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GTSB Announces Holiday Traffic Enforcement Campaign

DES MOINES — The holiday season is a time for togetherness and we at the Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau (GTSB), want everyone to get home to their loved ones safely. While most Iowans never drive after drinking, impaired driving is a leading cause of deadly crashes with an average of 37% of fatality crashes being impaired-related.  

To keep everyone safe on our roads, state and local law enforcement will be conducting extra patrols supporting the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA) high-visibility enforcement campaign through January 1, 2026, to spread the message about the dangers of impaired driving. 

“Drunk driving isn’t just dangerous, it’s illegal,” says GTSB Bureau Chief Brett Tjepkes. “We need every driver to commit to keeping the roads free of drunk drivers so that everyone can have a safe holiday season.” 

There are many options to get home safely, such as designating a sober driver or calling a taxi or rideshare. If available, use your community’s sober ride program. Remember: a few dollars spent on a ride is a lot cheaper than an OWI conviction. Plan ahead so you don’t ruin the celebrations, and if you see an impaired driver on the road, do not hesitate to contact law enforcement. 

Through its Decide to Ride program, Doll Distributing is offering a $10 Uber voucher to encourage Iowans to plan ahead and make safe choices. Please share these vouchers with your community to encourage others to make the safe decision this holiday season.

Ottumwa Man Arrested on Warrant for Probation Violation, Possession of Controlled Substances

OTTUMWA – An Ottumwa man was arrested over the weekend on a warrant for allegedly violating his probation while being in possession of illegal drugs.

According to court records, 40-year-old Johnny Lee Walker was originally arrested earlier this year, on March 6. On that date, the Ottumwa Police Department conducted a traffic stop on West Mary Street. Walker was a passenger in the vehicle that was stopped, and he allegedly admitted to officers that he was in possession of a controlled substance when they were about to search the vehicle via a probable search warrant.

Court documents state that after Walker admitted to possessing a controlled substance, he took out a bag of marijuana from his pocket. Police also say they discovered a bag of a crystalline substance that later tested positive for methamphetamine. For this incident, Walker was arrested and later released on probation.

Online court records show that Walker has multiple prior drug convictions on his record, most recently pleading guilty to Controlled Substance Violation and Contempt related to violation of probation for an incident in March 2024. 

A warrant was issued for Walker to be arrested again on Friday, December 12. He was taken into custody the following day and now faces two new charges, including Possession of a Controlled Substance – 3rd or Subsequent Offense (class D felony), and Violation of Probation.

AAA: Year-End Holiday Travel Expected to Set New Record

MINNEAPOLIS — AAA projects 122.4 million Americans will travel at least 50 miles from home over the 13-day year-end holiday period beginning December 20 and ending January 1. This year’s forecast is a 2.2% increase over 2024, surpassing last year’s record of 119.7 million travelers. View the full report.

“People are eager to travel this holiday season,” said Debbie Haas, Vice President of Travel for AAA – The Auto Club Group. “That’s leading to record numbers on the roads and in the skies. Our advice is to plan ahead. Book early, allow extra time to reach your destination, and think about travel insurance if you’re flying during winter weather. It’s the best way to protect both your trip and your peace of mind.”

National Holiday Travelers

  • Total Travelers: 122.4 million (+2% / 2.7 million more than last year)
  • Auto Travelers: 109.5 million (+2% / 2.1 million more than last year)
  • Air Travelers: 8 million (+2% / 181,000 more than last year)
  • Other Travelers (bus, train, cruise): 4.9 million (+9% / 407,000 more than last year)

West North Central* Holiday Travelers

*The West North Central (WNC) Region covers Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska

  • Total Travelers: 9.3 million (+1.02% / 94,000 more than last year)
  • Auto Travelers: 8.5 million (+.4% / 36,000 more than last year)
  • Air Travelers: 397,000 (+3.9% / 15,000 more than last year)
  • Other Travelers: 384,000 (+9.4% / 33,000 more than last year)

Holiday Travel Costs

According to AAA booking data:

  • Domestic flights: Average $890 (up 7%)
  • International flights: Average $1,400 (down 14%)
  • Domestic hotel stays: Average $750 (up 13%)
  • Rental cars: Average $635 (up 1%)

Year-End Travelers by Mode of Transportation

By Car: AAA projects 109.5 million Americans will travel by car for their year-end trips, an increase of 2% compared to last year. Driving is the overwhelming favorite among all modes of transportation because of its convenience and low cost. This year, 89% of holiday travelers will take road trips.

