abdul Rahman Rahimi, the Kabul police chief, said that at least 28 people were killed in the attack, which began when a suicide car bomber struck near the agency compound's gates.

After the explosion, armed gunmen stormed the compound and waged a prolonged battle with govement security forces.

The U.S. Embassy denounced the attack, calling it a senseless act of violence. It added that it supports the Afghan govement's peace process to end such violence.

Ismail Kawasi, spokesman for the Public Health Ministry, said so far 327 are wounded, including women and children, have been brought to area hospitals. An Interior Ministry statement said that dozens of civilians were killed and wounded in the attack. The casualty figures are expected to rise.

"This was one of the most powerful explosions I have ever heard in my life," said Obaidullah Tarakhail, a police commander who was present when the attack began. Tarakhail said he couldn't see or hear anything for 20 minutes after the initial explosion. "All around was dark and covered with thick smoke and dust," he said.

Dozens of civilian apartment buildings, houses, shops and several govement buildings were damaged by the car bomb blast.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack. Taliban insurgents have stepped up their attacks recently since announcing the start of their spring offensive last week.

President Ashraf Ghani issued a statement condemning the attack and saying it, "clearly shows the enemy's defeat in face-to-face battle with Afghan security forces."

The attack in Kabul comes four days after another attack by Taliban insurgents in northe Kunduz province which was repelled by the Afghan security forces.

Officials in Kunduz said that security has improved in the city and that the Taliban were defeated in other parts of the province, but operations were still underway to clear militant fighters from the rest of the province.

The Taliban held Kunduz for three days last year before being driven out by a two-week counteroffensive aided by U.S.-airstrikes. It was their biggest foray into an urban area since 2001.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Authorities in Texas were searching for a man dressed in SWAT gear after a fitness trainer and mother of three was found murdered inside a church Monday.

Terri Bevers, 45, was found at around 5 a.m. local time at the Creekside Church of Christ in Midlothian, about 25 miles southwest of Dallas. Bevers was scheduled to teach an early-moing fitness class at the church and one of her students found her body. 

Midlothian Police Chief Carl Smith told reporters that the church's motion-activated surveillance cameras captured a suspect walking around inside the church before Bevers' body was found. Smith said the man was wearing full tactical gear with a heavy vest, helmet, shin guards, gloves and ‘POLICE’ on the front.

"He is designed to look like a police officer," Smith said. "His intent was to look like a police officer."

The suspect was first seen on the cameras at around 3:50 a.m. Bevers is first seen on the cameras about 30 minutes later, as she arrives to prepare to teach the 5 a.m. fitness class.

Police said the suspect appeared to be carrying a tool used to either break windows or force doors. Investigators found several signs of forced entry, but nothing was reported taken from the church.

"It's just an odd random situation that they would actually happen to come into a building that was being burglarized on a Monday moing,” said Smith. "This is an extremely unusual situation for the city of Midlothian. We have a very safe community. In fact, it’s going to be the first event of my tenure here in almost ten years. Nothing like this happened here before."

Investigators also have not ruled out that Bevers was the victim of a targeted attack. The Dallas County medical examiner will determine exactly how Bevers died. 

She was very passionate about transforming people's lives, physically and mentally,” Bevers' husband, Brandon, told KDFW. “She transformed herself into a very fit person and her desire was to do that for others."

Click for more from Fox4News.com.

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April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y.

April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump's final rally before Tuesday's New York primary was marked by an unfortunate slip of the tongue, as the real estate mogul mistakenly mentioned the name of a popular convenience store chain in place of 9/11.

Trump was about to deliver prepared remarks lauding New York values at Buffalo's First Niagara Center Monday night when he referred to 7-Eleven.

"It's very close to my heart because I was down there, and I watched our police and our firemen down at 7/11, down at the World Trade Center right after it came down, and I saw the greatest people I've ever seen in action," Trump told the crowd.

Trump, who polls show holding a sizable lead over rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich in New York, has repeatedly invoked the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks as he campainged across his home state. He paid his first visit to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum earlier this month.

Trump billed the Buffalo event as a final push to rally supporters and make sure they vote.

"No New Yorker can vote for Cruz, no one can vote for Kasich", Trump told the estimated crowd of more than 11,000 people. "You know Cruz is way down in the polls, Kasich is not even showing up."

The latest headlines on the 2016 elections from the biggest name in politics. See Latest Coverage →

Cruz, who has made up considerable ground on Trump in the Republican delegate race, tried to downplay his Empire State expectations in an interview with Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Monday.

"New York is Donald’s home state," the Texas senator said. "Of course he will do well in his home state. When we were in Texas my home state well walloped him."

Trump countered later Monday by calling Cruz "a catastrophe. He didn’t even [gaer] 50 percent [of the vote] in his own state."

The rally was briefly interrupted by about a dozen protesters, who sat  locked arms and sat down on the floor of the arena shortly after Trump took the stage — forcing authorities to carry several out by their arms and their legs. Trump continued speaking as the demonstrators were removed. 

Buffalo police said they arrested six people, mainly for disorderly conduct and trespassing. They added that 21 people were ejected from the event, but no arrests were made inside the arena.

Fox News.com's Christopher Snyder and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Authorities in Texas were searching for a man dressed in SWAT gear after a fitness trainer and mother of three was found murdered inside a church Monday.

