Hencely v. Fluor Corp — Are Military Contractors Shielded from War-Zone Liability?
Release Date: 11/10/2025
Crime Talk with Scott Reisch
New revelations about the deeply troubled past of Ashlee Buzzard are raising even more questions as the search for her missing 9-year-old daughter, Melodee, reaches its fifth week. From childhood abuse to family estrangement, mental health struggles, and a disturbing cross-country trip—tonight we break down what investigators are uncovering and what it could mean for the case. If you have information, contact Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s detectives at 805-934-6117. 🆕🆕🆕 Crime Talk Store: #MelodeeBuzzard #TrueCrime #MissingChildren #CrimeTalk #AshleeBuzzard #BreakingNews
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New developments in the disappearance of 9-year-old Melodee Buzzard have uncovered surveillance footage, witness accounts, and suspicious moves made by her mother, Ashlee Buzzard — including wigs, cash-only travel, and swapped license plates. Investigators believe the key moment happened in Utah. We break down every new detail so you know exactly where the case stands. 🆕🆕🆕 Crime Talk Store: #MelodeeBuzzard #TrueCrimeNews #MissingChildren #CrimeTalk #AshleeBuzzard #BreakingCaseUpdate
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Three years after the brutal murders of four University of Idaho students, we revisit the night that changed everything — and the investigation that unraveled suspected killer Bryan Kohberger’s carefully crafted image. From the knife sheath DNA to the plea deal that ended the case, Scott breaks down what truly happened, what most people STILL don’t know, and how the community remembers the victims today. A solemn look back at one of the most haunting cases in recent American true crime history. 🆕🆕🆕 Crime Talk Store: #CrimeTalk, #BryanKohberger, #IdahoMurders, #TrueCrime,...
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Tonight on Crime Talk, we break down two disturbing cases involving two different mothers—one tied to the disappearance of Melodee Buzzard, and another caught on video threatening her own children. Plus: a highway jump gone wrong, drug-induced paranoia, child abuse charges, bizarre Florida behavior, and more stories you won’t believe actually happened. Buckle up. It’s one of those shows. 🆕🆕🆕 Crime Talk Store: #CrimeTalk, #MelodeeBuzzard, #AshleeBuzzard, #TrueCrime, #ScottReisch, #CrimeNews
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The Crime Talk team dives deep into the shocking Celeste Rivas case — the 14-year-old girl found dead in singer D4vd’s Tesla. LAPD now says no homicide occurred, meaning no murder charges will be filed. Seriously… are you kidding me?! Scott breaks down the timeline, the evidence, and the outrage surrounding a case that’s left the public demanding answers. Crime Talk Store: #CrimeTalk #CelesteRivas #D4vd #TrueCrime #ScottReisch #JusticeForCeleste
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Full audio of the Supreme Court oral argument in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump (No. 24-1287), argued November 5, 2025. This high-stakes case tests whether the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) authorizes President Trump’s use of national emergency declarations to impose broad import tariffs—and, if so, whether that sweeping authority is an unconstitutional delegation of Congress’s taxing power. The Justices press both sides on statutory text, separation of powers, and the limits of executive economic “emergency” authority in a case with massive implications for...
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Full audio of the Supreme Court oral argument in Hain Celestial Group v. Palmquist (No. 24-724), argued November 4, 2025. In this case, the Justices examine whether a federal appellate court must vacate a district court’s final judgment when it later concludes the case was improperly removed because a non-diverse defendant was wrongly dismissed at the outset—pitting strict jurisdictional rules against the need for finality in complex product-liability litigation. Hear counsel and the Court test the limits of Caterpillar v. Lewis, diversity jurisdiction, and what happens when federal courts...
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Full audio of the Supreme Court oral argument in Coney Island Auto Parts, Inc. v. Burton (No. 24-808), argued November 4, 2025. In this case, the Justices examine whether Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(c)(1)’s “reasonable time” limit can bar a motion to set aside a default judgment that is void for lack of personal jurisdiction—or whether a void judgment can be challenged at any time. The argument highlights a deep circuit split, the limits of procedural finality, and how far courts must go to protect due process in long-dormant cases. Check out the official Crime Talk merch at the...
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Full audio of the Supreme Court oral argument in Hencely v. Fluor Corp (No. 24-924), argued November 3, 2025. In this case, an Army specialist injured in a Bagram Airfield bombing sues defense contractor Fluor, and the Justices probe whether “uniquely federal interests” and the FTCA’s combatant activities exception can preempt state tort claims against military contractors—even when the contractor allegedly breached its contract and violated military orders. The argument goes to the core of contractor immunity, battlefield accountability, and who pays the price when private...
info_outlineFull audio of the Supreme Court oral argument in Hencely v. Fluor Corp (No. 24-924), argued November 3, 2025. In this case, an Army specialist injured in a Bagram Airfield bombing sues defense contractor Fluor, and the Justices probe whether “uniquely federal interests” and the FTCA’s combatant activities exception can preempt state tort claims against military contractors—even when the contractor allegedly breached its contract and violated military orders. The argument goes to the core of contractor immunity, battlefield accountability, and who pays the price when private companies help wage war.
Check out the official Crime Talk merch at the Crime Talk Store: scottreisch.com/crime-talk-store.
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