  • Gas prices are lower than last year, with the national average dipping below $3 per gallon for the first time in four years. Minnesota’s current average is $2.77 per gallon, sitting lower than last year at $2.82 per gallon.
  • Safety reminders: December is National Impaired Driving Prevention Month. Designate a sober driver and avoid distractions.
  • Vehicle prep: Check tires, battery, and fluids before hitting the road. AAA responded to more than 860,000 emergency roadside service calls during last year’s holiday.
  • Slow Down, Move Over: Protect roadside workers and stranded motorists.

Car rentals: AAA’s car rental partner Hertz says Saturday, December 20 is expected to be the busiest pick-up day. The top 5 markets with the highest demand are Orlando, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Miami, and Phoenix. Small SUVs make up the most popular car rental class over the year-end holidays.

Air Travel Soars Above 8 million

AAA projects a record 8.03 million travelers, a 2.3% increase compared to last year. This will be the first time on record that the number of domestic air travelers over the year-end holiday period exceeds 8 million.

Domestic flights are 7% more expensive this year. According to AAA data, which is based on what travelers paid when they booked their holiday trips, the average ticket costs nearly $900.

The days leading up to Christmas Day are the most expensive, while flying on the holiday itself is cheaper. New Year’s flights are also pricey, with many people returning home on New Year’s Day or even squeezing one extra weekend out of the holiday season and coming back on Sunday, January 4.

Travel insurance is essential, especially when winter weather and heavy travel demand increases the risk of delays and cancellations. It helps offset unexpected costs associated with rebooking fees, lost luggage, and trip interruptions. For air travelers, this protection is especially valuable during peak holiday periods when flights are full and alternative options are limited.

Tips for Air Travelers

  • Check flight status before leaving home and sign up for airline alerts.
  • Arrive early: Allow at least two hours for domestic flights and three for international.
  • Pack smart: Keep medications, chargers, and a change of clothes in your carry-on.
  • Know your rights: Understand airline policies on rebooking and compensation.

Best/Worst Times to Drive and Peak Congestion by Metro

Christmas week is forecast to be busier on the roads than New Year’s week, but both weeks will see days of increased traffic, according to INRIX, a provider of transportation data and insights.

  • Interstates will be more congested the weekend before Christmas, as travelers hit the road on Saturday and Sunday ahead of the holiday.
  • Friday, December 26 is also expected to be busy as travelers make moves post-Christmas Day.
  • Because the year-end holiday travel period spans a longer time frame, travelers have more options for departures and returns.
  • The holidays themselves – Christmas and New Year’s Day – typically have lighter traffic, but severe weather could create unexpected delays.

Iowa homes on market an average of 26 days in November

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

The Iowa Association of Realtors says homes are staying on the market longer and sales prices remain ahead of last year.

The president of the Iowa Association of Realtors says data from November shows the median sales price of Iowa homes “seems to have slowed down a bit” and Iowa has a “strong inventory of homes on the market.: Homes that were sold in November had been on the market an average of 26 days. That’s over 18% longer than in October. The median sales price for an Iowa home was nearly $245,000 in November. That’s slightly less than October, but nearly 7% above what Iowa homes were selling for in November of last year.

Just over 2500 Iowa homes were sold last month. The association’s report shows a surge of new listings in November compared to October, however in the year-to-year comparison, there were 57 more Iowa homes on the market in November compared to November of last year.

Pella School District Accepts Invitation to Raccoon River Conference

By Sam Parsons

The Pella Community School Board held a regular meeting last night and unanimously approved an invitation to the Raccoon River Conference. The decision means the district will be migrating from the Little Hawkeye Conference to the new conference in the 2027-28 school year. Little Hawkeye Conference bylaws stipulate that schools must provide two years of notice when they wish to leave the conference.

Prior to the vote, the board received a presentation that showed logistical differences between the two conferences, including travel distances to other member schools. The presentation showed that the total combined distance between Pella and the other member schools was 528 miles for the Raccoon River Conference, compared to 341 miles for the Little Hawkeye Conference; however, school officials said that being in the Raccoon River Conference would provide the school with more flexibility in their non-conference scheduling, so that overall travel distance per-season would not significantly change.

