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August 20, 2025 6 mins
The former boyfriend of a pregnant 18 year old from Rehoboth is charged with her murder. A judge in New York says the Epstein grand jury transcripts will stay sealed. An early look at the fall foliage forecast. Stay in "The Loop" with iHeartRadio.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
This is WBZY, Boston's news radio, redefining local news sixty
three degrees in Boston at four o'clock. Good afternoon, I'm
Ben Parker. Here's what's happening. An alleged killer appears in court.
Greg Groove, the boyfriend of Kylie Montero, arranged today for
her murder. The eighteen year old was pregnant and went

(00:22):
missing nearly two weeks ago. The Rohobath teen's body was
found yesterday. CBS News Boston's Christina Rex has more from Tonton.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Prosecutors revealed in court this morning how they finally found
eighteen year old Kylie Montero's body. They say her ex
boyfriend allegedly confessed and then drew them a map to
its location. Investigators had suspected that Montero had died because
of the last text message she sent her family.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Miss Montero texted a sister that he threw me on
the ground and pulled my hair and strangled and strangled me.
My phone is at four percent and if I died,
it was Greg. Family members and tried to communicate with
this Montero and get her to a face of safety,
and she didn't respond right away.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Greg Groom pleaded not guilty. He is due back in
court next month for a probable cause hearing. A federal
judge in New York rejects the Department of Justice's request
to unseal grand jury transcripts from the indictment of Jeffrey Epstein.
The Trump administration wanted to get that transcript out into
the public as outcry grows for the president to be
more transparent about the case, but the judge, Richard Berman,

(01:27):
says the information in the transcript pales in comparison to
the information already in the hands of the Department of Justice.
This comes days after another judge made a similar ruling
in the case of Epstein's accomplice, Glaine Maxwell. Asident. Trump
has denied having prior knowledge of Epstein's crimes and says
he cut off a relationship long ago. Lawyers for a
Maryland man mistakenly deported to Al Salvador have asked a

(01:50):
judge to dismiss his indictment.

Speaker 4 (01:51):
Jill mar Abrego Garcia was brought back from El Salvador
to face human smuggling charges. The Justice Department says he
transported undocumented immigrants from Mexico. In police video from a
twenty twenty two traffic stop a Brago Garcia explained he
was driving eight people from Houston to Maryland for a
construction job.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
You've got much saib hereduc A Brego.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
Garcia's attorneys told the judge in Nashville, the indictment is
a vindictive and selective prosecution by the Trump administration punishment
for him challenging his deportation.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
Michael Wallace, CBS News. Cutting the wait in line, that
is what airports you try to do. Rolling out a
new way to fast track passengers through security as they
get busier. Clear is partnering with the TSA to launch
new eGates for Clear Plus members. Travelers no longer will
have to show IDs to TSA officers, instead verifying their
identity with biometric scanners.

Speaker 5 (02:39):
The new eGates join other options available to flyers to
get through security faster. This comes at a time when
travel is booming. TSA reports seven of its ten busiest
travel days ever were this year alone, and next year.
Millions will travel for Soccer's World Cup here in the
US and the country's two hundred and fiftieth birthday.

Speaker 1 (02:59):
That is ABC's lional noise. We do have concerns with
Hurricane Aaron churning out there in the Atlantic. It's not
going to be a direct hit on the Eastern Seaboard,
but an indirect hit is causing a few problems down
toward the North Carolina Coast. There have been some flooding
concerns there and some pretty heavy wave action up in
our neck of the woods. By the time Aaron gets

(03:20):
close to us, we'll have some high surf. In fact,
we're going to pick up some dangerous surf, life threatening
rip currents and beach erosion and coastal flooding as we
head through the week and into Friday night. There was
a high surf advisory South Coast Cape Islands through eight
o'clock Saturday mornings. So getting there. We've got the rain today,
We've got the rain tonight. Some of that rain could

(03:40):
be heavy enough to cost some ponding on roadways and
even import drainage areas. Temperatures mainly in the upper fifties tomorrow.
A bit of rain early for the South Coast Cape Islands.
Otherwise it'll be a mostly cloudy day, breezy for most
of us, windy for some of us, in fact, very
windy across the Capean Islands gus forty to fifty miles
an hour into tomorrow night. Temperatures tomorrow not far from

(04:02):
seventy and then rather cloudy, still breezy with some clearing.
Late Tomorrow night will be close to sixty in Boston
closer to fifty in the inland suburbs. Friday, breezy with
clouds and some sun. Temperatures seventy five to eighty, eighty
to eighty five on Saturday, with more sun than clouds.
Right now we're at sixty three degrees in Boston. If
this cooler weather has you thinking of autumn, there's a

(04:24):
new look at what fall foliage has in store this year.

Speaker 6 (04:27):
As we get ready for another New England fall, we
have to think back to spring and all those rainy weekends,
twelve in a row of them. The dowsing we got
could impact the changing of the leaves this year, according
to a new early forecast from Yankee Magazine. Leaf peeping
expert Jim Salgee says it should still be a stunning show,
but the most brilliant hues may be more of a patchwork.
Across New England for certain elevations. All that rain led

(04:50):
to a lot of fungus growth. So if you're planning
a sightseeing trip, he says, visit different elevations. Now more
of a drought patterns emerging, and whether or not that
last could make a big difference in the coming weeks.
We'll also have to see how much tropical weather comes
our way. Madison Rogers, WBZ Boston's News Radio.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
Well, I still have to rake feeling blue for a
rare lobster in the haunt. That's the norm, as we
hear from wbz's Jared Brosna.

Speaker 3 (05:15):
Northeastern University's Marine Science Center just got a rare student
ahead of the school year.

Speaker 7 (05:20):
We are looking at the home of Neptune, our brand new,
beautiful blue lobster.

Speaker 3 (05:25):
Neptune is a tough interview, so Sierra Munoz, with a
marine science center, gave me his story.

Speaker 7 (05:29):
These bright blues are one in two million. We think
it's even rareer to actually catch them, though, because even
if they're one and two million, it's pretty rare to
see them survive to adulthood. Now, you know, depending on
how hungry you were, he is legal market size.

Speaker 5 (05:46):
But get those ideas of blue lobster rolls out of
your head.

Speaker 7 (05:48):
He would look just the same on your plate, because
it really is just the outside of him that is blue.
So it's a genetic anomaly that he has. When they
form their shells, their exoskeletons, the proteins that determine what
color they are just get kind of modified, and the
protein that he has makes him blue.

Speaker 4 (06:08):
From the hout.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
I'm Jared Brosnan, WVZ, Boston's News Radio. You are now
in the loop for news updates throughout the day. Listen
to WBZ News Radio on the iHeartRadio app. I'm Ben Parker,
WBZ Boston's News Radio.
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