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Ex-college swimmer and activist Riley Gaines makes major personal announcement – ‘nothing that could’ve prepared me’

ACTIVIST Riley Gaines has made a big personal announcement.

The former collegiate swimmer, 25, made the reveal on social media.

A man and woman smiling at each other while holding their newborn baby, with a date 09/29/2025.
Political activist Riley Gaines announced she had given birth to a baby girl, Margot
Riley Gaines at SiriusXM Studios.
The 25-year-old Gaines is a former collegiate swimmer
Getty

Gaines has welcomed her first child with her husband, Louis Barker.

She announced that she had given birth to a baby girl, named Margot, on September 29 in an emotional Instagram post on Thursday.

“There’s nothing that could’ve prepare for me love like this. God has blessed us beyond belief,” Gaine wrote.

Gaines added pictures of her and her husband holding their baby.

She married the British swimmer Barker in 2022.

The couple had met while both were swimming for the University of Kentucky in 2019.

Back in June, Gaine and Barke announced that they were expecting their first child together.

The announcement came as she was in a public feud with Olympic legend Simone Biles over transgender women competing in women’s sports.

Gaines first revealed she was pregnant during a speech at Turning Point USA’s Young Women’s Leadership Summit in Texas.

Biles had lashed out at Gaines for calling out a Minnesota softball team that was competing with a trans player back in June.

“You’re truly sick, all of this campaigning because you lost a race. Straight up sore loser,” Biles said.

She referenced the 2022 NCAA Championships where Gaines competed against trans swimmer Lia Thomas.

The seven-time Olympic gold medalist got even more personal in a follow-up social media post, saying, “bully someone your own size, which would ironically be a male.”

Gaines hit back in a long video and claimed Biles “had sold out to appear to be virtuous”.

She added that it was “not any woman’s job” to ensure “that men’s feelings are validated and their identity affirmed”.

Biles apologized for the comments four days later, and Gaines accepted.

Gaines’s campaigning has led to her earning respect from President Donald Trump.

The commander-in-chief invited her to appear at the Oval Office when he signed his executive order to prohibit trans athletes from competing in women’s sports.

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Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs has speaking events booked for next week, feds reveal at his sentencing: ‘That is the height of hubris, your honor’

Sean "Diddy" Combs is so confident he'll be released from jail on time served, he's already booked speaking engagements for next week, prosecutors revealed in court Friday.

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Furious’ family speaks out after daughter died ‘trapped in Cybertruck engulfed in flame’ and blame Tesla design

Collage of a crashed Cybertruck and a young woman.

THE GRIEVING parents of a college student killed in a Tesla fireball have accused the company of a deadly design flaw that left her trapped inside as flames engulfed the Cybertruck.

They claim the doors could not be opened when it mattered most – turning the vehicle into a death trap.

Krysta Tsukahara smiling at a restaurant, holding a menu.
Facebook
19-year-old Krysta Tsukahara died trapped in a burning Tesla Cybertruck[/caption]
A firefighter stands next to a burnt Tesla Cybertruck after a crash.
KTVU
Three people, including the driver, were killed in the wreck[/caption]

The lawsuit was filed in Alameda County Superior Court in California.

The case centers on a 19-year-old arts student, Krysta Tsukahara, who died when a Cybertruck crashed and exploded in a suburb of San Francisco.

Her parents allege that Tesla, the company helmed by billionaire Elon Musk, knew for years about serious door issues but failed to act.

They say their daughter’s death could have been prevented if the automaker had fixed the problem.

The teenager had been sitting in the back of the Cybertruck when the driver, allegedly drunk and high, lost control and smashed into a tree.

Three people, including the driver, were killed in the wreck.

A fourth passenger survived only after a rescuer shattered a window and pulled them out.

The Tsukahara family’s legal filing says Krysta never had that chance.

She was left trapped amid the smoke and fire, unable to escape.

“The Tesla design is at fault,” the lawsuit alleges, pointing to the vehicle’s electronic locking system.

Critics say Tesla’s battery-powered doors can fail in crashes and fires, with the manual override releases difficult to locate in an emergency.

Federal regulators have already launched a separate investigation into complaints that Tesla doors can stick shut.

That probe by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration was opened just last month.

Drivers have told regulators they were unable to open back doors to rescue children, and in some cases had to smash windows to get them out.

Tesla attacks

A series of attacks have targeted Tesla showrooms and vehicles starting in early 2025.

The FBI has started investigating the attacks as potential domestic terrorism.

The recent attacks have been linked to people protesting CEO Elon Musk and his work in Donald Trump’s administration.

Some of the attacks include:

  • January 20 and February 19 – Tesla dealership in Salem, Oregon, attacked with Molotov cocktails and gunfire
  • March 3 – Seven Tesla charging stations set on fire near Boston
  • March 9 – Four Cybertrucks burned in a parking lot in Seattle, Washington
  • March 18 – A Tesla service center is set on fire with Molotov cocktails in Las Vegas
  • March 24 – Multiple bombs found inside a Tesla showroom in Texas

Source: CSIS

The Tsukahara family’s lawsuit adds new pressure on the automaker as it faces mounting safety questions.

It also comes as Tesla works to persuade Americans that its cars will soon be safe enough to operate without anyone in the driver’s seat.

The lawsuit was first reported by the New York Times.

It follows a string of other cases claiming Tesla safety failures have cost lives.

In August, a Florida jury ordered Tesla to pay more than $240 million in damages to the family of another student killed in a runaway vehicle.

For Krysta’s family, the fight is personal.

They say she was robbed of her future because of a dangerous design Tesla chose not to fix.

Krysta Tsukahara's parents sitting for an interview.
KTVU
Krysta’s parents allege that Tesla, the company helmed by billionaire Elon Musk, knew for years about serious door issues but failed to act[/caption]

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