Terri Bevers, 45, was found at around 5 a.m. local time at the Creekside Church of Christ in Midlothian, about 25 miles southwest of Dallas. Bevers was scheduled to teach an early-moing fitness class at the church and one of her students found her body. 

Midlothian Police Chief Carl Smith told reporters that the church's motion-activated surveillance cameras captured a suspect walking around inside the church before Bevers' body was found. Smith said the man was wearing full tactical gear with a heavy vest, helmet, shin guards, gloves and ‘POLICE’ on the front.

"He is designed to look like a police officer," Smith said. "His intent was to look like a police officer."

The suspect was first seen on the cameras at around 3:50 a.m. Bevers is first seen on the cameras about 30 minutes later, as she arrives to prepare to teach the 5 a.m. fitness class.

Police said the suspect appeared to be carrying a tool used to either break windows or force doors. Investigators found several signs of forced entry, but nothing was reported taken from the church.

"It's just an odd random situation that they would actually happen to come into a building that was being burglarized on a Monday moing,” said Smith. "This is an extremely unusual situation for the city of Midlothian. We have a very safe community. In fact, it’s going to be the first event of my tenure here in almost ten years. Nothing like this happened here before."

Investigators also have not ruled out that Bevers was the victim of a targeted attack. The Dallas County medical examiner will determine exactly how Bevers died. 

She was very passionate about transforming people's lives, physically and mentally,” Bevers' husband, Brandon, told KDFW. “She transformed herself into a very fit person and her desire was to do that for others."

Click for more from Fox4News.com.

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April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y.

April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump's final rally before Tuesday's New York primary was marked by an unfortunate slip of the tongue, as the real estate mogul mistakenly mentioned the name of a popular convenience store chain in place of 9/11.

Trump was about to deliver prepared remarks lauding New York values at Buffalo's First Niagara Center Monday night when he referred to 7-Eleven.

"It's very close to my heart because I was down there, and I watched our police and our firemen down at 7/11, down at the World Trade Center right after it came down, and I saw the greatest people I've ever seen in action," Trump told the crowd.

Trump, who polls show holding a sizable lead over rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich in New York, has repeatedly invoked the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks as he campainged across his home state. He paid his first visit to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum earlier this month.

Trump billed the Buffalo event as a final push to rally supporters and make sure they vote.

"No New Yorker can vote for Cruz, no one can vote for Kasich", Trump told the estimated crowd of more than 11,000 people. "You know Cruz is way down in the polls, Kasich is not even showing up."

The latest headlines on the 2016 elections from the biggest name in politics. See Latest Coverage →

Cruz, who has made up considerable ground on Trump in the Republican delegate race, tried to downplay his Empire State expectations in an interview with Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Monday.

"New York is Donald’s home state," the Texas senator said. "Of course he will do well in his home state. When we were in Texas my home state well walloped him."

Trump countered later Monday by calling Cruz "a catastrophe. He didn’t even [gaer] 50 percent [of the vote] in his own state."

The rally was briefly interrupted by about a dozen protesters, who sat  locked arms and sat down on the floor of the arena shortly after Trump took the stage — forcing authorities to carry several out by their arms and their legs. Trump continued speaking as the demonstrators were removed. 

Buffalo police said they arrested six people, mainly for disorderly conduct and trespassing. They added that 21 people were ejected from the event, but no arrests were made inside the arena.

Fox News.com's Christopher Snyder and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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A North Carolina couple that appeared on the HGTV series “Love It Or List It” is suing the show’s production company, claiming their on-screen renovations left their home in disarray. According to the Miami Herald, now, the couple is asking the production company and the construction company the series hired to pay up for what they claim is shoddy work.

Deena Murphy and Timothy Sullivan say they endured a breach of contract and were subject to unfair trade practices that violate North Carolina’s general contract laws, the Miami Herald reports.

They’re suing Big Coat TV, which produces “Love it or List it,” a show in which homeowners present a designer and a realtor with their less-than-perfect home. At the conclusion of each hour-long episode, the homeowners see the adjustments the designer a team of workers have done to their home and they weigh whether to keep it or sell it in favor of one of the homes the series’ realtor has found for them.

The homeowners claim the show’s changes to their home left the floors “irreparably damaged,” with holes “through which vermin could enter the house.” They also claim the series left the home with unpainted areas and windows that had been painted shut.

“We are aware of the lawsuit,” CEO and executive producer of Big Coat Productions/Big Coat TV Maria Armstrong said in a statement to the Herald. “Because this matter involves ongoing litigation, our attoeys have advised us and we feel that making a comment would be inappropriate at this time. However, we do intend to vigorously defend what we consider to be false allegations.”

The allegations detailed in the lawsuit include claims the series hired a contractor the couple had expressed conces about using, and though the couple states they gave the series a deposit of $140,000 for their home repairs, only $85,786.50 was paid to the hired contractor.

“Love It or List It” first premiered in 2008 and the show has mostly filmed in Canada. In September 2014 it began filming episodes in North Carolina. Murphy and Sullivan say they were chosen for the show in April 2015.

Click here for more on this story from the Miami Herald.

