The deadly drug that's complicating US-China trade

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  • The deadly drug that's complicating US-China trade</p>

<p>Analysis by Simone McCarthy, CNNJuly 13, 2025 at 10:28 AM</p>

<p>Chinese leader Xi Jinping walks with US President Donald Trump during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing for Trump's 2017 state visit to China. - Kyodo/Getty Images</p>

<p>Since US President Donald Trump – just days into his second term – began imposing tariffs on China for its role in the flow of deadly opioids like fentanyl into the United States, Beijing's message has been clear.</p>

<p>The fentanyl crisis is the "US's problem," Chinese officials have repeatedly said, and China has already done "tremendous work" to address the issue.</p>

<p>"We stand ready for practical cooperation with the US based on equality and mutual respect. That said, we firmly oppose the US pressuring, threatening and blackmailing China under the pretext of the fentanyl issue," a spokesperson said in March, after Trump's fentanyl tariffs were raised to 20% on all Chinese imports into the US.</p>

<p>But as those tariffs remain in place months later and, despite a truce de-escalating other duties, Beijing is signaling it's paying attention to the issue – and may be prepared to do more.</p>

<p>China late last month announced it will add two more fentanyl precursors to its list of controlled substances – an expected step that brought it in line with international regulations, which its diplomats presented as a mark of "active participation" in global drug control.</p>

<p>Days earlier, Chinese authorities also extended control over another class of drug known as nitazenes – powerful synthetic opioids raising alarm among global health officials. The same day, Chinese Minister of Public Security Wang Xiaohong told US Ambassador to China David Perdue that Beijing was open to strengthening "practical cooperation" on drug control.</p>

<p>The Trump administration blames China for "sustaining" the influx into the US of fentanyl, a lab-made, synthetic opioid dozens of times more potent than heroin. Abuse of the drug and its analogues has fueled a drug overdose crisis in the US, killing tens of thousands of Americans annually, though those numbers saw a significant drop last year.</p>

<p>In Beijing's view, it's gone above and beyond international norms to stem the outflow of the drug and its component chemicals from its vast pharmaceuticals sector. In 2019 Beijing controlled fentanyl as a drug class – a significant move that drastically reduced the flow of the finished drug directly from China to the US, according to experts and US officials.</p>

<p>It didn't take long for criminal networks to adapt, however. Chinese outfits shifted to selling precursor chemicals often to cartel-backed labs in Mexico, which then make and ship illegal fentanyl and similar drugs to the US. Chinese authorities have since controlled a number of these precursor chemicals. But experts and US officials say more could be done – as Beijing remains the largest source for products used to make illegal fentanyl and other synthetic drugs in Mexico and other countries.</p>

<p>Chinese officials haven't explicitly linked their recent efforts at controlling two more of these substances to relations with the US, instead calling them another example of the "goodwill China has shown," and continuing to reject the premise of the US tariffs.</p>

<p>But Beijing is likely expecting it will get credit for the latest moves in trade negotiations with the US. The question, however, is whether the steps will move the needle for Washington – and whether the two sides will be able to cooperate on the issue if their overall relations remain rocky.</p>

<p>"If Washington does not publicly recognize Chinese steps and show responsiveness to Beijing's own concerns, then bilateral law enforcement cooperation likely will falter going forward," said Ryan Hass, director of the John L. Thornton China Center at the Brookings Institution.</p>

<p>'Poisoning our citizens'</p>

<p>As US-China ties have chafed on everything from technology to China's militarization of the South China Sea, few issues have appeared more personal to American leaders than China's role as a producer of the drugs and chemicals fueling an opioid crisis in the US.</p>

<p>During his first term, Trump hailed Chinese leader Xi Jinping's "wonderful humanitarian gesture" of designating fentanyl a controlled substance in China.</p>

<p>Some six years later, however, Trump began his second term accusing China of "actively sustaining and expanding the business of poisoning our citizens" – an accusation vehemently denied by China.</p>

<p>That message also contrasts with assessments from the US Drug Enforcement Agency which, in an annual report released in May, said fentanyl purity declined throughout 2024, consistent with indications that fentanyl cooks in Mexico were having trouble obtaining key precursor chemicals. That was as some China-based suppliers were "wary of supplying controlled precursors … demonstrating an awareness on their part that the Chinese government is controlling more fentanyl precursors," it said.</p>

<p>Beijing's latest moves to control the two additional fentanyl precursors and nitazenes are positive actions that could have an impact on illicit drug supply chains, experts say.</p>

<p>But they are also "clever maneuvering" from China, according to Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow at the Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology at the Brookings Institution.</p>

<p>A UN convention on illicit drugs added the two fentanyl precursors to its list of controlled substances last year, meaning signatory countries such as China must follow suit. China controlled a number of nitazenes in 2024 and the latest step, which expands those controls, was already in the works last fall, Felbab-Brown said.</p>

<p>"The Trump administration just reset the clock, did not recognize what China had already done and had committed to do, did not give China any credit for that. As a result, it also now is in a position where China can be promising to do exactly the same actions that it had promised to the Biden administration and use that as part of the bargaining," Felbab-Brown said.</p>

<p>A "more effective posture" would have been to embrace China's efforts in 2024 and then ask it to fill in the "substantial and impactful" holes in its drug control program, she added.</p>

<p>A US Customs and Border Protection agent weighs a package of fentanyl at the San Ysidro port of entry in California in 2019. - Sandy Huffaker/AFP/Getty ImagesA 'US problem'</p>

<p>Beijing has fiercely defended its record when it comes to controlling fentanyl and other synthetic drugs, releasing a 7,000-word white paper outlining its efforts in March, days after Trump imposed his second raft of fentanyl-linked tariffs.</p>

<p>It has also balked at a Congressional report released last year accusing the ruling Chinese Communist Party of directly subsidizing the manufacture and export of illicit fentanyl materials and other synthetic narcotics through tax rebates.</p>

<p>In China, where the Communist Party keeps a tight grip on all aspects of society, there's comparatively limited opioid abuse, according to official data – a situation Beijing uses to suggest the problem is about American appetite for the drug, not Chinese supply.</p>

<p>That also means Chinese officials feel they've gone out of their way to work with Washington on a US domestic issue – efforts they see as being greeted first by a lack of American appreciation, and then by tariffs.</p>

<p>Scientists in China on the front lines of identifying new precursors being used by criminal groups also point to reducing demand in the US as a key factor, given the challenges of controlling chemicals involved in synthesizing opioids.</p>

<p>"You really can't solve the fentanyl problem through control alone… the most fundamental issue is still reducing demand," Hua Zhendong, deputy director of a drug analysis division at a counternarcotics laboratory under China's Ministry of Public Security, told CNN in an interview last September.</p>

<p>He pointed to how some chemicals have widespread use in legitimate products, making them impractical to control, while chemicals used to make fentanyl can be easily adjusted to evade rules but still produce the product.</p>

<p>"It's always been like a cat-and-mouse game, because there could be thousands of potential substances for synthesizing fentanyl, we can't proactively control them all – we can only passively follow behind," said Hua, whose lab was working regularly with US counterparts at the time of the interview to share information on emerging chemicals.</p>

