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Published August 25, 2022 4:04pm EDT
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A North Dakota lawyer allegedly beat his ex-wife to death in Minnesota on Tuesday as she clung to the youngest of their five children as two others screamed for help, according to the Marshall County Sheriff’s Office.
The younger boy, 2, was so traumatized he did not respond to questions from deputies after they had his father in custody and rushed his mother to the hospital.
Anders Odegaard, 31, and Carissa Odegaard, also 31, divorced last year, court records show.
In a custody dispute this week, he allegedly refused to let her take their kids to church and a fight broke out, deputies wrote in the criminal complaint after interviewing the children.
Anders Odegaard faces a charge of second-degree murder in the beating death of his ex-wife, Carissa.
(Marshall County Sheriff's Office)
Two of their boys ran outside, flagged a stranger and begged him to call 911 "because their mom was bleeding really bad and needed help," according to the complaint.
The first responding deputy found Anders Odegaard in the kitchen wearing just his underwear, with blood on his face and in his hair. Carissa Odegaard was unresponsive , lying in a doorway — with a pool of blood around her head.
The deputy asked him to explain the situation.
"I don’t feel right," Odegaard replied, according to the complaint.
Three of Carissa Odegaard's children witnessed her ex-husband brutally beat her to death, according to investigators.
(Carissa Odegaard/Facebook)
The deputy found that Carissa Odegaard was not breathing. He cuffed the ex-husband and attempted CPR on the victim. He noticed "severe head trauma" and called for an ambulance.
The 9-year-old boy told investigators he saw his father strike his mother with a knife or spatula in the head moments before he ran outside and found someone to call 911, according to authorities. He also told deputies he had seen his father hit his mother before.
Three brothers, ages 9, 8 and 2, were inside during the attack. Two other siblings were outside in their mom’s car and were spared the horror, according to the complaint.
The 8-year-old told investigators that after beating his mother to the floor, his father "was on top of her choking her."
Attorney Anders L. Odegaard on the North Dakota Courts website.
(NDCourts.gov)
"There was blood all over," he told deputies, and when he tapped his mother’s foot, she did not respond to the touch.
Court records show the Odegaards married in May 2011 and officially divorced on Sept. 16, 2021, on the grounds that their marriage was "irretrievably broken." The slaying comes just days before the ex-couple was due in court for a review hearing.
The parents were granted shared legal custody, but the court gave Carissa Odegaard physical custody. Legal custody, under Minnesota law, means the right to be involved in "major decisions determining the child’s upbringing." Physical custody means "routine daily care and control of the residence."
Anders Odegaard, in the filing finalizing their divorce last year, was described as the Mercer County State’s Attorney in North Dakota.
Marshall County Attorney Donald Aandal told Fox News Digital he did not want to go into detail about the case, citing the active investigation, but said Odegaard’s full work history was not readily clear and that he’d switched careers several times.
According to the Mercer County State's Attorney's Office, Odegaard held the job for three months, from June to September 2021, before being fired. He spent three months as a public defender in Stark County, North Dakota, and was fired again. After another brief stint at a private practice, he moved back to Minnesota.
Odegaard faces a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison if convicted on the second-degree murder charge . Prosecutors are also seeking aggravated charges because "the victim was treated with particular cruelty" and because there were multiple child witnesses.
He made his first court appearance Thursday and was ordered held on $5 million bond without conditions, $2,500,000 surety bond or $250,000 cash.
Carissa Odegaard was pronounced brain-dead at Sanford Hospital in Fargo, North Dakota, on Aug. 24. She was being kept on life support until her organs could be donated.
Michael Ruiz is a reporter for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to michael.ruiz@fox.com and on Twitter: @mikerreports
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Ivana Trump attends the 2018 Angel Ball at Cipriani Wall Street on Oct. 22, 2018 in New York City.
Donald Trump Jr., Ivana Trump, Eric Trump and Ivanka Trump attends the 9th Annual Eric Trump Foundation golf invitational at Trump National Golf Club Westchester, Sept. 21, 2015, in Briarcliff Manor City.
Ivana Trump, her son Eric Trump, her former husband businessman Donald Trump, and her daughter Ivanka Trump are pictured at the Mar-a-Lago estate, Palm Beach, Fla., in 1998.
Davidoff Studios Photography/Getty Images
The Trump family in 1986, pose for a family photo. Donald had three children with his first wife Ivana, Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric.
Norman Parkinson/Corbis via Getty Images, FILE
Ivana Trump aboard the Trump Princess super yacht, circa 1988, in New York City.
Ivana Trump, Donald Trump's first wife, in lobby of Trump Casino in Atlantic City, 1987.
Ivanka Trump, Eric Trump, and Ivana Trump attend a reception held at Ivana Trump's Residence in New York City on May 2, 2007.
M. Von Holden/WireImage for Niche Media via Getty Images, FILE
ABC's Barbara Walters interviews Ivana Trump for the TV show "20/20," Oct. 15, 1987.
Donna Svennevik/ABC News via Getty Images
Ivana Trump attends an event Kaufman Astoria Studios, Nov. 29, 2018, in New York City.
Patrick McMullan via Getty Images, FILE
Ivana Trump and her ex-husband Rossano Rubicondi perform on the Italian version of Dancing with the Stars (Ballando Con Le Stelle), May 5, 2018, in Rome, Italy.
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Ivana Trump is survived by three children: Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric Trump.
Ivana Trump, the ex-wife of former President Donald Trump , died from injuries sustained as the result of a fall, the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner said Friday.