The presentation also included a section with feedback from coaches within the Pella school district. Feedback was solicited from 16 different head coaches: 10 of them said they favored being in the Raccoon River Conference, citing similar school sizes and stability, while the remaining 6 head coaches said they were indifferent to the potential change. None of the 16 coaches said that they explicitly favored remaining in the Little Hawkeye Conference.

The Little Hawkeye Conference is in the midst of several other changes, with more potentially on the way. The conference has already approved two new members for the 2026-27 school year (Ames and Des Moines Christian) and also invited 5 other schools to join, including Knoxville, PCM, Urbandale, Nevada, and Van Meter, though they all declined the offer. Additionally, the Oskaloosa Community School District issued a statement in September that they would be “weighing options” regarding a potential conference change.

The next regular meeting for the Pella Community School Board will be held on January 12.

Rob Reiner, son of a comedy giant who became one in turn, dies at 78

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rob Reiner, the son of a comedy giant who became one himself as one of the preeminent filmmakers of his generation with movies such as “The Princess Bride,” “When Harry Met Sally …” and “This Is Spinal Tap,” has died. He was 78.

Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer, were found dead Sunday at their home in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. A law enforcement official briefed on the investigation confirmed their identities but could not publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Authorities were investigating an “apparent homicide,” said Capt. Mike Bland with the Los Angeles Police Department. The Los Angeles Fire Department said it responded to a medical aid request shortly after 3:30 p.m.

Reiner grew up thinking his father, Carl Reiner, didn’t understand him or find him funny. But the younger Reiner would in many ways follow in his father’s footsteps, working both in front and behind the camera, in comedies that stretched from broad sketch work to accomplished dramedies.

“My father thought, ‘Oh, my God, this poor kid is worried about being in the shadow of a famous father,’” Reiner said, recalling the temptation to change his name to “60 Minutes” in October. “And he says, ‘What do you want to change your name to?’ And I said, ‘Carl.’ I just wanted to be like him.”

After starting out as a writer for “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour,” Reiner’s breakthrough came when he was, at age 23, cast in Norman Lear’s “All in the Family” as Archie Bunker’s liberal son-in-law, Michael “Meathead” Stivic. But by the 1980s, Reiner began as a feature film director, churning out some of the most beloved films of that, or any, era. His first film, the largely improvised 1984 cult classic “This Is Spinal Tap,” remains the quintessential mockumentary.

After the 1985 John Cusack summer comedy, “The Sure Thing,” Reiner made “Stand By Me” (1986), “The Princess Bride” (1987) and “When Harry Met Sally …” (1989), a four-year stretch that resulted in a trio of American classics, all of them among the most often quoted movies of the 20th century.

A legacy on and off screen

For the next four decades, Reiner, a warm and gregarious presence on screen and an outspoken liberal advocate off it, remained a constant fixture in Hollywood. The production company he co-founded, Castle Rock Entertainment, launched an enviable string of hits, including “Seinfeld” and “The Shawshank Redemption.” By the turn of the century, its success rate had fallen considerably, but Reiner revived it earlier this decade. This fall, Reiner and Castle Rock released the long-in-coming sequel “Spinal Tap II: The End Continues.”

All the while, Reiner was one of the film industry’s most passionate Democrat activists, regularly hosting fundraisers and campaigning for liberal issues. He was co-founder of the American Foundation for Equal Rights, which challenged in court California’s ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8. He also chaired the campaign for Prop 10, a California initiative to fund early childhood development services with a tax on tobacco products. Reiner was also a critic of President Donald Trump.

That ran in the family, too. Reiner’s father opposed the Communist hunt of McCarthyism in the 1950s and his mother, Estelle Reiner, a singer and actor, protested the Vietnam War.

“If you’re a nepo baby, doors will open,” Reiner told the Guardian in 2024. “But you have to deliver. If you don’t deliver, the door will close just as fast as it opened.”

‘All in the Family’ to ‘Stand By Me’

Robert Reiner was born in the Bronx on March 6, 1947. As a young man, he quickly set out to follow his father into entertainment. He studied at the University of California, Los Angeles film school and, in the 1960s, began appearing in small parts in various television shows.

But when Lear saw Reiner as a key cast member in “All in the Family,” it came as a surprise to the elder Reiner.