<p>Outside observers agree that US efforts to curb demand are critical for mitigating the opioid crisis. They note too that even if no chemicals came from China, fentanyl makers would look to other countries with large pharmaceuticals and chemicals industries, such as India.</p>

<p>'One step of many'</p>

<p>Des pite the challenges of enforcement in a vast sector where goods are often shipped in covert ways by busy air and sea routes, observers also say that more can be done in China.</p>

<p>That includes tightening regulations to enable tougher punishments for people who sell controlled precursors to criminal groups or their middlemen unknowingly. Experts also say more could also be done to enforce existing regulations, especially in terms of how central government edicts are enforced by local authorities across China.</p>

<p>"Scheduling drugs and precursors that lead to the production of illegal drugs is one step of many needed in China," said David Luckey, a senior international and defense researcher at RAND, a US-based think tank. "I would suggest better still would be actually preventing Chinese companies from selling and distributing these harmful chemicals and drugs to criminal organizations in Mexico."</p>

<p>In addition to China, Trump placed tariffs on Mexico and Canada earlier this year, accusing them of not doing enough to curb migration and fentanyl trafficking, but carved out significant exemptions to those tariff rates. The US earlier this year designated Mexican cartels it alleges are involved in fentanyl trafficking as foreign terrorist organizations.</p>

<p>"China is a command economy with extreme control of its population – I think if the Chinese Communist Party didn't want Chinese companies doing this, the CCP could do more to stop it, and be more effective in stopping it," Luckey said.</p>

<p>An annual US State Department report on narcotics controls released in March described China's "significant steps" working with the US last year to reduce precursor exports, which it said included cracking down on online platforms and companies selling them, making arrests, and adding 55 synthetic drugs and precursor chemicals to control lists.</p>

<p>China's Ministry of Public Security last month said it had seized more than 1,400 tons of various precursor chemicals, and 151 related criminal cases were resolved in 2024.</p>

<p>But authorities in China also acknowledge the scope of the problem, with a recent report noting that channels and means for smuggling chemicals out of the country "were increasing" and "constantly being ," creating "greater challenges."</p>

<p>Nine people were sentenced for producing and trafficking fentanyl at a court in north China's Hebei Province in 2019, following a collaborative law enforcement effort between the US and China. - Xinhua/Getty Images'Good progress'</p>

<p>Beijing – which seeks to present itself as a responsible global player – has its own reasons for not wanting to be seen as an international purveyor of illicit drugs. But Chinese officials have long linked cooperation with the US on the issue to the health of the broader relationship.</p>

<p>China cut off drug control cooperation completely in August 2022 in retaliation for then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan. It then took a friendly summit between Xi and former US President Joe Biden in late 2023 to get collaboration back on track.</p>

<p>This time around, China has bristled at the Trump administration's off-the-bat imposition of tariffs, saying it "undermines" cooperation. The White House did not respond to a CNN request for comment on China's latest control steps.</p>

<p>"If the US truly wants to cooperate with China, it should face up to the objective facts, correct its wrongdoing, and seek dialogue with China," a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said last month when asked whether those measures were done in cooperation with the US or at its behest.</p>

<p>But Beijing is also keenly aware that the current tariffs are hitting at a time when China's economy has already been struggling with domestic challenges – and there's no certainty those duties couldn't rise again under Trump's capricious trade policy.</p>

<p>"Since the 20% tariff is specifically linked to cooperation on fentanyl, the Chinese might be hoping for a package deal that includes trade, counternarcotics, among other things," said Yun Sun, director of the China program at the Stimson Center think tank in Washington.</p>

<p>"The Chinese hope to remove the 20% tariff … (and are) eager to get President Trump to visit China this year, so they need to work out good progress," she said.</p>

<p>For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com</p>

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The deadly drug that’s complicating US-China trade

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Long Before Kurt Cobain Rose to Fame, There Was Another Nirvana and Now They're Being Remembered

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  • Long Before Kurt Cobain Rose to Fame, There Was Another Nirvana and Now They're Being Remembered</p>

<p>Craig RosenJuly 13, 2025 at 1:20 AM</p>

<p>(Photo by KMazur/WireImage)</p>

<p>Long Before Kurt Cobain Rose to Fame, There Was Another Nirvana and Now They're Being Remembered originally appeared on Parade.</p>

<p>Decades before Kurt Cobain and Nirvana delivered the seismic shock of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" in 1991 that changed popular music forever, there was another band called Nirvana.</p>

<p>The British Nirvana was formed in 1966 by Irish musician Patrick Campbell-Lyons and Greek songwriter Alex Spyropoulos along with British producer Ray Singer. They released their first album, The Story of Simon Simopath in October 1967, eight months after Cobain was born. It was produced by Chris Blackwell, the founder of Island Records who helped launch Bob Marley to fame.</p>

<p>🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬</p>

<p>If Cobain and company didn't know about the British psychedelic band when they chose the name Nirvana, they soon found out. The British group sued their American counterparts but reached an out-of-court settlement for $100,000 that allowed both groups to share the name, per The Guardian. It's been reported that the British band once considered covering Cobain's songs for an album called Nirvana Sings Nirvana.</p>

<p>While that album never materialized, the British Nirvana has a catalog that runs much deeper than that of the American band whose career was cut tragically short by Cobain's suicide in 1994.</p>

<p>Their recorded works have been compiled for The Show Must Go On: The Complete Collection, a 12-CD boxed set that includes the group's eight studio albums (with the debut album, The Story of Simon Simopath, presented on separate stereo and mono discs) all newly remastered, as well as three discs of outtakes, demos and other rarities. The set, which also includes a 90-page hardback book, is due for release on Sept. 12 on Madfish.</p>

<p>While the British Nirvana never achieved mainstream success and remains a cult band, there are those who consider the band's '60 psychedelic sound highly influential.</p>

<p>"Crafting a visionary sound that moved beyond the confines of the 1960s, British psychedelic band Nirvana's influence has echoed through the generations and continues to inspire artists to this day," reads a statement announcing the release of the boxed set.</p>

<p>Madfish even created a trailer for the release that's been posted on YouTube, featuring the songs "Rainbow Chaser," "Love Suite," and "The Touchables (All of Us)," along with a look at the boxed set's packaging and hardcover book.</p>

<p>So far, the video has only prompted two comments: one joke and one serious inquiry.</p>

<p>"where is smells like teen spirit tho," wrote one, referring to the American Nirvana's biggest hit.</p>

<p>"Will they be available on vinyl separately," asked another fan.</p>

<p>Long Before Kurt Cobain Rose to Fame, There Was Another Nirvana and Now They're Being Remembered first appeared on Parade on Jul 12, 2025</p>

<p>This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 12, 2025, where it first appeared.</p>

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Long Before Kurt Cobain Rose to Fame, There Was Another Nirvana and Now They’re Being Remembered

<p>- Long Before Kurt Cobain Rose to Fame, There Was Another Nirvana and Now They're Being Remembered</p> ...

