X-ray shows diamond earrings swallowed by theft suspect during arrest

X-ray shows diamond earrings swallowed by theft suspect during arrest

A suspected thief gulped down two pairs of diamond earrings during his arrest on the side of a Florida Panhandle highway last week, detectives say, leaving them with the unenviable task of waiting to “collect” the Tiffany & Co. jewellery worth nearly $1200.

In the squad car, a state trooper heard the suspect say, “I should have thrown them out the window,” and at the Washington County jail he asked staff, “Am I going to be charged with what is in my stomach?” according to the arrest report.

The 32-year-old man from Texas is accused of two felonies for forcibly stealing the earrings from an upscale Orlando shopping centre last Wednesday.

READ MORE: Cyclone Alfred live updates 

This image provided by the Orlando Police Department shows an x-ray of what are believed to be two diamond earrings that were stolen from a Tiffany & Co. jewelry store in central Florida and were swallowed by the suspect. ( Orlando Police Department office via AP)

An X-ray of his torso shows what the Orlando Police Department believed to be the diamond earrings — a white mass shining brightly against the grey backdrop of his digestive tract.

“These foreign objects are suspected to be the Tiffany & Co earrings taken in the robbery but will need to be collected ... after they are passed,” the department's arrest report said.

Orlando police spokeswoman Kaylee Bishop said on Wednesday she was checking with the lead detective on whether the earrings had been recovered yet.

READ MORE: Authorities warn 'idiot' beachgoers to stay away from treacherous coastline

The earrings’ status also wasn’t known to a deputy who answered the phone but wouldn’t give his name in the rural Panhandle county where the suspect was arrested near Chipley, Florida.

Handwriting on an order of commitment document filed on Monday said “outside medical,” suggesting he was at a medical facility.

During the theft, the man allegedly told Tiffany sales associates he was interested in purchasing diamond earrings and a diamond ring on behalf of an Orlando Magic basketball player.

READ MORE: What's been closed and called off as Cyclone Alfred approaches

Sales associates escorted the man to a VIP room where he could view the jewellery. A short time later, he jumped out of his chair, grabbed the jewellery and tried to force his way out of the door.

One of the sales associates was injured trying to block him but managed to knock the diamond ring, valued at $927,000, out of his hands.

Detectives obtained the license plate of the suspect’s car through shopping mall security footage and believe he was driving back to Texas.

State troopers tracked the car from tag readers on the Florida Turnpike and Interstate 10 until he was pulled over for driving without rear lights in Washington County, almost 550 kilometers away, the Orlando police report said.

The suspect was charged with first-degree felony grand theft and robbery with a mask, a third-degree felony.

Court records showed no attorney for him, and he was listed as being in police custody in Orange County Florida, which is home to Orlando, as of Wednesday morning.

Authorities warn 'idiot' beachgoers to stay away from treacherous coastline

Authorities warn 'idiot' beachgoers to stay away from treacherous coastline

Queensland Premier David Crisafulli has warned people to stay away from the beaches in the cyclone zone today, as some continue to risk their lives to witness the massive swells churned up by Tropical Cyclone Alfred.

Locals, including children, were seen playing in the sea foam and white water at Currumbin and watching the swell from rock walls across the Gold Coast and northern NSW yesterday.

The Gold Coast City Council has confirmed fines of $16,100 would apply to people who breached disaster declarations.

LIVE UPDATES: Cyclone Alfred bears towards south-east Queensland as emergency preparations get underway

Crisafulli said the "vast majority" of people did the responsible thing, aside from some "idiots".

"You're not just endangering yourself, but you've got emergency services workers who want to be going to help people and advise people and give them information," he said.

"You're putting them in harm's way, too, and they've got families as well."

He said the goal was to protect people.

"I don't want to have to bark orders at people," he said.

Gold Coast chief lifeguard Chris Maynard said there was no need for people to be at the beach or on the rock walls.

"You can be standing in what you think is a safe spot where your feet are dry and then a big surge and, as it's happened, it's knocked people off their feet and down into the sand," Maynard told the ABC yesterday.

READ MORE: How to prepare for Tropical Cyclone Alfred and what to expect

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has also urged people to avoid dangerous behaviour and take "personal responsibility".

"This isn't a time for sight-seeing, or seeing what it's like to experience these conditions first-hand," he said.

"Please stay safe. Be sensible. And keep distance from these events and the impact as it's happening," he said.

He again urged people to listen to the SES on evacuation orders.