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Inteally displaced woman walks through dust at the Protection of Civilians site in Bentiu, South Sudan. (United Nations)

Inteally displaced woman walks through dust at the Protection of Civilians site in Bentiu, South Sudan. (United Nations)

Just five years ago, celebrities such as George Clooney and Don Cheadle hailed the creation of a new African nation as one of President Obama’s foreign policy success stories, but now South Sudan is looking like a failed state.

The nation, sought as a means of bringing peace to Sudan’s long-running civil war, was promoted as a potential U.S. ally and was formed following a referendum passed with 98 percent of the vote to secede from the northe part of Sudan and the Khartoum govement. But hope has given way to desperation, as South Sudan has descended into bloodshed and chaos.

“The euphoria has faded and South Sudan is an embarrassment for the administration, and that comes with reputational costs,” Joshua Meservey, policy analyst for Africa and the Middle East at The Heritage Foundation, told FoxNews.com. “Bringing attention to it is not in the White House’s interest.”

“The issue of human rights in South Sudan has no value to reality. The war machine just won’t stop.”

- Joseph Afhandy, South Sudanese joualist

Meservey said the U.S.-backed solution was based on a “very superficial” grasp of the war between Sudan and South Sudan, and the deep divisions that existed in the nascent nation.

“People ignored the waing signs and it was an exciting time framed as the liberation of the region,” he said.

The civil war that rocked Sudan from 1983-2005 started in what is now South Sudan, and would eventually see more than 2 million people die as a direct result of war or of famine and disease related to the conflict. Twice as many people were displaced before a peace agreement was signed in 2005 and laid the groundwork for the creation of the new nation.

With three-quarters of Sudan’s oil reserves in the newly formed country, the future looked bright for South Sudan. It was accepted as a United Nations member state, and expatriates flocked back to help build the country. But South Sudan plunged into civil war in late 2013 after President Salva Kiir accused his then-deputy, Riek Machar, of plotting a coup. Machar denied the accusation, but quickly formed a rebel army.

The UN stepped in in an effort to head off a deadly and embarrassing civil war. Under the threat of sanctions, a peace deal was signed by both sides last August – intended to stop the fighting and targeting of civilians and bring about the formation of a transitional govement. But in just the last eight months, thousands of people have since been slaughtered and driven from their homes – with the number of displaced now well over two million – into deteriorating and dangerous camps and settlements.

“These aren’t refugee camps, they are military bases where they have to be under armed protection,” Casie Copeland, an Africa-based analyst focusing on South Sudan for the Inteational Crisis Group, said. “They are afraid to leave, and are fearful for their lives every day.”

A recent UN investigation found that South Sudanese army soldiers were given permission to rape more than 1,300 women and girls "as a reward" in lieu of receiving salaries. Amnesty Inteational investigators also reported that scores of men and boys have been suffocated in a shipping container by govement forces. Countless civilians have been bued, starved, shot, speared, blown up and even consumed in ritual cannibalism.

“People have been bued and drowned, children are raped and homeless mothers are being forced to eat meat of their dead children after their husbands die,” South Sudanese joualist Joseph Afhandy – who is now living in exile in Nairobi, after enduring his own brutal torture for exposing corruption and govement abuse - told FoxNews.com.

“The issue of human rights in South Sudan has no value to reality,” he said. “This is about power and shadow-wrestling. The war machine just won’t stop.”

Both govement and rebel leaders have been accused of recruiting more than 15,000 child soldiers to take up arms in the bloody civil war. While it is nearly impossible to quantify, some analysts have likened the suffering and slaughter to what has taken place in Syria during the same period.

“It is possible,” John Prendergast, prominent human rights activist and founding director of the Enough Project, an initiative to end genocide, said of the comparisons to Syria death tolls. “But we will never know because the world does not prioritize what is happening in South Sudan sufficiently to even properly count the dead there.”

Aid groups this month issued critical waings that the country was on the brink of running out of medicine and facing “alarming” levels of hunger and food shortages. However, U.S. emergency aid assistance to South Sudan alone has already far exceeded $1 billion, and yet the famine crisis continues to worsen and policy experts have condemned the U.S. administration for giving aid money without conditions.

Waing signs of the new nation’s chronic dysfunction were there even as the U.S and the UN praised its formation as a foreign policy triumph. Despite its oil, South Sudan is one of the world's least developed and poorest nations, and ethnic rivalries, mainly between the Dinka, Kirr’s people, and the Macher’s Nuer faction go back generations.

Ted Dagne, an Ethiopian-American who was formerly a leading advocate in Washington for the country’s creation, an embedded go-between for United Nations, United States and Sudanese diplomats and initially appointed by President Kiir as his special advisor, has charged that that officials stole $4 billion in start-up funds before South Sudan was even formalized.

“Those who came to power began to loot and do very little to help their people, except themselves and their cronies,” Dagne told FoxNews.com, claiming that he and Kiir sought to stamp out corruption from the very beginning but that brought pushback and increased hostility against the president from forces loyal to the vice president.

With sudden wealth and power to fight over, the new govement wasted no time. Eric Reeves, an English literature professor at Smith College, in Massachusetts, and an expert in Sudan, noted that horrific atrocities are taking place on both sides of the spectrum and while the civil war didn’t officially break out until December 2013, things on the ground were tumultuous “from day one.” The Obama administration’s miscalculations did not help, he said.