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  • "Boy Meets World" cast says "this" makeout session 'could be the most passionate one of the show': 'They are going at it!'</p>

<p>Daysia TolentinoJuly 13, 2025 at 5:00 AM</p>

<p>ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty</p>

<p>The 'Boy Meets World' season 6 cast</p>

<p>Boy Meets World features the many highs, lows, and hijinks of young romance — but its stars recently revealed what they think was the "most passionate" kiss of the series.</p>

<p>In the most recent episode of Pod Meets World, Will Friedle, Danielle Fishel, and Rider Strong recapped episode 16 of season 6, "My Baby Valentine." In the episode, Jack (Matthew Lawrence) and Rachel (Maitland Ward) share a steamy, secret kiss in their shared apartment. The pair has to keep their tryst secret from their roommate Eric (Friedle).</p>

<p>"Because they're lying down on the couch, I would argue this is more intense than [Jennifer] Love [Hewitt] and I making out in the hallway because we were standing up," Friedle said. "So they're lying down. He's on top of her. They're really making out. He's then going for her neck. I would say this could be the most passionate one of the show."</p>

<p>ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty</p>

<p>Jack (Matthew Lawrence) and Rachel (Maitland Ward) share a passionate kiss on 'Boy Meets World'</p>

<p>Sign up for Entertainment Weekly's free daily newsletter to get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more.</p>

<p>Friedle was referencing the kiss he shared with then-girlfriend Jennifer Love Hewitt when the I Know What You Did Last Summer actress made a cameo on the show. In season 5 episode 17 of Boy Meets World, the former couple shares a passionate kiss in the school hallway as the rest of the gang run from an unknown killer.</p>

<p>The plot ended up being a dream, but the stars reassessed the makeout scene as being oddly intense for the premise of the episode. Friedle previously said that this was the steamiest kiss of the show.</p>

<p>"It's like full-on making out," Friedle said on a different episode of Pod Meets World. "That is the most intense makeout we have on the seven years of the show, is right there in the hallway, then me kissing her neck while she's trying to talk and all this. Like, we haven't even said our names yet. It's intense."</p>

<p>Hewitt has talked about this scene in the past, saying that Friedle was the "best boyfriend" but that she was nervous about her daughters watching their kiss.</p>

<p>"We really went for it in that makeout, definitely," she told Fox News Digital in 2024. "My daughter watches Girl Meets World right now, and I'm always afraid that she's going to want to watch Boy Meets World and then see me as Jennifer Love Fefferman making out on the bookshelf, and she's going to be like, 'Mommy, this is cringe.'"</p>

<p>Listen to the full episode of Pod Meets World below.</p>

<p>on Entertainment Weekly</p>

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“Boy Meets World” cast says “this” makeout session 'could be the most passionate one of the show': 'They are going at it!'

<p>- "Boy Meets World" cast says "this" makeout session 'could be the most passionate one of...

Dancers at an Arizona club feared they were being targeted — and then one was killed

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  • Dancers at an Arizona club feared they were being targeted — and then one was killed</p>

<p>Tim StellohJuly 13, 2025 at 9:03 PM</p>

<p>Justine Goode / NBC News; Getty Images</p>

<p>Beginning six years ago, a series of armed robberies left dancers at a Phoenix strip club shaken.</p>

<p>In 2023, one of those dancers who was robbed — Mercedes Vega — was kidnapped and brutally murdered. She was found beaten, shot and burned in the back seat of a Chevrolet Malibu on a highway east of Phoenix. Bleach was poured down her throat, authorities said.</p>

<p>Her family thought the crimes were connected, and they waited more than two years for answers. Now, authorities believe that one of the suspects in Vega's killing is the same man who was charged in her robbery case.</p>

<p>Vega had identified Cudjoe Young as the masked assailant who robbed her at gunpoint outside her Phoenix apartment building, according to a police report. He was charged with armed robbery, pleaded not guilty and was released on bond. His current and previous lawyers have declined to comment.</p>

<p>Vega was supposed to testify about the robbery at a court hearing scheduled for the day she was found dead, her mother said.</p>

<p>Tom and Erika Pillsbury hold a picture of their late daughter, Mercedes Vega, as they pose for a portrait in their living room on June 13 in San Tan Valley, Ariz. (Megan Mendoza / USA TODAY / REUTERS)</p>

<p>The Maricopa County Sheriff's Office is now recommending that Young be charged with conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit kidnapping in Vega's death, according to a probable cause statement filed last month in that county's superior court.</p>

<p>For Vega's mother, the latest development brought a measure of relief.</p>

<p>"We've felt like we've been drowning in a sea of despair and grief for two and a half years," Erika Pillsbury said. "And now we've been thrown a life preserver. The people that are responsible for murdering my little daughter are hopefully going to face justice."</p>

<p>Two other suspects have been accused in Vega's death. The Maricopa County Attorney's Office filed charges of first-degree murder, kidnapping, armed robbery and theft against Jared Gray, according to a June 20 complaint. Gray was in custody in Georgia on unrelated charges and has not been extradited to Arizona, a spokesman for the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office said.</p>

<p>A third person, Sencere Hayes, was charged in November with first-degree murder, kidnapping, armed robbery and theft in connection with Vega's killing. He has pleaded not guilty.</p>

<p>Authorities have provided few details about the connection between the men, though the probable cause statement identified a geographic link — Chattanooga, Tennessee. Young is from the city, the statement says, and Hayes and Gray traveled to Phoenix from there.</p>

<p>The Maricopa County Sheriff's Office declined to comment. A spokesperson for the county attorney's office said it is reviewing potential charges against Young, 29, but would not comment on the robbery case, which it is prosecuting and is scheduled to take to trial on July 29. It isn't clear why the case has taken so long to adjudicate.</p>

<p>Lawyers for Hayes and Young did not respond to requests for comment. Court records do not list an attorney for Gray. In an interview with authorities, he denied ever having been to Arizona, the probable cause statement shows.</p>

<p>A terrifying incident close to home</p>

<p>At 4:15 a.m. on Oct. 12, 2020, Vega was parking outside her apartment building after work when a masked man ran toward her, drew a gun and demanded her belongings, according to a Phoenix Police Department incident report.</p>

<p>The man grabbed Vega's phone and held it to her face to try and unlock it, but failed because the facial-recognition feature wasn't set up, Vega's mother recalled her daughter telling her. When he ordered her to enter her PIN, Vega resisted, Pillsbury said.</p>

<p>"He shoved her to the ground, told her he'd kill her and held the gun to her face," Pillsbury said.</p>

<p>Mercedes Vega. (Erika Pillsbury)</p>

<p>Vega complied, Pillsbury said, and the man took everything — car keys, wallet, phone and a bag holding hundreds of dollars. With the phone unlocked, the man stole more money through a cash transfer app, according to the report.</p>

<p>Vega was so distraught, Pillsbury recalled, that "you couldn't walk up behind her without her jumping."</p>

<p>Within days, Pillsbury said, Vega moved somewhere she thought had better security. The new apartment was on the second floor, Pillsbury said, and had a parking garage that required a key fob for access.</p>

<p>Three years later, that garage was the last place Vega would be seen alive.</p>