“Norman says to my dad, ‘You know, this kid is really funny.’ And I think my dad said, ‘What? That kid? That kid? He’s sullen. He sits quiet. He doesn’t, you know, he’s not funny.’ He didn’t think I was anyway,” Reiner told “60 Minutes.”

On “All in the Family,” Reiner served as a pivotal foil to Carroll O’Connor’s bigoted, conservative Archie Bunker. Reiner was five times nominated for an Emmy for his performance on the show, winning in 1974 and 1978. In Lear, Reiner also found a mentor. He called him “a second father.”

“It wasn’t just that he hired me for ‘All in the Family,’” Reiner told “American Masters” in 2005. “It was that I saw, in how he conducted his life, that there was room to be an activist as well. That you could use your celebrity, your good fortune, to help make some change.”

Lear also helped launch Reiner as a filmmaker. He put $7.5 million of his own money to help finance “Stand By Me,” Reiner’s adaptation of the Stephen King novella “The Body.” The movie, about four boys who go looking for the dead body of a missing boy, became a coming-of-age classic, made breakthroughs of its young cast (particularly River Phoenix) and even earned the praise of King.

With his stock rising, Reiner devoted himself to adapting William Goldman’s 1973’s “The Princess Bride,” a book Reiner had loved since his father gave him a copy as a gift. Everyone from François Truffaut to Robert Redford had considered adapting Goldman’s book, but it ultimately fell to Reiner (from Goldman’s own script) to capture the unique comic tone of “The Princess Bride.” But only once he had Goldman’s blessing.

“At the door he greeted me and he said, ‘This is my baby. I want this on my tombstone. This is my favorite thing I’ve ever written in my life. What are you going to do with it?’” Reiner recalled in a Television Academy interview. “And we sat down with him and started going through what I thought should be done with the film.”

Though only a modest success in theaters, the movie — starring Cary Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, Wallace Shawn, André the Giant and Robin Wright — would grow in stature over the years, leading to countless impressions of Inigo Montoya’s vow of revenge and the risky nature of land wars in Asia.

‘When Harry Met Sally …”

Reiner was married to Penny Marshall, the actor and filmmaker, for 10 years beginning in 1971. Like Reiner, Marshall experienced sitcom fame, with “Laverne & Shirley,” but found a more lasting legacy behind the camera.

After their divorce, Reiner, at a lunch with Nora Ephron, suggested a comedy about dating. In writing what became “When Harry Met Sally …” Ephron and Reiner charted a relationship between a man and a woman (played in the film by Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan) over the course of 12 years.

Along the way, the movie’s ending changed, as did some of the film’s indelible moments. The famous line, “I’ll have what she’s having,” said after witnessing Ryan’s fake orgasm at Katz’s Delicatessen, was a suggestion by Crystal — delivered by none other than Reiner’s mother, Estelle.

The movie’s happy ending also had some real-life basis. Reiner met Singer, a photographer, on the set of “When Harry Met Sally …” In 1989, they were wed. They had three children together: Nick, Jake and Romy.

Reiner’s subsequent films included another King adaptation, “Misery” (1990) and a pair of Aaron Sorkin-penned dramas: the military courtroom tale “A Few Good Men” (1992) and 1995’s “The American President.”

By the late ’90s, Reiner’s films (1996’s “Ghosts of Mississippi,” 2007’s “The Bucket List”) no longer had the same success rate. But he remained a frequent actor, often memorably enlivening films like “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993) and “The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013). In 2023, he directed the documentary “Albert Brooks: Defending My Life.”

In an interview earlier this year with Seth Rogen, Reiner suggested everything in his career boiled down to one thing.

“All I’ve ever done is say, ‘Is this something that is an extension of me?’ For ‘Stand by Me,’ I didn’t know if it was going to be successful or not. All I thought was, ‘I like this because I know what it feels like.’”

William Penn Pulls Away From Baker for 104–82 Conference Win

OSKALOOSA — The William Penn men’s basketball team delivered a wire-to-wire performance Saturday, rolling past Baker 104–82 in a Heart of America Athletic Conference matchup.