“There have been some serious missteps by the Obama administration,” Reeves said.

The U.S. State Department has repeatedly condemned ongoing attacks in the region, insisting that the conflict be settled through diplomacy as “there is no military solution.” Obama and National Security Advisor Susan Rice – both of whom led the charge to create South Sudan – have expressed “disappointment” over the leadership that has failed to stop the hostilities.

In the most recent testimony to the House Foreign Relations Committee from the Special Envoy to Sudan and South Sudan, Ambassador Donald Booth assured members in December that “the people of South Sudan have no greater friend than the United States,” and that the peace agreement remains the best chance for a “fresh start.”

Yet critics say it’s easier to keep the issue out of the political and media spotlight than it is to address it properly, and even though talks between the two parties have resumed in Juba, hopes for stability are being met with skepticism.

“The creation of the world’s newest country was in fact a foreign policy success,” Prendergast said. “It helped avoid a retu to the North-South war within Sudan, a war that had taken two and a quarter million lives.

“What followed, however, was not sufficiently understood by inteational supporters of the new state. The foreign policy success was followed by a foreign policy failure.”

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April 18, 2016: The images at left show a suspect in SWAT gear sought by police in the murder of Terri Bevers, right, in Midlothian, Texas

April 18, 2016: The images at left show a suspect in SWAT gear sought by police in the murder of Terri Bevers, right, in Midlothian, Texas (Midlothian Police Department/Facebook)

Authorities in Texas were searching for a man dressed in SWAT gear after a fitness trainer and mother of three was found murdered inside a church Monday.

Terri Bevers, 45, was found at around 5 a.m. local time at the Creekside Church of Christ in Midlothian, about 25 miles southwest of Dallas. Bevers was scheduled to teach an early-moing fitness class at the church and one of her students found her body. 

Midlothian Police Chief Carl Smith told reporters that the church's motion-activated surveillance cameras captured a suspect walking around inside the church before Bevers' body was found. Smith said the man was wearing full tactical gear with a heavy vest, helmet, shin guards, gloves and ‘POLICE’ on the front.

"He is designed to look like a police officer," Smith said. "His intent was to look like a police officer."

The suspect was first seen on the cameras at around 3:50 a.m. Bevers is first seen on the cameras about 30 minutes later, as she arrives to prepare to teach the 5 a.m. fitness class.

Police said the suspect appeared to be carrying a tool used to either break windows or force doors. Investigators found several signs of forced entry, but nothing was reported taken from the church.

"It's just an odd random situation that they would actually happen to come into a building that was being burglarized on a Monday moing,” said Smith. "This is an extremely unusual situation for the city of Midlothian. We have a very safe community. In fact, it’s going to be the first event of my tenure here in almost ten years. Nothing like this happened here before."

Investigators also have not ruled out that Bevers was the victim of a targeted attack. The Dallas County medical examiner will determine exactly how Bevers died. 

She was very passionate about transforming people's lives, physically and mentally,” Bevers' husband, Brandon, told KDFW. “She transformed herself into a very fit person and her desire was to do that for others."

Click for more from Fox4News.com.

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A North Carolina couple that appeared on the HGTV series “Love It Or List It” is suing the show’s production company, claiming their on-screen renovations left their home in disarray. According to the Miami Herald, now, the couple is asking the production company and the construction company the series hired to pay up for what they claim is shoddy work.

Deena Murphy and Timothy Sullivan say they endured a breach of contract and were subject to unfair trade practices that violate North Carolina’s general contract laws, the Miami Herald reports.

They’re suing Big Coat TV, which produces “Love it or List it,” a show in which homeowners present a designer and a realtor with their less-than-perfect home. At the conclusion of each hour-long episode, the homeowners see the adjustments the designer a team of workers have done to their home and they weigh whether to keep it or sell it in favor of one of the homes the series’ realtor has found for them.

The homeowners claim the show’s changes to their home left the floors “irreparably damaged,” with holes “through which vermin could enter the house.” They also claim the series left the home with unpainted areas and windows that had been painted shut.

“We are aware of the lawsuit,” CEO and executive producer of Big Coat Productions/Big Coat TV Maria Armstrong said in a statement to the Herald. “Because this matter involves ongoing litigation, our attoeys have advised us and we feel that making a comment would be inappropriate at this time. However, we do intend to vigorously defend what we consider to be false allegations.”

The allegations detailed in the lawsuit include claims the series hired a contractor the couple had expressed conces about using, and though the couple states they gave the series a deposit of $140,000 for their home repairs, only $85,786.50 was paid to the hired contractor.

“Love It or List It” first premiered in 2008 and the show has mostly filmed in Canada. In September 2014 it began filming episodes in North Carolina. Murphy and Sullivan say they were chosen for the show in April 2015.

Click here for more on this story from the Miami Herald.

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Republican and Democratic presidential front-runners Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton have another chance to edge closer to their respective parties' nominations Tuesday as voters go to the polls in the delegate-rich New York primary. 

Pre-primary polls show Trump and Clinton holding comfortable leads, but winning alone is not necessarily enough. Clinton will want a convincing victory to halt rival Beie Sanders' winning streak and blunt his claims of "momentum" in the Democratic race.