The former president said Thursday that Ivana Trump had died at her home in New York City. She was 73.
Ivana Trump was Donald Trump's first wife. They had three children together: Donald Jr., Ivanka and Eric Trump.
"Our mother was an incredible woman -- a force in business, a world-class athlete, a radiant beauty, and caring mother and friend," the Trump family said in a statement.
"Ivana Trump was a survivor. She fled from communism and embraced this country. She taught her children about grit and toughness, compassion and determination," the family said. "She will be dearly missed by her mother, her three children and ten grandchildren."
As Eric Trump walked out of his mother's apartment building Thursday afternoon, he told reporters, "It's been a very sad day."
Manhattan paramedics, responding to a call for cardiac arrest, found a 73-year-old woman in the Upper East Side apartment where Ivana Trump lived just after 12:30 p.m. Thursday, according to the FDNY. She was pronounced dead at the scene, the NYPD said.
Ivana Trump was found unconscious and unresponsive at the bottom of a set of stairs in her apartment, according to police sources. The police were investigating whether she fell and, if so, whether the fall contributed in any way to her death, the sources said.
On Friday, the medical examiner said her cause of death was blunt impact injuries to the torso sustained as the result of a fall. The manner of death is an accident and is not suspicious, the medical examiner said.
In a statement on his platform Truth Social, the former president remembered Ivana as a "wonderful, beautiful, and amazing woman, who led a great and inspirational life."
"Her pride and joy were her three children, Donald Jr., Ivanka, and Eric," he wrote. "She was so proud of them, as we were all so proud of her."
Ivanka Trump remembered her mother as "brilliant, charming, passionate and wickedly funny."
"She lived life to the fullest -- never forgoing an opportunity to laugh and dance," Ivanka Trump said on Twitter while sharing a childhood photo of herself with her mother. "I will miss her forever and will keep her memory alive in our hearts always."
Ivana Trump, born Ivana Marie Zelníčková, grew up under communist rule in the former Czechoslovakia. She left in the 1970s and married Donald Trump in 1977.
She worked for years in Trump's business empire as a senior executive. She was appointed CEO of Trump's Castle, one of his hotel casinos in Atlantic City, and helped design interiors for the Grand Hyatt Hotel and Trump Tower. She also authored multiple bestselling books and created her own clothing line.
"No matter how busy I was, I had breakfast with my children every day. I sat with them at dinner every night and helped them with their homework (I loved algebra) before going out in a Versace gown to a rubber-chicken charity event," Ivana Trump wrote in her memoir, "Raising Trump." "The kids and I celebrated, traveled, and grieved together. Our bond was, and is, our most valuable possession."
Ivana and Trump divorced in 1992. Their marriage dissolved amid revelations that the former president was having an affair with Marla Maples, who would become his second wife.
In a 2017 interview with ABC News' Amy Robach, Ivana Trump said she had forgiven her former husband. She also described the formative years of raising her children with Donald Trump.
"He was a loving father, don't get me wrong, and he was a good provider, but he was not the father which would take a stroll and go to the Central Park or go play to baseball with them or something," she said. She added, when they "were about 18-years-old," "he could communicate with them, because he could start to talk business with them."
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Sandy Hook conspiracy theorist Alex Jones is “truly mentally ill” and a danger to society, his ex-wife insisted in a new interview.
Kelly Jones, 54, gave the damning verdict in an interview with “Inside Edition” just ahead of her ex being ordered to pay out $4.1 million for repeatedly calling the 2012 school slaughter in Newton, Connecticut, a hoax.
“Alex is truly mentally ill. To me, he should be protected from himself and others,” she said of the 48-year-old Infowars host, whom she was married to for eight years.
“He doesn’t have any moral compass. He lives in his own universe, and he is a very — in my opinion — delusional man.”
The ex, who has had her own legal battles with Jones over child custody, smiled when she discussed the bombshell moment her ex was told in court that his lawyers had accidentally forwarded his cellphone records, told they proved he’d lied on oath in court.
“I think we definitely saw him getting caught committing aggravated perjury,” Kelly Jones said with a big smile.
“I think you saw somebody really having what we call in Texas a ‘Come to Jesus moment,'” she said with a chuckle.
“I think that the cats out of the bag, and a lot of people are gonna be interested in that information,” she said of her conspiracy theorist ex’s phone records.
Kelly Jones also scornfully dismissed her ex’s claim ahead of his costly court loss that he was bankrupt.
“I know that he’s hidden money,” Kelly Jones told “Inside Edition.” “I think he’s got a lot of buckets under a lot of shelves.”
A rep for Jones didn’t immediately respond to request for comment.
Jones was ordered to pay $4.1 million to Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, whose son Jesse Lewis was among the 20 children and six educators who were slaughtered in Sandy Hook. He finally admitted in court that the mass shooting was “100% real.”
The parents had sought at least $150 million in compensation for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
In a video posted on his website Thursday night, Jones again called the reduced award a major victory, while other clips pushing his company’s goods still said he was a “victim” of “rigged” courts.
“I admitted I was wrong. I admitted it was a mistake. I admitted that I followed disinformation but not on purpose. I apologized to the families. And the jury understood that,” Jones insisted.
“What I did to those families was wrong. But I didn’t do it on purpose,” he said, promising that he was going to “work on trying to make restitution.”
It likely won’t be the last judgment against Jones over his claims that the attack was staged by crisis actors in a plot to increase gun controls.
A Connecticut judge has ruled against him in a similar lawsuit brought by other victims’ families and an FBI agent who worked on the case. He also faces another trial in Austin.
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