"They have knowledge, they have expertise, they have experience," he said.

"You make their life harder, and importantly as well it means they can be distracted from assisting others if people aren't following the recommendations in a timely manner."

Monster 12m waves smash Gold Coast as cyclone delivers king tides

Monster 12m waves smash Gold Coast as cyclone delivers king tides

Tropical Cyclone Alfred has delivered towering king tides over 12m high across beaches on Queensland's south-east coast today.

With only hours now left to spare before Alfred is expected to make landfall, surf conditions across the Gold Coast have become even more dangerous as huge swells inundate shorelines.

Residents have captured terrifying footage of the treacherous waves as they smashed the coastline, with cyclonic swells seen at multiple beaches including Currumbin and Main Beach.

LIVE UPDATES: Tropical Cyclone Alfred nears Queensland coast

GOLD COAST, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 05: People watch the waves at Kirra Beach on March 05, 2025 in Gold Coast, Australia. Tropical Cyclone Alfred is expected to make landfall in southeast Queensland as a Category 2 storm, marking the first time a cyclone has directly hit the region in over 50 years. The storm is forecast to bring damaging winds, heavy rainfall, and potential storm surges, prompting authorities to urge residents to prepare for significant impacts, including flooding and power outages.

Main Beach on the Gold Coast recorded a monster swell topping 12.3 metres overnight, which Queensland Premier David Crisafulli described as the "highest ever recorded".

These 12m waves were seen three times in the past 24 hours, according to Queensland government data.

The dangerous waves have resulted in authorities asking locals to please avoid the coast until Alfred passes.

However, some keen surfers ignored the warnings and took advantage of the huge swells.

The Bureau of Meteorology issued a hazardous surf warning early today and said swell conditions are expected to be dangerous for any coastal activities.

READ MORE: Fears about what's next as Cyclone Alfred slows

King tide Cyclone Alfred Gold coastCyclone Alfred king tide floods Currumbin

This warning was issued for today and tomorrow across the K'gari Coast, Sunshine Coast and Gold Coast waters.

"We have seen the sea pick up yesterday and we see abnormally high tide which means the water levels are higher than you would normally see for the highest tide of the year and that is something we are monitoring closely," said Bureau of Meteorology's Jane Golding. 

READ MORE: Where and when Cyclone Alfred will make landfall

"The waves are powerful and we expect significant coastal erosion is well associated with this."

Surf Live Saving Queensland warned people to stay out of the water and avoid surf-exposed areas including coastal rock platforms.

A woman aged in her 70s was injured after a wave knocked her over in Currumbin yesterday around 5pm AEDT.

King tide Cyclone Alfred Gold coast

READ MORE: What's been closed and called off as Cyclone Alfred approaches

The woman was left with lacerations to her head and leg injuries after she hit her head on the rocks near Duringan Street and Pacific Parade, Queensland Ambulance said.

She was taken to Gold Coast University Hospital in a stable condition.

A City of Gold Coast Council spokesperson said everyone should stay away from the beach.

"We are urging everyone – including swimmers, board riders, boaties and fishers – to stay off the beach," the spokesperson said.

High tide is forecast for the Gold Coast at 1pm AEDT today.

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The US is killing someone by firing squad for the 1st time in 15 years

The US is killing someone by firing squad for the 1st time in 15 years

It was a punishment for mutiny in colonial times, a way to discourage desertion during the Civil War and a dose of frontier justice in the Old West. In modern times, some consider it a more humane alternative to lethal injection. The firing squad has a long and thorny history in the US.

South Carolina on Friday is scheduled to put the first person to death by firing squad in the US in 15 years.

Brad Sigmon, who was convicted of killing his ex-girlfriend's parents in 2001, chose it over the two other methods in South Carolina — the electric chair and lethal injection. The state’s Supreme Court rejected what will likely be his final appeal Wednesday.

LIVE UPDATES: Tropical Cyclone Alfred nears Queensland coast

This Feb. 6, 2014, photo (left) provided by the South Carolina Department of Corrections shows Brad Sigmon. The photo on the right shows the state's death chamber in Columbia, S.C., including the electric chair, right, and a firing squad chair, left.

Since 1608, at least 144 civilian prisoners have been executed by shooting in America, nearly all in Utah. Only three have occurred since 1977, when the use of capital punishment resumed after a 10-year pause. The first of those, Gary Gilmore, caused a media sensation in part because he waived his appeals and volunteered to be executed. When asked for his last words, Gilmore replied, “Let's do it.”