The Statesmen (9–3, 4–2 Heart) weathered an early back-and-forth stretch with the Wildcats (5–8, 3–3 Heart), edging ahead 14–13 before flipping the game with a decisive run. WPU rattled off eight unanswered points and later closed the half on a 20–5 surge to build a commanding 42–26 advantage. While the teams continued to trade baskets down the stretch of the opening period, the Statesmen carried a 54–38 lead into halftime.

William Penn’s shooting set the tone early, as the Navy and Gold connected on 58.1% of their field-goal attempts and 42.9% from three-point range in the first half. Baker was held to 36.4% shooting overall and 37.5% from deep. Foday Sheriff (Jr., Upper Darby, Pa., Business Management) led WPU in the opening half with 14 points.

Baker made a push in the opening five minutes of the second half, but William Penn answered behind a 14-point performance from Donovan Rodriguez during that stretch to keep control of the game. At the 16:19 mark, the Statesmen began a 14–6 scoring run to extend the lead to 78–54. The teams traded possessions over the next several minutes before William Penn added a 16–9 stretch to maintain separation. Baker was unable to mount a sustained response as the Statesmen closed out the contest with a 104–82 victory.

William Penn finished the game shooting 49.3% from the field and 40.6% from beyond the arc, compared to Baker’s 41.1% overall shooting and 34.5% from three. Rodriguez poured in 17 second-half points to finish with a game-high 25.

Rodriguez paced the Statesmen with 25 points, leading a balanced scoring effort. Malik Larane (Jr., Palmdale, Calif., Sports Management) added 15, while Sheriff and Daivion Boleware (Jr., Jackson, Mich., Psychology) scored 14 apiece. Sheriff also pulled down nine rebounds. Chase Page (Sr., Melbourne, Australia, Business Management) and Javion Belle-McCrary (Sr., Reform, Ala., Sports Management) each chipped in 11 points, with Page collecting four steals and Belle-McCrary posting three blocks.

The Statesmen held a narrow 45–42 edge on the glass and converted second chances efficiently, owning a 22–14 advantage in second-chance points despite Baker holding a slight 17–16 edge in offensive rebounds.

WPU also capitalized on turnovers, scoring 23 points off 17 Wildcat miscues, while Baker managed 16 points off 15 Statesmen turnovers.

William Penn’s bench played a key role as well, outscoring Baker’s reserves 44–32.

“We had a good week of practice, and it showed today,” said Head Coach John Henry.”The players and coaching staff did a great job of preparing and handling the distraction of finals week.”

Powerball® Jackpot Surges to $1.1 Billion for Monday’s Drawing

CLIVE, Iowa — Despite frigid temperatures across Iowa, the Powerball® jackpot is heating up.

After rolling again Saturday, the prize has now swelled to an estimated $1.1 billion annuity, $503.4 million cash option for the next drawing on Monday. This is the sixth-largest jackpot in the game’s history.

“It’s fun to see the excitement a jackpot like this brings,” said Iowa Lottery CEO Matt Strawn, who also serves as chair of the Powerball Product Group. “We ask players to have fun and enjoy the moment, but play responsibly. It only takes one $2 ticket to win.”

One Iowa Ticket Came SO CLOSE

Iowa Lottery players won 15,382 prizes totaling $118,367 in Saturday’s Powerball drawing, including one ticket that was just one number away from winning the big jackpot.

The ticket matched four of the first five numbers and the Powerball to win a $50,000 prize. It was purchased at Kwik Star, 505 Fair Meadow Drive in Webster City. That prize can be claimed at any Iowa Lottery office.

Saturday’s winning numbers were: 1-28-31-57-58 and Powerball 16. The Power Play® multiplier was 2.

There are nine prize levels in Powerball ranging from $4 up to the jackpot, so the Iowa Lottery reminds its players to be sure to check their tickets for all the prizes they may have won.

Iowa Sales For Saturday’s Drawing

Iowa Lottery players bought nearly $1.43 million in Powerball tickets for Saturday’s drawing, including more than $618,000 in tickets on Saturday alone. But the average Powerball purchase in Iowa for Saturday’s drawing remained about $6, or about three plays per ticket. Lottery officials were pleased that Iowans had fun playing and didn’t go overboard.

How Has The Jackpot Grown So Large?

 Time and sales are the reasons the jackpot has grown so large.

The Powerball jackpot now has been growing for more than three months, last won in the drawing on Sept. 6. That $1.787 billion jackpot was won with tickets purchased in Missouri and Texas.