<p>Another dancer says she was likely tracked</p>

<p>Vega, who performed at the Phoenix strip club Le Girls and was saving to become a certified personal trainer, wasn't the venue's only dancer who said they'd been targeted after a shift. In the months before and after Vega's robbery, two other women said a masked man held them up — or tried to hold them up — at gunpoint, according to interviews with former dancers and police reports.</p>

<p>One former dancer who said she was robbed didn't know Vega well, but asked Vega to describe her attacker.</p>

<p>After Vega described a man with gloves, a ski mask and a hoodie who was taller than her — Vega was 5-foot-8 — the former dancer said she believed they'd likely been targeted by the same person. (The woman asked NBC News not to identify her because she no longer works as a dancer.)</p>

<p>Around 4:30 a.m. on Nov. 2, 2019, she said, a masked assailant appeared in front of her aunt's condo in a quiet part of Scottsdale, a wealthy suburb east of Phoenix, and pointed a gun in her face. He took her bag and fled.</p>

<p>Afterward, the woman said, she banged so hard on her aunt's front door that her knuckles bled.</p>

<p>Photographs of Mercedes Vega, who was killed at the age of 22, hang on a wall in her parents' living room in San Tan Valley, Ariz. (Megan Mendoza/The Republic / USA TODAY Network via Reuters Co)</p>

<p>The former dancer dialed 911 and told the responding officers that she believed the gunman had likely tracked her from the club and knew her routine. She said she asked police to review video from Le Girls to see if she had been followed, but never heard if they did. Aside from a brief follow-up with a detective a few days later, the woman said she never heard from authorities again.</p>

<p>"It just seems like there's really nothing we can do," the former dancer said the detective told her.</p>

<p>There have been no arrests in the robbery, and the woman has accused authorities of failing to properly investigate.</p>

<p>"I'm angry and frustrated he hasn't faced any consequences," she said.</p>

<p>A spokesman for the Scottsdale Police Department, which investigated the robbery, said the agency examines crimes as thoroughly as it can and that investigators did the best they could with the information they had at the time.</p>

<p>According to Aaron Bolin, the Scottsdale police spokesman, the detective who investigated recalled that when the crime occurred, the victim was unsure if she had been followed. So the detective did not request the club's security video, Bolin said.</p>

<p>After NBC News contacted the department about the allegations, Bolin said investigators looked into whether that case was connected to the others. No link was found based on the available evidence, Bolin said.</p>

<p>A club on edge and an arrest</p>

<p>On Nov. 16, 2020, a third dancer was targeted. Vega's friend and co-worker, Jelena Gamboa, recalled the woman saying that after work, a man with a mask, hood and gloves emerged from behind a car in the garage of her Scottsdale apartment building and approached her with his gun drawn, she said. The woman did not respond to requests for comment.</p>

<p>When another car appeared, the gunman ran, according to a supplemental report included in Vega's incident report that cites Scottsdale police.</p>

<p>Dancers at Le Girls were on edge, Gamboa said, and kept an eye out for anyone who matched the man's description.</p>

<p>A month after the third incident, around 2 a.m. on a Tuesday in December 2020, a Le Girls manager told authorities that a man who matched the description was inside, according to the incident report.</p>

<p>Later that day, after Vega told authorities that the man was the person she believed to be her assailant, Young was arrested, the incident report shows. He denied knowing anything about the robberies but acknowledged going to Le Girls often.</p>

<p>Young was later charged with armed robbery in Vega's case and attempted armed robbery in the Nov. 16 case. He posted a nearly $50,000 bond for those cases and was released, according to the records.</p>

<p>Taken against her will</p>

<p>On April 16, 2023, Gamboa and Vega planned to hang out, but Vega later texted her friend with a crying emoji.</p>

<p>"Uber is $60," she wrote, according to a screenshot provided by Gamboa. "I might just go to work then. I feel like it's a sign I shouldn't go."</p>

<p>Shortly after, at 9:17 p.m., video from inside Vega's apartment complex captured her walking into the garage, according to the probable cause statement.</p>

<p>Security footage of Mercedes Vega. (via Dateline)</p>

<p>Two minutes later, Vega's car — a Dodge Charger — and the Malibu her body was later found in were captured on a camera leaving the garage at the same time, according to the statement. Blood found at the crime scene and in the Charger, which was discovered unoccupied roughly a mile away, "suggest the victim was physically assaulted, injured and taken from her parking garage against her will," according to the statement.</p>

<p>A fingerprint from a grocery bag in Vega's car initially produced no results. But in May 2024, it was matched to Hayes after he was arrested in Tennessee, according to the statement.</p>

<p>Authorities learned that Hayes flew to Arizona with Jared Gray on March 3 — a month before Vega's killing, the statement says. The person who owned the credit card used to buy their tickets denied making the purchase or knowing Hayes and Gray, the statement says, but told authorities that Young was allowed to use the card.</p>

<p>Two people told detectives that Young paid them to pick up the Malibu after it was bought through an online seller in March, the statement says. After Vega's death, authorities discovered a fingerprint on a plastic cup inside the car that belonged to Gray, according to the document.</p>

<p>Photographs of Mercedes Vega, displayed in her parents' living room. (Megan Mendoza/The Republic / USA TODAY Network via Reuters Co)</p>

<p>A day after Vega was found dead, Hayes and Gray left Arizona on a bus for Young's hometown of Chattanooga, the statement says. When authorities traveled there to interview them, Gray said he had never been to Arizona and denied knowing Young or Hayes, the statement says.</p>

<p>Hayes said he knew Young from Chattanooga. He told investigators he'd gone to Arizona for business, the statement says, but refused to say who he'd gone with.</p>

<p>Hayes' trial is scheduled for 2027.</p>

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Florida inmate's execution for 'savage' killings to mark 10-year high in US. What to know.

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  • Florida inmate's execution for 'savage' killings to mark 10-year high in US. What to know.</p>

<p>Amanda Lee Myers, USA TODAYJuly 13, 2025 at 7:01 PM</p>

<p>The U.S. is set to reach a 10-year high for executions next week, with Florida expected to administer a lethal injection to Michael Bernard Bell for the revenge killing of two people in 1993.</p>

<p>Bell is set to be executed on Tuesday, July 15, for murdering 23-year-old Jimmy West and 18-year-old Tamecka Smith outside a Jacksonville bar on Dec. 9, 1993, when he went on a rampage with an AK-47.</p>

<p>Should the execution move forward as expected, Bell will be the 26th inmate executed in the U.S. this year, eclipsing the 25 executions conducted in the nation during all of last year. It will also be the most executions in any given year in the U.S. since all of 2015, when there were 28. Another nine executions are scheduled for later this year.</p>

<p>"We're in the midst of something historic," Robert Dunham, director of the Death Penalty Policy Project, told USA TODAY.</p>

<p>Not only is the nation seeing a rise in executions, but so is Florida. Bell's execution will mark the eighth in the state this year, which has only happened twice in the last five decades: in 1984 and 2014.</p>

<p>Here's what you about Bell's execution and why we're seeing more executions this year.</p>

<p>What was Michael Bell convicted of?</p>

<p>In June 1993, a man named Theodore Wright killed Michael Bell's brother in self-defense. Afterward, Bell broadcast his plans for revenge, even saying: "Wright belongs in the morgue," according to court records.</p>