Five states — Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah — authorise the use of firing squads in certain circumstances.

Here's a look at the history behind the death penalty method.

1608-1865: Jamestown, George Washington and the Civil War

The earliest recorded execution by shooting came in Jamestown, Virginia, in 1608. Capt. George Kendall came to be suspected of mutiny — and possibly of conspiring with Spain. Centuries later, in 1996, archaeologists discovered a bullet-ridden body buried in the fort's walls that many suspect was Kendall.

In the American Revolution, public executions by firing squad were sometimes used to punish desertion.

In 1776, then-Gen. George Washington spared a Connecticut soldier, Ebenezer Leffingwell, who was sentenced to die after fighting with a superior, the Journal of the American Revolution recounted. Leffingwell had been bound, blindfolded and forced to kneel in front of a crowd when a chaplain involved in the proceedings announced he would live.

Convicted murderer Gary Mark Gilmore arrives, heavily guarded, at the 4th District Court in Provo, Utah, on Dec. 1, 1976.

Mark Smith, a history professor at the University of South Carolina, said firing squads were used — not often — by both sides during the Civil War to create a “public spectacle, a vision of terror” to keep soldiers in line.

“A man could be sitting on his own coffin at times or blindfolded, shot by six or seven men, one of whom has a blank,” the professor said. “These were gatherings designed to shock and it worked.”

At least 185 men were executed by firing squad during the Civil War, according to Christopher Q. Cutler in a Cleveland State Law Review article.

1860s to 1915: Executions in the Old West

Firing squads were primarily used only in Utah, where the lawmakers in 1851 designated three possible punishments for murder: shooting, hanging or beheading. The first firing squad execution was carried out in a courthouse enclosure, disappointing a crowd waiting outside to see it.

Only one other state since 1900 has executed someone by shooting: Nevada, which in 1913 built a contraption that fired three guns by pulling strings because it had trouble finding volunteers to serve on a firing squad.

An 1877 sentencing in Utah gave rise to the first US Supreme Court case challenging a specific execution method. Wallace Wilkerson, who shot a man to death during a heated game of cribbage, challenged authorities' plans to kill him by firing squad. The court declined his appeal, finding that unlike some other bygone methods — drawing and quartering, for example — execution by firing squad would not bring the sort of “terror, pain and disgrace” that would violate the 8th Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

As it turned out, Wilkerson's killing was botched, Cutler noted: Reportedly intoxicated and smoking a cigar, he moved slightly just before the executioners shot. Badly wounded, he fell to the ground, saying, "My God! They’ve missed it.” It took him an agonising 15 minutes to die.

Among other famous firing squad executions in Utah was the 1915 death of labor activist and songwriter Joe Hill, who until the end insisted on his innocence in the murder of a grocer and his son.

Modern times: lethal injections vs firing squads

One of the reasons firing squads did not gain much use beyond Utah was that people viewed them as barbaric, according to Deborah Denno, a criminologist at Fordham School of Law.

The bloody reality of those killings, as well as botched hangings and electrocutions, which sometimes led people to struggle and suffer, prompted states in the early 1980s to begin turning to lethal injection, a procedure viewed — at least initially — as more humane.

This file photo provided by the Nevada Department of Corrections shows the execution chamber at Ely State Prison in Ely, Nevada.

But since then, lethal injection has become the most commonly botched execution method, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. States have struggled to obtain the required drugs, and some have taken another look at firing squads — an old but largely reliable method. Lawmakers in Idaho passed a bill Wednesday that would make firing squads the primary method of execution there.

Two people now on Utah’s death row have requested firing squads.

Denno urged policymakers to reconsider firing squads in a 2016 law review article. Among those who have expressed similar views is Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who wrote in a 2017 dissent that “in addition to being near instant, death by shooting may also be comparatively painless.”

“Lethal injection has only gotten worse over the decades,” Denno told The Associated Press in an interview. “The firing squad really stands out as a relatively decent method of execution.”

In the annals of executions in the US, she said, there have been just two botched firing squad executions: Wilkerson's and that of Eliseo Mares in Utah in 1951. It's not clear what happened in Mares' case, but reports surfaced decades later that the executioners disliked him and intentionally missed his heart to prolong his suffering.

With greater oversight and expert shooters, those problems wouldn't be repeated today, Denno said.

In South Carolina, Sigmon, 67, chose to die by firing squad because the alternatives seemed worse, his attorney Gerald “Bo” King wrote in a statement.