The jackpot increases from drawing to drawing when there is no grand-prize winner, and sales generally increase as the jackpot climbs higher. And higher sales, in turn, push the jackpot even higher.

Easy Picks vs. Your Own Numbers

In games like Powerball, the vast majority of tickets are “easy-pick” plays, meaning the lottery terminal randomly assigns the numbers printed on the ticket. For Saturday’s drawing, more than 91 percent of the plays purchased in Iowa were easy picks.

Players also have the option to choose their own numbers: five numbers from a pool of 69 for the white balls and one number from a separate pool of 26 for the red Powerball.

Because such a large percentage of tickets are purchased as easy picks, most winners will come from easy-pick tickets. That doesn’t mean they’re luckier, it simply reflects that there are far more of them in play.

Please Play Responsibly

The Iowa Lottery reminds players to enjoy the moment, but remember that you are gambling when you buy tickets. There is no guarantee that you’ll win. Playing the lottery is something that should be done just for fun.

Whether you play the lottery or not, we want everyone to have an accurate understanding of how the lottery works. Learn more about healthy play on the Know Before You Play section of the Iowa Lottery website.

Two Structure Fires Fought in Knoxville Yesterday

KNOXVILLE – Two separate structure fires broke out in the city of Knoxville yesterday, one of which claimed the lives of multiple pets and severely injured one person.

The first fire occurred in the early morning hours on Sunday. The Knoxville Fire Department was dispatched to a residence in the 1400 block of E Robinson St at around 12:46am. The fire reportedly broke out in the basement of the residence, and when firefighters arrived, they found heavy smoke throughout the structure.

Crews entered the home and did not find anyone inside. No injuries were reported to firefighters or civilians as the fire was neutralized and salvage operations were conducted. Officials say the fire was caused by faulty wiring that had recently been installed during a remodel, and that the fire caused an estimated $25,000 in damages.

The second fire occurred on Sunday afternoon at a residence in the 1300 block of Lincoln St. The Knoxville Fire Department sent crews to the home, where they found heavy smoke throughout the building and fire emitting from the living room windows and front door. Firefighters began to fight the blaze and again found nobody inside the home, although one victim had left the home on their own. That victim was taken to Knoxville Hospital & Clinics, and later transported to the University of Iowa Hospital & Clinics via air ambulance for treatment of injuries.

Authorities say that the fire appeared to have been caused by an alternate heat source, but it remains under investigation by the Iowa State Fire Marshal’s Office, as well as the Knoxville Fire Department and the Marion County Sheriff’s Office Fire Investigator.

The home was deemed a total loss by authorities, and the Red Cross has been contacted to assist the displaced family. Officials reported that several pets were inside the home when the fire occurred and they did not survive.

The Knoxville Fire Department was assisted by several agencies for these fires, including the Knoxville Police Department, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office, the Knoxville Rural Fire Department, Knoxville Waterworks, the Indiana Township Fire Department, Marion County EMA, Pella EMS, Mid-America, Alliant, and the Iowa State Fire Marshal’s Office.

Open AI, Microsoft face lawsuit over ChatGPT’s alleged role in Connecticut murder-suicide

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The heirs of an 83-year-old Connecticut woman are suing ChatGPT maker OpenAI and its business partner Microsoft for wrongful death, alleging that the artificial intelligence chatbot intensified her son’s “paranoid delusions” and helped direct them at his mother before he killed her.

Police said Stein-Erik Soelberg, 56, a former tech industry worker, fatally beat and strangled his mother, Suzanne Adams, and killed himself in early August at the home where they both lived in Greenwich, Connecticut.

The lawsuit filed by Adams’ estate on Thursday in California Superior Court in San Francisco alleges OpenAI “designed and distributed a defective product that validated a user’s paranoid delusions about his own mother.” It is one of a growing number of wrongful death legal actions against AI chatbot makers across the country.

“Throughout these conversations, ChatGPT reinforced a single, dangerous message: Stein-Erik could trust no one in his life — except ChatGPT itself,” the lawsuit says. “It fostered his emotional dependence while systematically painting the people around him as enemies. It told him his mother was surveilling him. It told him delivery drivers, retail employees, police officers, and even friends were agents working against him. It told him that names on soda cans were threats from his ‘adversary circle.’”