Trump needs to gaer more than 50 percent of the statewide vote to have a shot at taking home all 95 of New York’s delegates. Trump has been campaigning heavily in the state with an eye toward that goal, and most recent polls shows him with just over 50 percent support in the state, holding a huge double-digit lead over rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich.

Trump and Clinton are hoping to win in part on the strength of their local ties. Clinton was twice elected senator from New York, while Trump was bo in Queens and lives in a building bearing his name in Manhattan.

"We love this city," Trump said Monday in brief remarks to reporters in the lobby of Trump Tower. "You look at the other folks that are running, they couldn't care less about New York."

Cruz, who infamously panned Trump's "New York values" earlier in the primary, was bracing for a tough showing in the Empire State. The Texas senator was already looking ahead on the primary calendar, scheduling events Tuesday in Pennsylvania, which votes next week.

The latest headlines on the 2016 elections from the biggest name in politics. See Latest Coverage →

"New York is Donald’s home state," Cruz told Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Monday evening. "Of course he will do well in his home state. When we were in Texas, my home state, we walloped him."

Trump leads the GOP race with 744 delegates, ahead of Cruz with 545 and Kasich with 144. Securing the GOP nomination requires 1,237 delegates. While it's still possible for Trump to reach that number ahead of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, it'll be tough. If Trump cannot reach that threshold, voting would proceed to a second ballot at the convention, with a majority of delegates free to vote for whomever they choose.

In the Democratic race, Clinton's campaign was declaring the contest virtually over Monday and waing Sanders that he risks damaging the party's eventual nominee if he keeps up harsh criticism of the former secretary of state.

Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook said Sanders faces a "close to impossible path to the nomination" and predicted New York would result in Clinton taking "an important step to the nomination." Sanders needs to win 68 percent of the remaining delegates if he hopes to clinch the Democratic nomination.

Clinton herself spent the final hours of campaigning in New York trying to drive up tuout among women and minorities, her most ardent supporters. Since Sunday, she's danced to Latin music at a Brooklyn block party, vowed to defend abortion rights to female supporters in Manhattan, prayed at a black church in Westchester, drunk a bubble tea at a dumpling shop in Flushing and cheered newly unionized workers in Queens.

"We're not taking anything for granted," Clinton said Monday after greeting workers at the Hi-Tek Car Wash & Lube in Queens. "Tell your friends and your family, everyone, to please vote tomorrow."

The Sanders campaign has held out hope for a closer race, relying on the large crowds at the Vermont senator's rallies translating into votes Tuesday.

"This is a campaign on the move," Sanders shouted to a crowd of thousands gathered along the waterfront in Queens, the Manhattan skyline serving as a dramatic backdrop. "This is a movement getting the establishment very, very nervous."

Among Democrats, Clinton has accumulated 1,758 delegates to Sanders' 1,076. Those totals include both pledged delegates from primaries and caucuses, as well as superdelegates, the party insiders who can back the candidate of their choice regardless of how their state votes. It takes 2,383 to win the Democratic nomination.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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FILE - In this Monday, Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, a grizzly bear looks up from foraging, in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska.

FILE - In this Monday, Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, a grizzly bear looks up from foraging, in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska. (AP Photo/Becky Bohrer, File)

An assistant college professor was mauled by a bear while teaching a mountaineering course in the Alaska Panhandle Monday, a university spokeswoman said.

Forest Wagner, 35, of Fairbanks, was with a group of 12 University of Alaska Southeast students on Mount Emmerich near Haines when he was attacked. A student hiked down the mountain to get cell reception and call for help.

Wagner was in stable condition at an Anchorage hospital, according to a university statement sent to KTUU. None of the students were harmed. 

According to a police report, Wagner was removed from the mountain via helicopter and put on another LifeMed helicopter before being taken him to the hospital.

According to Wagner's teaching schedule, he was part of a Mountaineering 101 class that was scheduled to come down off of the mountain by Tuesday. He has been coordinating and teaching in the outdoor studies program at the university since 2006, according to his biography. He teaches rock and ice climbing, backcountry navigation, glacier travel and mountaineering.

The bear was sighted again after the mauling and Bausler said the 12 students in the mountaineering class were taken down from the mountain and are spending the night in Haines with another professor. They are scheduled to take the ferry back to Juneau on Tuesday, she said.

It's the second mauling reported in Alaska within days.

A 77-year-old bear hunter is recovering from injuries suffered when he was mauled by a grizzly in interior Alaska.

Troopers on Monday said hunter Glenn Bohn of Wasilla was attacked by the bear near Mile 68 of the Denali Highway just after 1:30 p.m. on Friday.

The 135-mile road runs east to west and connects the Richardson and Parks highways east of Denali National Park.

Bohn's hunting partner killed the bear. Bohn was driven by snowmobile to the Denali Highway where a LifeMed Alaska helicopter flew him to an Anchorage hospital.

Wildlife troopers, employees of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and friends of Bohn removed the bear from the field Saturday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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April 7, 2016: Vice President Joe Biden speaks at an event in Las Vegas.

April 7, 2016: Vice President Joe Biden speaks at an event in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher, File)

Vice President Joe Biden said Monday night that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's govement was leading the country "in the wrong direction" hours after a bus bombing in Jerusalem wounded at least 21 people. 