Some aspects of his execution are modern — for example, bullets are deadlier and guns are now more precise.

But much of it would have been familiar in Utah more than a century ago: A hooded inmate with a target over his heart is bound to a chair in a death chamber and may say his final words. Nearby, volunteer officers await the order to fire.

Brisbane plane passenger charged over alleged bomb threat

Brisbane plane passenger charged over alleged bomb threat

A Brisbane man is accused of making a bomb threat while onboard a flight and travelling under a false name.

The alleged threat happened on January 14 when the 44-year-old man boarded a flight to Brisbane at Sydney Airport. 

It is alleged the man was speaking on a mobile phone before take-off and referred to a bomb. 

READ MORE: Cars caught in surging tides on Gold Coast

A plane takes off from Sydney Airport.

Australian Federal Police officers escorted the man off the plane before discovering he was travelling under a fake name. 

Following a search of the aircraft, it was determined there was no bomb threat.

The man was charged with making a threatening statement on an aircraft and travelling under a false name and is due to appear at the Downing Centre Local Court in Sydney today.

The charges come with a maximum one year imprisonment and a $16,500 fine. 

AFP Detective Superintendent Morgen Blunden said the AFP would not tolerate threats to aviation security – overt or overheard.

"Travelling on an aircraft should be a safe experience for passengers and airline crew alike," Blunden said.

"The AFP will continue to work closely with airline partners to deal with any behaviour that interferes with aviation security."

Brisbane ferries cancelled as Cyclone Alfred lurks off Queensland

Brisbane ferries cancelled as Cyclone Alfred lurks off Queensland

Brisbane's ferries have been moved to safety and their Moreton Bay islands counterparts will soon follow suit as Cyclone Alfred prepares to make an expected sharp curve towards south-east Queensland.

More than 4 million people across Queensland's population centre and into northern NSW have been warned to brace for possible daily rainfall totals of 200 to 400 millimetres, life-threatening flash flooding and wind gusts up to 120km/h.

The cyclone was predicted to make landfall between Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast on Thursday night as a category 2 storm.

CYCLONE ALFRED LIVE UPDATES: Ferries cancelled, shelves stripped bare as storm edges closer

Cyclone Alfred

Alfred was expected to remain a category 1 storm through the night before powering up to a category 2 system today and possibly fluctuating in intensity while heading west towards the coast.

Everyone in the impact zone was warned to do what they could to prepare but the focus was particularly on those living in low-lying coastal areas and the Moreton Bay islands.

All ferries were pulled from their Brisbane River routes at midnight to be floated to safe harbour and the same fate was forecast for boats linking both Stradbroke Island and the south of the bay.

The last passenger boat from Dunwich on Stradbroke Island to Cleveland east of Brisbane was expected at 10.45am today, with the vehicle ferry to also be pulled from operation on Wednesday and Thursday. The last ferry from Coochiemudlo to the mainland is expected at 7.30pm tomorrow.

Preparations for the storm were well under way yesterday as residents stripped supermarket shelves bare and joined lengthy queues for sandbags.

Some drivers reported wait times of up to two hours as long lines upset traffic and two of Brisbane City Council's five sandbag stations ran out by mid-afternoon.

READ MORE: The region in firing line of cyclone for first time in 30 years

"I thought it was early but apparently not," one waiting driver said.

"Probably not going to be any left."

The Bureau of Meteorology's latest cyclone forecast track map, issued just before 11pm yesterday (just after midnight today AEDT) had Alfred hitting the coast somewhere between Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast on Thursday night.

But it stressed there was plenty of uncertainty, with the centre possibly making landfall as far south as the Gold Coast or as far north as K'gari.

READ MORE: 'Window closing' as Cyclone Alfred approaches coast

The watch zone covered more than 500 kilometres of coastline from Sandy Cape south to Grafton in NSW.

Overnight, the cyclone was still heading south-east, spinning up sustained winds of 85km/h and gusts of 120km/h roughly 550 kilometres east of Brisbane.

It was expected to turn towards the coast some time today, likely bringing abnormally high tides, hazardous surf and potentially damaging swells.

Time to safely evacuate before Alfred hit was running out for many Queenslanders, Premier David Crisafulli warned yesterday.

"There will come a time where you either leave or stay, once that window closes, we will support people in whatever decision they make," he said.

"But it is important you make that decision fairly soon, because that window will close."

Queensland premier David Crisafulli

Crisafulli today told Queenslanders to be prepared and keep across updates as the fast-moving cyclone barrels towards the south-east.