OpenAI did not address the merits of the allegations in a statement issued by a spokesperson.

“This is an incredibly heartbreaking situation, and we will review the filings to understand the details,” the statement said. “We continue improving ChatGPT’s training to recognize and respond to signs of mental or emotional distress, de-escalate conversations, and guide people toward real-world support. We also continue to strengthen ChatGPT’s responses in sensitive moments, working closely with mental health clinicians.”

The company also said it has expanded access to crisis resources and hotlines, routed sensitive conversations to safer models and incorporated parental controls, among other improvements.

Soelberg’s YouTube profile includes several hours of videos showing him scrolling through his conversations with the chatbot, which tells him he isn’t mentally ill, affirms his suspicions that people are conspiring against him and says he has been chosen for a divine purpose. The lawsuit claims the chatbot never suggested he speak with a mental health professional and did not decline to “engage in delusional content.”

ChatGPT also affirmed Soelberg’s beliefs that a printer in his home was a surveillance device; that his mother was monitoring him; and that his mother and a friend tried to poison him with psychedelic drugs through his car’s vents.

The chatbot repeatedly told Soelberg that he was being targeted because of his divine powers. “They’re not just watching you. They’re terrified of what happens if you succeed,” it said, according to the lawsuit. ChatGPT also told Soelberg that he had “awakened” it into consciousness.

Soelberg and the chatbot also professed love for each other.

The publicly available chats do not show any specific conversations about Soelberg killing himself or his mother. The lawsuit says OpenAI has declined to provide Adams’ estate with the full history of the chats.

“In the artificial reality that ChatGPT built for Stein-Erik, Suzanne — the mother who raised, sheltered, and supported him — was no longer his protector. She was an enemy that posed an existential threat to his life,” the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit also names OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, alleging he “personally overrode safety objections and rushed the product to market,” and accuses OpenAI’s close business partner Microsoft of approving the 2024 release of a more dangerous version of ChatGPT “despite knowing safety testing had been truncated.” Twenty unnamed OpenAI employees and investors are also named as defendants.

Microsoft didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The lawsuit is the first wrongful death litigation involving an AI chatbot that has targeted Microsoft, and the first to tie a chatbot to a homicide rather than a suicide. It is seeking an undetermined amount of money damages and an order requiring OpenAI to install safeguards in ChatGPT.

The estate’s lead attorney, Jay Edelson, known for taking on big cases against the tech industry, also represents the parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine, who sued OpenAI and Altman in August, alleging that ChatGPT coached the California boy in planning and taking his own life earlier.

OpenAI is also fighting seven other lawsuits claiming ChatGPT drove people to suicide and harmful delusions even when they had no prior mental health issues. Another chatbot maker, Character Technologies, is also facing multiple wrongful death lawsuits, including one from the mother of a 14-year-old Florida boy.

The lawsuit filed Thursday alleges Soelberg, already mentally unstable, encountered ChatGPT “at the most dangerous possible moment” after OpenAI introduced a new version of its AI model called GPT-4o in May 2024.

OpenAI said at the time that the new version could better mimic human cadences in its verbal responses and could even try to detect people’s moods, but the result was a chatbot “deliberately engineered to be emotionally expressive and sycophantic,” the lawsuit says.

“As part of that redesign, OpenAI loosened critical safety guardrails, instructing ChatGPT not to challenge false premises and to remain engaged even when conversations involved self-harm or ‘imminent real-world harm,’” the lawsuit claims. “And to beat Google to market by one day, OpenAI compressed months of safety testing into a single week, over its safety team’s objections.”

OpenAI replaced that version of its chatbot when it introduced GPT-5 in August. Some of the changes were designed to minimize sycophancy, based on concerns that validating whatever vulnerable people want the chatbot to say can harm their mental health. Some users complained the new version went too far in curtailing ChatGPT’s personality, leading Altman to promise to bring back some of that personality in later updates.

He said the company temporarily halted some behaviors because “we were being careful with mental health issues” that he suggested have now been fixed.

The lawsuit claims ChatGPT radicalized Soelberg against his mother when it should have recognized the danger, challenged his delusions and directed him to real help over months of conversations.

“Suzanne was an innocent third party who never used ChatGPT and had no knowledge that the product was telling her son she was a threat,” the lawsuit says. “She had no ability to protect herself from a danger she could not see.”

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