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Parents Charged With Severely Beating Teenage Sons In New York Church

Also: Gun shop owes wounded cops $6 million and Uber exposed hundreds of driver's information.

Their Oldest Son Died In The Incident

Police arrested Bruce Leonard, 65, and his wife Deborah Leonard, 59, on Tuesday, charging them with first-degree manslaughter in th death of their 19-year-old son, Lucas. The incident took place inside the World of Life Christian Church in New Hartford, New York, where Lucas Leonard's 17-year-old brother was also severely beaten and taken to a local hospital in serous condition; four other church members were also charged in the assault. In all, six church members were arraigned on Tuesday, where it was revealed that both teens suffered injuries to their abdomens, genitals, back and thighs. More arrests are expected as the investigation continues and no details of any motive have been revealed so far.

Gun Shop Pays Injured Officers $6 Million

Milwaukee's Badger Guns was found liable by a jury on Tuesday in a lawsuit filed by two police officers who were gravely injured by a weapon purchased at the store. In the first-of-its-kind $6 million judgement jurors found that Badger broke four laws when an employee sold a gun that was used to shoot the two officers in the head. Jurors said they were swayed by testimony that store owners didn't train employees properly, didn't have regular procedures for sales, hadn't read federal regulations concerning firearms sales and did not know all that was required on federal gun-sales forms. The officers claimed that the shop's workers were negligent because they sold a gun to a man who was obviously buying it for 18-year-old Julius Burton, who is observed on surveillance video pointing to the weapon he was too young to purchase on his own.

Typo-Filled Anti-Hillary Attack Ad Airs During Debate

A chilling attack ad targeting presidential candidate Hillary Clinton aired during Tuesday night's first Democratic debate. The clip, which focused on the controversy over the attack in Benghazi that led to the death of Ambassador Christopher Stevens noted that the incident took place in Lybia. That was one of two noticeable typos. You see, it actually took place in Libya, which is the correct spelling of the country's name. The ad also referred to the U.S (commonly known as the U.S.) and called the conservative news/opinion site Breitbart a news outlet, which is only half true.

Reason #712 To Think Twice About Uber: Shortly after ride-share service Uber released a new app on Tuesday called "Uber Partner" that was "designed to give drivers more information so Uber works better for them," it also accidentally gave just about anyone access to the highly personal information for more than 1,000 Uber drivers in the Washington And Virginia area, including clear views of tax forms, drivers' licenses and other sensitive docs with social security numbers. Uber told Gawker that the latest security breach of its system was quickly discovered and fixed, but it's unknown how long the sensitive material was out there.

Quick Take: Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel has blamed the upsurge in violence in his city on officers second-guessing themselves and turning "fetal" out of concern that they might get in trouble for their arrests following incidents in Ferguson and Baltimore. Citing the "YouTube effect," Emanuel said officers are acting less aggressively. September was Chicago's deadliest since 2002, with 60 homicides, with homicides and shooting incidents up 21 percent over the same period last year.

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