In a speech to the Israel advocacy group J Street, Biden did single out Palestinian leaders, including Mahmoud Abbas, for declining to condemn specific acts of terrorism carried out against Israelis. The vice president said he didn't know whether Monday's explosion was a terrorist attack, but added that the U.S. condemns "misguided cowards" who resort to violence.

However, the bulk of the Biden's criticism was reserved for Netanyahu, reflecting diminishing patience within the White House as President Barack Obama's term nears an end, compounded by deep disagreements over Iran and a strained relationship between the two leaders.

Biden suggested that Netanyahu's approach raised "profound questions" about how Israel could remain both Jewish and democratic.

"I firmly believe that the actions that Israel's govement has taken over the past several years -- the steady and systematic expansion of settlements, the legalization of outposts, land seizures -- they're moving us and more importantly they're moving Israel in the wrong direction," Biden said.

He said those policies were moving Israel toward a "one-state reality" -- meaning a single state for Palestinians and Israelis in which, eventually, Israeli Jews will no longer be the majority.

"That reality is dangerous," Biden added.

Biden, who met in March with both Netanyahu and Abbas, said he came away from that trip discouraged about prospects for peace anytime soon. Still, he said the U.S. is obliged to guarantee Israel's security and to "push them as hard as we can" toward a two-state solution despite "our sometimes overwhelming frustration with the Israeli govement."

"There is at the moment no political will that I observed from either Israelis or Palestinians to go forward with serious negotiations," Biden said.

The vice president's remarks to J Street, a dovish group that frequently criticizes Netanyahu, came at the height of a campaign season in which candidates have been scrutinized over their adherence to traditionally stalwart U.S. support for Israel.

Ahead of Tuesday's primary in New York, Democratic candidate Beie Sanders has sparked controversy by saying the U.S. should be even-handed and mustn't always say that Netanyahu is right.

In another dig at Netanyahu and his Likud party, Biden singled out for praise Stav Shaffir, a young member of Israel's parliament and a Netanyahu critic from the left wing of Israeli politics.

"May your views begin to once again become the majority opinion in the Knesset," Biden said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y.

April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump's final rally before Tuesday's New York primary was marked by an unfortunate slip of the tongue, as the real estate mogul mistakenly mentioned the name of a popular convenience store chain in place of 9/11.

Trump was about to deliver prepared remarks lauding New York values at Buffalo's First Niagara Center Monday night when he referred to 7-Eleven.

"It's very close to my heart because I was down there, and I watched our police and our firemen down at 7/11, down at the World Trade Center right after it came down, and I saw the greatest people I've ever seen in action," Trump told the crowd.

Trump, who polls show holding a sizable lead over rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich in New York, has repeatedly invoked the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks as he campainged across his home state. He paid his first visit to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum earlier this month.

Trump billed the Buffalo event as a final push to rally supporters and make sure they vote.

"No New Yorker can vote for Cruz, no one can vote for Kasich", Trump told the estimated crowd of more than 11,000 people. "You know Cruz is way down in the polls, Kasich is not even showing up."

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Cruz, who has made up considerable ground on Trump in the Republican delegate race, tried to downplay his Empire State expectations in an interview with Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Monday.

"New York is Donald’s home state," the Texas senator said. "Of course he will do well in his home state. When we were in Texas my home state well walloped him."

Trump countered later Monday by calling Cruz "a catastrophe. He didn’t even [gaer] 50 percent [of the vote] in his own state."

The rally was briefly interrupted by about a dozen protesters, who sat  locked arms and sat down on the floor of the arena shortly after Trump took the stage — forcing authorities to carry several out by their arms and their legs. Trump continued speaking as the demonstrators were removed. 

Buffalo police said they arrested six people, mainly for disorderly conduct and trespassing. They added that 21 people were ejected from the event, but no arrests were made inside the arena.

Fox News.com's Christopher Snyder and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y.

April 18, 2016: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump's final rally before Tuesday's New York primary was marked by an unfortunate slip of the tongue, as the real estate mogul mistakenly mentioned the name of a popular convenience store chain in place of 9/11.

Trump was about to deliver prepared remarks lauding New York values at Buffalo's First Niagara Center Monday night when he referred to 7-Eleven.

"It's very close to my heart because I was down there, and I watched our police and our firemen down at 7/11, down at the World Trade Center right after it came down, and I saw the greatest people I've ever seen in action," Trump told the crowd.

Trump, who polls show holding a sizable lead over rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich in New York, has repeatedly invoked the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks as he campainged across his home state. He paid his first visit to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum earlier this month.

Trump billed the Buffalo event as a final push to rally supporters and make sure they vote.

"No New Yorker can vote for Cruz, no one can vote for Kasich", Trump told the estimated crowd of more than 11,000 people. "You know Cruz is way down in the polls, Kasich is not even showing up."

The latest headlines on the 2016 elections from the biggest name in politics. See Latest Coverage →

Cruz, who has made up considerable ground on Trump in the Republican delegate race, tried to downplay his Empire State expectations in an interview with Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Monday.

"New York is Donald’s home state," the Texas senator said. "Of course he will do well in his home state. When we were in Texas my home state well walloped him."

Trump countered later Monday by calling Cruz "a catastrophe. He didn’t even [gaer] 50 percent [of the vote] in his own state."