<p>Almost six months later, Bell spotted what he thought was Wright's distinctive yellow Plymouth Fury outside a Jacksonville bar. But Wright had sold his car to his half-brother, 23-year-old Jimmy West.</p>

<p>West left the bar with 18-year-old Tamecka Smith and another woman. As they were getting into the car, a ski mask-wearing Bell used an AK-47 to spray the group with bullets and then fired on people nearby and the front of the bar, according to court records. Though Bell didn't realize West had bought the car, he recognized him as Wright's brother before he opened fire and proceeded anyway, court records say.</p>

<p>Bell later told his aunt: "Theodore got my brother and now I got his brother," court records say.</p>

<p>Death row inmate Michael Bernard Bell listens to testimony during his evidentiary hearing on June 23, 2025, at the Duval County Courthouse. Bell is scheduled to be executed on July 15 for two 1993 murders in Jacksonville.</p>

<p>At trial, Judge R. Hudson Olliff lamented how Bell received early release from prison three separate times before West's and Smith's murders, including once for an armed robbery, following years of repeated arrests and convictions.</p>

<p>"Seven months after that early release the defendant committed this savage double murder of an innocent 23-year-old man and a teenaged girl," Olliff said during Bell's sentencing.</p>

<p>"These two murders can be laid at the doorstep of the Florida Parole Commission for the irresponsible early prison release of this violent habitual criminal who should have been in prison at the time the murders were committed," he said.</p>

<p>Olliff said the planning involved in the killings so long after Bell's brother was murdered "showed an attitude of hatred and revenge ... These murders were cold and calculated and with heightened premeditation."</p>

<p>Why are executions on the rise?</p>

<p>After Bell's execution, at least nine more inmates are set to be executed by the end of the year. If they all proceed, that would mean at least 35 executions this year − a 40% increase over last year. Though it would still be a far cry from the busiest execution year ever in the U.S. − 1999 when there were 98 − the stage is set for the nation to reverse a long-term downward trend.</p>

<p>Some experts say the current political climate in the U.S. of seeking law and order and a conservative-leaning U.S. Supreme Court is driving the increasing execution numbers, according to interviews conducted by USA TODAY with a half-dozen experts and a Republican lawmaker in Florida who has pushed pro-death penalty legislation in the last two years.</p>

<p>They say that the U.S. Supreme Court − shaped by three conservative appointments made by President Donald Trump during his first term in office − has proved far less likely to issue stays of execution than previous courts.</p>

<p>"I think that President Trump has had a bigger impact on the death penalty than he might even realize," Frank Baumgartner, a death penalty researcher and political science professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told USA TODAY.</p>

<p>"No defense attorney wants to bring their case in front of the Supreme Court," he continued. "It's very hostile territory."</p>

<p>Dunham pointed to a spree of 13 federal executions during the last six months of Trump's first term in office. At the time, he said, the new Supreme Court "went out of its way to lift stays of execution that were granted by lower federal court judges."</p>

<p>"That emboldened states," Dunham said. "That has meant in this current surge of executions, the lower federal courts aren't stopping them and the U.S. Supreme Court is not intervening ... That increases the number of executions."</p>

<p>What's going on in Florida?</p>

<p>Florida has executed more inmates than any other state this year, with nine set to be carried out by the start of August.</p>

<p>Florida state Rep. Berny Jacques, a Republican who has spearheaded multiple recent pieces of successful pro-death penalty legislation in his state, chalked up this year's increases to "the political environment not only in our state but nationwide."</p>

<p>"You have a president who won in such strong fashion. Certainly his messaging and the policies he ran on resonate with the American people at large," he said. "There is a renewed interest in law and order ... and you're seeing that filter up to the elected officials and the executives that want to pursue tough-on-crime, law-and-order policies."</p>

<p>He continued: "State officials are taking their cues. This is what the people want."</p>

<p>Republican Florida Rep. Berny Jacques stands for the pledge of allegiance during opening day of the Florida legislative session on April 11, 2025. Jacques has been spearheading aggressive death penalty laws in his state.</p>

<p>Jacques pointed to the social unrest in the U.S. in the wake of George Floyd's death at the hands of police in 2020, and recent ongoing immigration protests taking place in the U.S., saying a lot of Americans are frustrated with "rioting in the streets" and want leaders to be tougher on crime.</p>

<p>Among the pro-death penalty legislation that Jacques proposed this year is House Bill 903. Signed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis in May and effective on July 1, the law expands the state's options for execution methods from lethal injection and the electric chair to other methods.</p>

<p>"The bill doesn't call for any particular method as long as a method is not deemed unconstitutional. Everything's on the table," Jacques said. "The department of corrections could pick something other states are currently doing or another method that I can't really conceive of now. They would be within their right to make sure the sentence is carried out."</p>

<p>Jacques also spearheaded a law this year expanding the death penalty to be used for a crime that doesn't involve murder: the sexual trafficking of children under 12 or of people who are mentally incapacitated. It goes into effect in October.</p>

<p>"For me, it's a matter of conviction," Jacques said. "Even if the political winds weren't in this posture, I would still be calling for more executions."</p>

<p>Michael Bell has little hope for a reprieve</p>

<p>The many efforts of Bell's attorneys to win him a reprieve so far have failed. Most recently, the Florida Supreme Court rejected arguments that witnesses who helped convict Bell wanted to recant their testimony, with the justices citing the "overwhelming evidence" in the case.</p>

<p>The only remaining hope for Bell is the U.S. Supreme Court and Gov. Ron DeSantis, who signed Bell's death warrant in June.</p>

<p>On July 8, Tampa Pentecostal minister Demetrius Minor marched to the governor's office in Tallahassee, carrying a letter signed by 100 Florida Christians asking him to stop the executions.</p>

<p>"The death penalty is not about public safety. It's about power," Minor told the Tallahassee Democrat, part of the USA TODAY Network. "The governor alone decides who lives, who dies with no checks or balances. That is not justice. That's what we call vengeance and it's very dangerous."</p>

<p>Gov. Ron DeSantis stands outside the Jefferson County Courthouse in front of an American flag after unveiling a statue of Thomas Jefferson on Wednesday, July 2, 2025.</p>

<p>When asked for comment, the governor's office pointed to DeSantis' thoughts on the issue in May, when he said that he signs death warrants to help bring closure to families who've been waiting sometimes decades for their loved one's killer to be executed.</p>

<p>"There are so some crimes that are just so horrific, the only appropriate punishment is the death penalty," he said, adding that there are backstops for wrongfully convicted offenders, and he supports that.</p>

<p>"But anytime we go forward, I'm convinced that not only was the verdict correct, but that this punishment is absolutely appropriate under the circumstances," he added.</p>

<p>Bell is set to be executed just after 6 p.m. on Tuesday, July 15, at the Florida State Prison near Starke.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Florida execution to mark 10-year high in US. What to know.</p>

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The 50 best superhero movies: Where does the new 'Superman' rank?