"I am asking Queenslanders to be ready for it, and history shows it can happen," he added.

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'This one hurts': Tributes pour in for RnB star after deadly US crash

'This one hurts': Tributes pour in for RnB star after deadly US crash

Fans are remembering the voice and songs of trailblazer Angie Stone after her death at 63 in a weekend crash on an Alabama highway as she travelled from a performance.

The Grammy-nominated RnB singer was a member of the all-female hip-hop trio The Sequence and known for the hit song "Wish I Didn't Miss You." She found a sweet spot in the early 2000s as neo-soul began to dominate RnB.

In a recent Instagram post, Stone told fans she was excited about upcoming events and "getting back in the mix."

READ MORE: Oscars winners list as they are announced

"A lot of stuff is going on that I don't want to just let out of the bag just yet," she said. "But you can see that there's a big grin on my face."

The tributes to Stone on social media included one from rap artist MC Hammer, who posted a video featuring Stone's song "Brotha," writing "I can't tell you how many days this song blessed my Soul. RIP Angie Stone."

Actor and singer Jennifer Hudson expressed disbelief in a social media post.

"What a loss !!! Angie Stone was a true pioneer," Hudson wrote.

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"Another one of our great soul singers gone too soon. Prayers up for her family and loved ones!"

The Alabama Highway Patrol said the Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van that Stone was travelling in overturned on Interstate 65 early Saturday before being hit by a 2021 Freightliner Cascadia truck. Stone was pronounced dead at the scene, the highway patrol said in a statement.

The crash occurred about 8km south of the Montgomery city limits. The van's driver and seven others were taken to a hospital for treatment. Officials continue to investigate the crash.

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The singer-songwriter created hits like "No More Rain (In This Cloud)" which reached number one for 10 weeks on Billboard's Adult RnB airplay chart, "Baby" with legendary soul singer Betty Wright, another number one hit, and "Wish I Didn't Miss You" and "Brotha." Her 2001 album "Mahagony Soul" reached number 22 on the Billboard 200, while 2007's "The Art Of Love & War" peaked at number 11.

"Rest in Power, Angie Stone. A true pioneer, a soulful storyteller, and a voice that helped shape the sound of RnB," the NAACP Image Awards posted on social media.

The church-grown singer was born in Columbia, South Carolina. She helped form The Sequence, the first all-female group on the hip-hop trailblazing imprint Sugar Hill Records, becoming one of the first female groups to record a rap song.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DGq57ZmSJTV/?utm_source=ig_embed&amp

The group's "Funk You Up," has been sampled by numerous artists, including Dr. Dre. Stone later joined the trio Vertical Hold before launching her solo career.

Actor and comedian Jamie Foxx said Stone would be missed "painfully."

"I know they say that God doesn't make any mistakes… but man this one hurts…," Foxx said.

"Angie Stone was an incredible songwriter, and incredible artist and incredible person … never thought in 1 million years that this would happen…"

Stone was also remembered by the Reverend Bernice King, daughter of the late Martin Luther King Jr and CEO of the King Centre.

"So heartbreaking" King posted on social media.

"Rest well, soul sister. #AngieStone".

Stone's performance at the Mobile Area Mardi Gras Association's Grand Marshal's Ball on Friday night was "nothing short of phenomenal," according to the organisation's president, Isadore B Sims. In a statement, Sims said they would cherish memories of Stone's talent and warm spirit.

"Her talent captivated everyone in attendance, and her presence truly elevated the event," Sims said.

"Never could we have imagined that it would be the last time we would have the honour of witnessing her perform."

At the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association's men's championship basketball game in Baltimore on Saturday, where Stone was scheduled to perform during halftime, Chaplain Pastor Jerome Barber called for a moment of silence.

Zeta Phi Beta Sorority mourned the loss of their sorority sister.

"Renowned for her contributions to the RnB and neo-soul genres, Stone's music has resonated with fans for decades," the sorority said in a statement, remembering her diabetes awareness efforts and work with the sorority's Elder Care initiatives and Zetas Helping Other People Excel.

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Man found hiding in lake after alleged bus stabbing

Man found hiding in lake after alleged bus stabbing

A man has been charged after hiding in a lake following an alleged stabbing on a bus in south Melbourne overnight.

Police alleged the charged man verbally abused another man before stabbing him on a bus travelling along Canterbury Road in Middle Park at about 9pm yesterday.

The victim, 27, was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries.