The rally was briefly interrupted by about a dozen protesters, who sat  locked arms and sat down on the floor of the arena shortly after Trump took the stage — forcing authorities to carry several out by their arms and their legs. Trump continued speaking as the demonstrators were removed. 

Buffalo police said they arrested six people, mainly for disorderly conduct and trespassing. They added that 21 people were ejected from the event, but no arrests were made inside the arena.

Fox News.com's Christopher Snyder and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Inteally displaced woman walks through dust at the Protection of Civilians site in Bentiu, South Sudan. (United Nations)

Inteally displaced woman walks through dust at the Protection of Civilians site in Bentiu, South Sudan. (United Nations)

Just five years ago, celebrities such as George Clooney and Don Cheadle hailed the creation of a new African nation as one of President Obama’s foreign policy success stories, but now South Sudan is looking like a failed state.

The nation, sought as a means of bringing peace to Sudan’s long-running civil war, was promoted as a potential U.S. ally and was formed following a referendum passed with 98 percent of the vote to secede from the northe part of Sudan and the Khartoum govement. But hope has given way to desperation, as South Sudan has descended into bloodshed and chaos.

“The euphoria has faded and South Sudan is an embarrassment for the administration, and that comes with reputational costs,” Joshua Meservey, policy analyst for Africa and the Middle East at The Heritage Foundation, told FoxNews.com. “Bringing attention to it is not in the White House’s interest.”

“The issue of human rights in South Sudan has no value to reality. The war machine just won’t stop.”

- Joseph Afhandy, South Sudanese joualist

Meservey said the U.S.-backed solution was based on a “very superficial” grasp of the war between Sudan and South Sudan, and the deep divisions that existed in the nascent nation.

“People ignored the waing signs and it was an exciting time framed as the liberation of the region,” he said.

The civil war that rocked Sudan from 1983-2005 started in what is now South Sudan, and would eventually see more than 2 million people die as a direct result of war or of famine and disease related to the conflict. Twice as many people were displaced before a peace agreement was signed in 2005 and laid the groundwork for the creation of the new nation.

With three-quarters of Sudan’s oil reserves in the newly formed country, the future looked bright for South Sudan. It was accepted as a United Nations member state, and expatriates flocked back to help build the country. But South Sudan plunged into civil war in late 2013 after President Salva Kiir accused his then-deputy, Riek Machar, of plotting a coup. Machar denied the accusation, but quickly formed a rebel army.

The UN stepped in in an effort to head off a deadly and embarrassing civil war. Under the threat of sanctions, a peace deal was signed by both sides last August – intended to stop the fighting and targeting of civilians and bring about the formation of a transitional govement. But in just the last eight months, thousands of people have since been slaughtered and driven from their homes – with the number of displaced now well over two million – into deteriorating and dangerous camps and settlements.

“These aren’t refugee camps, they are military bases where they have to be under armed protection,” Casie Copeland, an Africa-based analyst focusing on South Sudan for the Inteational Crisis Group, said. “They are afraid to leave, and are fearful for their lives every day.”

A recent UN investigation found that South Sudanese army soldiers were given permission to rape more than 1,300 women and girls "as a reward" in lieu of receiving salaries. Amnesty Inteational investigators also reported that scores of men and boys have been suffocated in a shipping container by govement forces. Countless civilians have been bued, starved, shot, speared, blown up and even consumed in ritual cannibalism.

“People have been bued and drowned, children are raped and homeless mothers are being forced to eat meat of their dead children after their husbands die,” South Sudanese joualist Joseph Afhandy – who is now living in exile in Nairobi, after enduring his own brutal torture for exposing corruption and govement abuse - told FoxNews.com.

“The issue of human rights in South Sudan has no value to reality,” he said. “This is about power and shadow-wrestling. The war machine just won’t stop.”

Both govement and rebel leaders have been accused of recruiting more than 15,000 child soldiers to take up arms in the bloody civil war. While it is nearly impossible to quantify, some analysts have likened the suffering and slaughter to what has taken place in Syria during the same period.

“It is possible,” John Prendergast, prominent human rights activist and founding director of the Enough Project, an initiative to end genocide, said of the comparisons to Syria death tolls. “But we will never know because the world does not prioritize what is happening in South Sudan sufficiently to even properly count the dead there.”

Aid groups this month issued critical waings that the country was on the brink of running out of medicine and facing “alarming” levels of hunger and food shortages. However, U.S. emergency aid assistance to South Sudan alone has already far exceeded $1 billion, and yet the famine crisis continues to worsen and policy experts have condemned the U.S. administration for giving aid money without conditions.

Waing signs of the new nation’s chronic dysfunction were there even as the U.S and the UN praised its formation as a foreign policy triumph. Despite its oil, South Sudan is one of the world's least developed and poorest nations, and ethnic rivalries, mainly between the Dinka, Kirr’s people, and the Macher’s Nuer faction go back generations.

Ted Dagne, an Ethiopian-American who was formerly a leading advocate in Washington for the country’s creation, an embedded go-between for United Nations, United States and Sudanese diplomats and initially appointed by President Kiir as his special advisor, has charged that that officials stole $4 billion in start-up funds before South Sudan was even formalized.