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  • The 50 best superhero movies: Where does the new 'Superman' rank?</p>

<p>Brian Truitt, USA TODAY July 9, 2025 at 11:36 PM</p>

<p>Who needs a crown and scepter when you've got capes, cowls and the occasional magic hammer?</p>

<p>For most of this century – and a couple pockets of the past one – Hollywood has been ruled by the kings and queens of superhero movies. From the sprawling Marvel Cinematic Universe, where Captain America and Spider-Man hang out, to the evolving movie world of Superman, Batman and the rest of the DC contingent, guys and gals with cool powers and righteous attitudes – and their resident villains – have won over movie fans' hearts and minds. They've also made made ridiculous amounts of money: Of the 10 highest-grossing films domestically, four feature beloved comic-book heroes ("Avengers: Endgame," "Spider-Man: No Way Home," "Black Panther" and "Avengers: Infinity War").</p>

<p>The streak likely won't end anytime soon, with the MCU trucking along with movies scheduled until 2027 – including "The Fantastic Four: First Steps" out later this month – and DC relaunching its film universe with the new "Superman" (in theaters now). In honor of a new Man of Steel on the big screen, we're ranking the 50 best superhero movies of all time.</p>

<p>Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox</p>

<p>50. 'Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow' (2004)</p>

<p>Gwyneth Paltrow plays newspaper reporter Polly Perkins and Jude Law is the title pilot of the sci-fi action adventure "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow."</p>

<p>It's a crime this innovative steampunk throwback adventure was never a thing, but it just was before its time. Alongside A-listers Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelina Jolie, Jude Law plays the heroic title pilot who has to save the world in a narrative with giant robots, flying zeppelins, a "Wizard of Oz" jones and digitized Laurence Olivier.</p>

<p>49. 'The Last Dragon' (1985)</p>

<p>A kitschy '80s cult kung-fu movie with ninjas, martial artists who glow and DeBarge on the soundtrack is going to make the list, period. Taimak stars as the Bruce Lee fan who rescues a New York VJ (Vanity), takes on a bad dude named Sho'Nuff (Julius Carry), plus can dance and karate kick to the rhythm of the night.</p>

<p>48. 'Ant-Man' (2015)</p>

<p>Marvel deserves a lot of credit for its big swings, like director Peyton Reed's superhero heist film with a guy who can shrink and ride ants. The immortal Paul Rudd is the secret sauce, as the ex-con cat burglar given these crazy abilities − though instead of doing it for the attaboys and kudos, he just wants to be a good dad.</p>

<p>47. 'Watchmen' (2009)</p>

<p>Say what you will about Zack Snyder's DC movies but this faithful adaptation of the seminal "Watchmen" source material is the best thing he's done outside of "300." His signature visual style – with slo-mos and hero shots aplenty – lend themselves well to the alt-history epic and the deconstruction of the caped do-gooder.</p>

<p>46. 'Fast Color' (2018)</p>

<p>Gugu Mbatha-Raw (right) stars as a woman who learns she has supernatural powers and reconnects with her mom (Lorraine Toussaint) while on the run in the thriller "Fast Color."</p>

<p>Gugu Mbatha-Raw headlines the emotional and grounded take on the superhero genre as a former drug addict on the run from those trying to study her telekinetic abilities. The post-apocalyptic scenario adds some flavor, as does the narrative of generations of women mending what's been shattered between them.</p>

<p>45. 'Thunderbolts*' (2025)</p>

<p>A bunch of antiheroic misfits become the New Avengers. Florence Pugh's Yelena Belova and Sebastian Stan's Winter Soldier lead the charge in a Marvel effort involving government conspiracy and an existential crisis involving one of their own that also acts as a thoughtful exploration of depression and mental health.</p>

<p>44. 'X-Men: First Class' (2011)</p>

<p>So many X-movies are just X-tremely bad. Not so this groovy 1960s-set adventure that doubles as an origin story for the team of superpowered mutants, putting them at the center of the Cuban Missile Crisis and going deep on the relationship between frenemies Professor X (James McAvoy) and Magneto (Michael Fassbender).</p>

<p>43. 'Shazam'! (2019)</p>

<p>Zachary Levi is a natural to inhabit the body of a teen boy in a souped-up body. Like "Big" meets "Superman," the family-tinged fantasy tracks the wish-fulfillment high jinks of a kid trying (and often failing) to be a hero, leans into the importance of family and is the rare mainstream film that touches on the foster-care system in a tangible way.</p>

<p>42. 'Dick Tracy' (1990)</p>

<p>Al Pacino chewing scenery like a buffet. Madonna slinking around. Dustin Hoffman mumbling a lot. There's so much to adore about the colorful gangland comic-book movie, and at the center of it is Warren Beatty as the hard-nosed detective with the radio watch, bright yellow overcoat and unshakable righteousness.</p>

<p>41. 'Spider-Man' (2002)</p>

<p>Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) discovers his web-slinging powers after getting bit by a radioactive spider in "Spider-Man."</p>

<p>OK, so Tobey Maguire didn't look like a teenager. The sight of the OG Spidey swinging around New York City in Sam Raimi's origin story still holds up, as does J.K. Simmons' newsman J. Jonah Jameson chomping cigars and an unhinged Willem Dafoe tearing up Manhattan as the superhero's most dangerous enemy, the Green Goblin.</p>

<p>40. 'Hellboy II: The Golden Army' (2008)</p>

<p>There is only one Hellboy, Ron Perlman, and the big horned guy with the Right Hand of Doom is a joy to behold in director Guillermo del Toro's fantasy sequel. Del Toro loves his monsters and he unleashes all sorts, from nasty tooth fairies to goblin blacksmiths, as Hellboy is tasked with stopping an army of clockwork mechanical soldiers.</p>

<p>39. 'Blade' (1998)</p>

<p>Neither Spider-Man nor X-Men were Marvel's first big success at the cinema. That honor goes to Wesley Snipes' fanged vampire hunter, who took out gore-covered bloodsuckers and had all the swagger in a cult flick that boasted B-movie antics, '90s style and set the stage for the heroes who came after.</p>

<p>38. 'Robocop' (1987)</p>

<p>In a futuristic and extremely crime-ridden Detroit, cop Alex Murphy (Peter Weller) is killed in the line of duty and brought back as a cyborg warrior by a shady corporation. Director Paul Verhoeven's violent '80s action film is also a well-crafted social satire that tackles themes of capitalism and identity and only gets better with age.</p>

<p>37. 'Iron Man' (2008)</p>

<p>Robert Downey Jr. snagged a heck of a career revival playing Tony Stark, an arms manufacturer who gets a high-tech heart and a conscience – plus one really sweet suit of armor. Jon Favreau's action-packed character study turned out to be a game-changer, kicking off what would become the Marvel Cinematic Universe.</p>

<p>36. 'Sky High' (2005)</p>

<p>The Disney high school comedy still works as a superhero gateway for kids. Michael Angarano is the teen son of hero parents wondering if he'll ever gets his powers in this clever take on young adolescence and family legacy, and Kurt Russell's square jaw was born to play a dude named Steve Stronghold.</p>