READ MORE: Homes shudder, sound of 'explosion' as earthquake rocks Aussie state

Man jumps into lake after alleged bus stabbing

The offender then fled the scene on foot before he was found in a nearby lake and refused to get out, police say.

Water police attended the scene to coax the man out of the lake.

READ MORE: Pope Francis is stable, in 'good humour' after alarming coughing fit

Man jumps into lake after alleged bus stabbing

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The Prahran man, 32, was then arrested and treated by paramedics.

He was charged with intentionally causing injury and was remanded to appear before Melbourne Magistrates Court today.

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'Huge crash': Passenger describes cruise ship incident which injured 16

'Huge crash': Passenger describes cruise ship incident which injured 16

A passenger on board a cruise ship that injured 16 people when it suddenly tilted said he's never experienced anything like it.

Martin Wise was on board the Crown Princess near Milford Sound when it hit strong winds earlier this week.

At the time, Wise was in the sixth floor dining room.

READ MORE: Homes shudder, sound of 'explosion' as earthquake rocks Aussie state

Passengers injured after cruise ship hits rough waters

"I felt the boat starting to slant and tip. Then it lent over quite a bit and really started moving along at a high speed and we could see the sea looking very high out of the restaurant windows," he told Stuff.

Then cups, glasses and plates "went flying" around the room, he said.

"And crashing could be heard around the area and a huge crash from the kitchen."

Wise estimated the incident lasted 40 seconds and said the captain told them the boat had been hit by a 75 knot wind, which briefly increased the vessels speed, and tilted the boat by 14 degrees.

READ MORE: Pope Francis is stable, in 'good humour' after alarming coughing fit

"On a frightening scale, I'd put it at 8.5 to 10," Wise said.

"This is our seventh Princess cruise and nothing's ever happened like this before."

Passengers injured after cruise ship hits rough waters

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Wise said parts of a restaurant's carpet on a higher deck was still drying out days later.

"It's not put us off cruises," he said.

According to industry website Cruise Passenger, the ship was on a 14 day round trip from Sydney to New Zealand and was cruising through Fiordland when harsh weather conditions caused the ship to rock and tilt.

Thirteen passengers and three crew members reportedly suffered minor injuries.

The ship, which has capacity for 3090 guests, did not suffer any structural damage and continued on as scheduled.

Cruise Ship injuries

In a statement to website Cruise Hive, Princess Cruises said: "On February 25, while in Fiordland, New Zealand, Crown Princess encountered strong winds during a course change, causing the ship to briefly tilt beyond its usual movement before stabilising.

"Our crew responded quickly to correct the situation, and at no point was the safety of the ship compromised.

"Additionally, a small amount of water from the Lido Deck pool briefly entered the Horizons food court, but the area was quickly cleaned and reopened. There was no structural damage to the ship."

This article has been reproduced with permission from Stuff.co.nz.

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Pope Francis remains in 'good humour' after alarming coughing fit

Pope Francis remains in 'good humour' after alarming coughing fit

Pope Francis is in a stable condition and remains in "good humour" following a distressing coughing fit while reading newspapers, the Vatican said in an update.

The Vatican said in a statement released overnight that the 88-year-old pope no longer has a fever as he recovers from a bout of double pneumonia.

"He is alternating between non-invasive mechanical ventilation and long periods of supplemental high-flow oxygenation, maintaining a good response to gas exchange," the statement read.

READ MORE: Homes shudder, sound of 'explosion' as earthquake rocks Aussie state

"The Holy Father does not have a fever and shows no leukocytosis [high white blood cell count]."

It comes as the pope suffered an alarming setback while reading newspapers yesterday.

Doctors had to put him on noninvasive mechanical ventilation following a coughing fit in which he inhaled vomit that needed to then be extracted.

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The Vatican said he has not experienced any further coughing fit episodes.

The episode was different from the prolonged respiratory crisis on February 22, that was said to have caused Francis discomfort.

"His haemodynamic parameters have always remained stable; he has continued eat on his own and has regularly undergone respiratory physiotherapy, in which he cooperates actively," the statement from the Vatican continued.

READ MORE: Angie Stone, Grammy-nominated R&B artist, dead at 63 after car crash

"He has not experienced any further episodes of bronchospasm.

"The Holy Father remains alert and oriented. He received the Eucharist on Saturday afternoon, then devoted himself to prayer.

"The prognosis remains guarded."

Despite yesterday's setback, Vatican officials said the pope "remains in good humour".

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