“Those who came to power began to loot and do very little to help their people, except themselves and their cronies,” Dagne told FoxNews.com, claiming that he and Kiir sought to stamp out corruption from the very beginning but that brought pushback and increased hostility against the president from forces loyal to the vice president.

With sudden wealth and power to fight over, the new govement wasted no time. Eric Reeves, an English literature professor at Smith College, in Massachusetts, and an expert in Sudan, noted that horrific atrocities are taking place on both sides of the spectrum and while the civil war didn’t officially break out until December 2013, things on the ground were tumultuous “from day one.” The Obama administration’s miscalculations did not help, he said.

“There have been some serious missteps by the Obama administration,” Reeves said.

The U.S. State Department has repeatedly condemned ongoing attacks in the region, insisting that the conflict be settled through diplomacy as “there is no military solution.” Obama and National Security Advisor Susan Rice – both of whom led the charge to create South Sudan – have expressed “disappointment” over the leadership that has failed to stop the hostilities.

In the most recent testimony to the House Foreign Relations Committee from the Special Envoy to Sudan and South Sudan, Ambassador Donald Booth assured members in December that “the people of South Sudan have no greater friend than the United States,” and that the peace agreement remains the best chance for a “fresh start.”

Yet critics say it’s easier to keep the issue out of the political and media spotlight than it is to address it properly, and even though talks between the two parties have resumed in Juba, hopes for stability are being met with skepticism.

“The creation of the world’s newest country was in fact a foreign policy success,” Prendergast said. “It helped avoid a retu to the North-South war within Sudan, a war that had taken two and a quarter million lives.

“What followed, however, was not sufficiently understood by inteational supporters of the new state. The foreign policy success was followed by a foreign policy failure.”

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A North Carolina couple that appeared on the HGTV series “Love It Or List It” is suing the show’s production company, claiming their on-screen renovations left their home in disarray. According to the Miami Herald, now, the couple is asking the production company and the construction company the series hired to pay up for what they claim is shoddy work.

Deena Murphy and Timothy Sullivan say they endured a breach of contract and were subject to unfair trade practices that violate North Carolina’s general contract laws, the Miami Herald reports.

They’re suing Big Coat TV, which produces “Love it or List it,” a show in which homeowners present a designer and a realtor with their less-than-perfect home. At the conclusion of each hour-long episode, the homeowners see the adjustments the designer a team of workers have done to their home and they weigh whether to keep it or sell it in favor of one of the homes the series’ realtor has found for them.

The homeowners claim the show’s changes to their home left the floors “irreparably damaged,” with holes “through which vermin could enter the house.” They also claim the series left the home with unpainted areas and windows that had been painted shut.

“We are aware of the lawsuit,” CEO and executive producer of Big Coat Productions/Big Coat TV Maria Armstrong said in a statement to the Herald. “Because this matter involves ongoing litigation, our attoeys have advised us and we feel that making a comment would be inappropriate at this time. However, we do intend to vigorously defend what we consider to be false allegations.”

The allegations detailed in the lawsuit include claims the series hired a contractor the couple had expressed conces about using, and though the couple states they gave the series a deposit of $140,000 for their home repairs, only $85,786.50 was paid to the hired contractor.

“Love It or List It” first premiered in 2008 and the show has mostly filmed in Canada. In September 2014 it began filming episodes in North Carolina. Murphy and Sullivan say they were chosen for the show in April 2015.

Click here for more on this story from the Miami Herald.

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FILE - In this Monday, Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, a grizzly bear looks up from foraging, in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska.

FILE - In this Monday, Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, a grizzly bear looks up from foraging, in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska. (AP Photo/Becky Bohrer, File)

An assistant college professor was mauled by a bear while teaching a mountaineering course in the Alaska Panhandle Monday, a university spokeswoman said.

Forest Wagner, 35, of Fairbanks, was with a group of 12 University of Alaska Southeast students on Mount Emmerich near Haines when he was attacked. A student hiked down the mountain to get cell reception and call for help.

Wagner was in stable condition at an Anchorage hospital, according to a university statement sent to KTUU. None of the students were harmed. 

According to a police report, Wagner was removed from the mountain via helicopter and put on another LifeMed helicopter before being taken him to the hospital.

According to Wagner's teaching schedule, he was part of a Mountaineering 101 class that was scheduled to come down off of the mountain by Tuesday. He has been coordinating and teaching in the outdoor studies program at the university since 2006, according to his biography. He teaches rock and ice climbing, backcountry navigation, glacier travel and mountaineering.

The bear was sighted again after the mauling and Bausler said the 12 students in the mountaineering class were taken down from the mountain and are spending the night in Haines with another professor. They are scheduled to take the ferry back to Juneau on Tuesday, she said.

It's the second mauling reported in Alaska within days.

A 77-year-old bear hunter is recovering from injuries suffered when he was mauled by a grizzly in interior Alaska.

Troopers on Monday said hunter Glenn Bohn of Wasilla was attacked by the bear near Mile 68 of the Denali Highway just after 1:30 p.m. on Friday.

The 135-mile road runs east to west and connects the Richardson and Parks highways east of Denali National Park.

Bohn's hunting partner killed the bear. Bohn was driven by snowmobile to the Denali Highway where a LifeMed Alaska helicopter flew him to an Anchorage hospital.

Wildlife troopers, employees of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and friends of Bohn removed the bear from the field Saturday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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