<p>35. 'Flash Gordon' (1980)</p>

<p>New York Jets star quarterback rockets to a strange planet, tussles with a guy named Ming the Merciless, gets in a love triangle, and teams up with a bunch of hawkmen. (Follow that, Aaron Rodgers!) The campy space opera is lustier than you might expect from a comic-strip do-gooder, and that Queen soundtrack rocks as hard as it ever did.</p>

<p>34. 'Deadpool 2' (2018)</p>

<p>Ryan Reynolds' masked mercenary breaks out the "Say Anything" reference in "Deadpool 2."</p>

<p>Ryan Reynolds' masked "Merc with a Mouth" broke the fourth wall "Looney Tunes" style and blew up the genre with a bunch of Acme dynamite in the 2016 original. The zanier time-traveling meta sequel ups his hallmark lampooning game, while also methodically redefining how funny and completely messed up these flicks could be.</p>

<p>29. 'Wonder Woman' (2017)</p>

<p>Gal Gadot had already appeared as the Amazon warrior but she came into her own in this World War I adventure. Her relationship with a pilot (Chris Pine) opens her heart to humanity, and the sight of her bravely walking across the battlefield of "No Man's Land" has become an emotional touchstone in the annals of comic-book movies.</p>

<p>32. 'The Suicide Squad' (2021)</p>

<p>James Gunn is now in charge of DC's movie future, and this violently subversive retooling of the supergroup was a successful job interview. The director's love for quirky characters and a dark sense of humor blended well with stars like Idris Elba, John Cena and Margot Robbie (whose Harley Quinn has never been more gloriously wacky.)</p>

<p>31. 'Spider-Man: Homecoming' (2017)</p>

<p>Ned (Jacob Batalon, left) and Peter (Tom Holland) nerd out in "Spider-Man: Homecoming."</p>

<p>Tom Holland proved that having a young dude play teenage Peter Parker is definitely for the best. Instead of an origin story, Peter is thrown into the stressful situation of navigating high school life, being a friendly neighborhood Spider-Man and crushing on the daughter of Michael Keaton's villainous Vulture.</p>

<p>30. 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever' (2022)</p>

<p>In the wake of Chadwick Boseman's death, Ryan Coogler's sequel became a soulful and profound look at life, legacy and dealing with grief. It gave Wakanda a female-centered story to tell – with Letitia Wright's Princess Shuri taking on the Panther mantle – and a standout Marvel antagonist in Tenoch Huerta Mejía's charming Namor.</p>

<p>29. 'The Lego Batman Movie' (2017)</p>

<p>The joyously bonkers animated comedy tackled Batman (voiced by Will Arnett) in a fun new way, showing him as a complicated mess who can't get out of his own way long enough for the greater good. The brick-built bro-dude Dark Knight shreds a mean guitar and also learns the importance of friendship.</p>

<p>28. 'Superman II' (1980)</p>

<p>The one where Supes gets beat up by a trucker. In order to be with his beloved Lois (Margot Kidder), Christopher Reeve's Man of Steel has his powers removed and that's of course when General Zod (Terence Stamp) and his crew show up wanting to take over Earth and Gene Hackman's top-notch Lex Luthor reappears as a pest.</p>

<p>27. 'Scott Pilgrim vs. the World' (2010)</p>

<p>Mixing video-game boss battles with coming-of-age tropes, Edgar Wright's electrifying musical action comedy cast Michael Cera as the Canadian title slacker, who falls for enigmatic Ramona (Mary Elizabeth Winstead). To date her, he has to literally fight her seven evil exes and along the way earn the power of self-respect.</p>

<p>26. 'Superman' (2025)</p>

<p>Superman (David Corenswet) isn't happy with Krypto making a mess of the Fortress of Solitude in "Superman."</p>

<p>He doesn't get beaten up by a trucker, but David Corenswet's terrific Man of Steel does get smacked around a lot. This Supes is all about empathy and kindness as he looks for ways to be more human, deals with wild superdog Krypto and faces a smarmy Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult) in James Gunn's electric, all-star outing.</p>

<p>25. 'Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse' (2023)</p>

<p>How many Spider-people is too many? Trick question: There's never enough. The snazzy animated sequel sends the Brooklyn teen (voiced by Shameik Moore) into the multiverse to grow up some more: He learns he's part of a huge connected web of folks, yet puts all that in jeopardy to save a loved one.</p>

<p>24. 'Captain America: The First Avenger' (2011)</p>

<p>Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) supports his fellow soldiers in "Captain America: The First Avenger."</p>

<p>Cap was punching Nazis in comic books way before Indiana Jones, and Chris Evans captured that appealing righteousness onscreen in the stirring World War II origin tale. When the super soldier puts up his dukes and says, "I can do this all day," you believe him – and Evans did, for several more Marvel movies afterward.</p>

<p>23. 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3' (2023)</p>

<p>James Gunn's swan song with his motley crew of cosmic misfits couldn't have been better, with Star-Lord (Chris Pratt) and Co. scrambling to save their raccoon buddy Rocket (Bradley Cooper) in a sprawling heartfelt adventure that, in its own profound way, tackled issues of animal cruelty and abuse.</p>

<p>22. 'Batman Returns' (1992)</p>

<p>Michelle Pfeiffer's Catwoman is a feline femme fatale for Michael Keaton's hero in "Batman Returns."</p>

<p>If "Die Hard" is a Christmas movie, then so is the art deco Tim Burton sequel that pitted his Caped Crusader (Michael Keaton) against the ghoulish and freaky Penguin (a never-scarier Danny DeVito). The real gift in this holiday-tinged Bat-bonanza: Michelle Pfeiffer's purr-fect Catwoman, a fierce and alluring vision in black leather.</p>

<p>21. 'Spider-Man: No Way Home' (2021)</p>

<p>"Spider-Verse" doesn't have a monopoly on multiple web-slingers, and Tom Holland's third Marvel solo film – and alternate-reality smorgasbord – teamed him with past screen Spideys Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield. (The welcome return of Willem Dafoe's Green Goblin and Jamie Foxx's improved Electro were awesome, too.)</p>

<p>20. 'Avengers: Infinity War' (2018)</p>

<p>Be honest, who's still catching their breath from half the Marvel heroes horrifically turning to ash? The Avengers and other good guys rally to try and keep Thanos (Josh Brolin) from collecting the all-powerful Infinity Stones. They fail, miserably, and the consequences lead to a cliffhanger not soon forgotten.</p>

<p>19. 'Batman Begins' (2005)</p>

<p>The British came to Gotham City and redefined the Dark Knight for a new generation of Bat-fans. Christian Bale nailed the delineations between rich guy Bruce Wayne and his vigilante alter ego, and director Christopher Nolan's outstanding redo of the Caped Crusader's origins was a twisty masterstroke.</p>

<p>18. 'X-Men' (2000)</p>

<p>Hugh Jackman had impressive mutton chops and claws as Wolverine in 2000's original "X-Men."</p>

<p>Marvel's mutant squad made an auspicious big-screen debut that paid tribute to the deep comic themes of them not being accepted by humanity and saving the world anyway. It was also a straight-up blast, especially with Halle Berry's weather-manipulating Storm and Hugh Jackman's mutton-chopped, clawed wonder Wolverine.</p>

<p>17. 'The Batman' (2022)</p>

<p>Robert Pattinson's younger riff on the Dark Knight leans into the "World's Greatest Detective" angle from the comics. Director Matt Reeves also populated a neo-noir Gotham with reinvented, realistic Bat-villains: serial-killing Riddler (Paul Dano), vengeful Catwoman (Zoe Kravitz) and power-hungry gangster Penguin (Colin Farrell).</p>

<p>16. 'The Rocketeer' (1991)</p>

<p>In the thrilling ode to the days of pulp serials, Billy Campbell threw on a jetpack and aerodynamic helmet as the 1930s title character, a stunt pilot whose airborne exploits put him on the radar of the FBI, Howard Hughes (!) and Nazi spies. And none of that's helpful in mending fences with his beloved squeeze Jenny (Jennifer Connelly).</p>

<p>15. 'Deadpool & Wolverine' (2024)</p>

<p>"Can you imagine the fun? The chaos? The residuals?" Ryan Reynolds' mouthy merc Deadpool says about the delightfully meta, proudly gonzo buddy-comedy Marvel team-up with Hugh Jackman's clawed and grumpy Wolverine. Extremely violent, often hilarious, occasionally touching and always a good time.</p>

<p>14. 'Unbreakable' (2000)</p>

<p>Yeah, it's a bit of a somber affair, but woo boy, M. Night Shyamalan's love letter to comics works exceedingly well with a pair of origin stories and a couple of Hollywood icons. Bruce Willis is the train-wreck survivor turned reluctant, quasi-immortal hero, while Samuel L. Jackson stuns as the totally breakable bad-guy mastermind.</p>

<p>13. 'Logan' (2017)</p>

<p>James Mangold's Western-tinged adventure strips away the superhero trappings to get down and dirty with Hugh Jackman's Wolverine in his twilight years. Even an old man Logan is still a brutal warrior, though rather than dustups, the drama focuses more on a surly X-Man realizing he needs loved ones in a thoughtful exploration of age and mortality.</p>

<p>12. 'Spider-Man 2' (2004)</p>

<p>Not that Sam Raimi's first Spidey outing was shabby by any stretch, but the sequel set a high bar for superhero movies for a good while. Tobey Maguire's hero wrestles with personal problems in a more emotional story line and Alfred Molina shined as an entertaining Doctor Octopus with plenty of metal tentacles and gravitas.</p>

<p>11. 'The Incredibles' (2004)</p>

<p>The best Fantastic Four movie – even considering there were three actual "Fantastic Four" movies. Director Brad Bird's animated Pixar gem took the family of superheroes theme to new heights, with strong main characters appealing to a wide base of filmgoers. (The MVP: Craig T. Nelson's relatable and embattled dad Mr. Incredible.)</p>

<p>10. 'Black Panther' (2018)</p>

<p>Erik Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan) and T'Challa/Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman) don't see eye to eye on Wakanda's future in "Black Panther."</p>

<p>Ryan Coogler's first journey to Wakanda became a phenomenon for Black culture, with kids doing "Wakanda Forever" salutes and Chadwick Boseman turning in a performance befitting a king. His death has given new weight to all his roles, none more than the dignity, grace and quiet power he brought to T'Challa.</p>

<p>9. 'The Avengers' (2012)</p>

<p>Let's face it, we've been spoiled by all the superteam blockbusters during the past decade. But even after "Justice League" and its ilk, the OG "Avengers" still holds up as a banger. Marvel's shawarma-chomping A-listers have to put differences aside to stave off an alien attack on Manhattan. Until it all falls apart again in ...</p>

<p>8. 'Captain America: Civil War' (2016)</p>

<p>Cap vs. Iron Man is the main event, of course, and the heroes-batting-each-other airport showdown is an all-timer. What makes this one special is how it deals with the real-world ramifications of superpowered beings among us, and the watchable messiness of good guys divided down political and personal lines.</p>

<p>7. 'Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse' (2018)</p>

<p>Peter Parker (Jake Johnson, left) is a heroic role model to Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) in "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse."</p>

<p>Spidey is often the superhero that little kids connect with first. And wielding eye-popping animation and a coming-of-age narrative, the daring first "Spider-Verse" embraced that universality with Shameik Moore's Miles Morales, a multicultural Brooklyn kid navigating self-confidence and identity issues with entertaining moxie.</p>

<p>6. 'Batman' (1989)</p>

<p>Do we want to get nuts? Yes, Michael Keaton, we would like to get nuts. In Tim Burton's striking and gonzo Bat-flick, Keaton was a slightly crazy Bruce Wayne who you'd believe was a nighttime vigilante – and the right guy to be taking on a Joker that oozes Jack Nicholson's signature kooky charisma.</p>

<p>5. 'Avengers: Endgame' (2019)</p>

<p>After the events of "Infinity War," Earth's mightiest survivors go on a spiffy time-travel heist in order to bring back their friends and the rest of the galaxy that got whisked away. That, and the numerous MCU movies prior, was merely prelude to a monumental brawl against Thanos for all the marbles that may never be surpassed in sheer epicness.</p>

<p>4. 'Guardians of the Galaxy' (2014)</p>

<p>"Guardians of the Galaxy" centered on Marvel's favorite bunch of space misfits.</p>

<p>Always remember, James Gunn made the world fall in love with an alien tree and a talking raccoon. As much as the first "Guardians" is full of big stakes and save-the-universe derring-do, it's the themes of family and friendship, and little oddities like a convo about how "Footloose" is the most heroic movie in the cosmos, that make it sparkle.</p>

<p>3. 'Captain America: The Winter Soldier' (2014)</p>

<p>It's not just a great superhero movie, it's just a great movie. An ace political thriller, the flick taps into timely themes of privacy concerns, an enemy growing from within, and military might used in ethically questionable ways. And if that timeliness doesn't impress you, maybe Cap wrecking a bunch of heavies in an elevator will.</p>

<p>2. 'The Dark Knight' (2008)</p>

<p>The late Heath Ledger's Oscar-winning performance as a chaotic, unpredictable Joker completely hijacks Christopher Nolan's breathtaking Bat-sequel, and will likely never be matched. Dealing with this colorful psychopath, Christian Bale's hero wrestles with personal choices and his gig as Gotham's resident protector in a white-knuckle affair about the fine line between good and evil.</p>

<p>1. 'Superman: The Movie' (1978)</p>

<p>Richard Donner's masterpiece covers the action-packed bases, from an exploding Krypton to disastrous quakes on Earth – you know, a job for Superman. What sets it apart from all the rest of the superhero pack is Christopher Reeve's magnificent showing as the ultimate Man of Steel. This alien is nurtured to be the best of us, embracing humanity and falling in love (see: Supes and Margot Kidder's Lois going on a stellar first-date flight). Reeve brings so much heart to a role where, with just little shifts in posture and mannerisms, he effortlessly switches from bespectacled Clark Kent to the legendary boy scout. Simply put, Reeve was super, man.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Best superhero movies: The top 50, ranked ('Superman' included)</p>

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The 50 best superhero movies: Where does the new 'Superman' rank?

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