
Three tense days after ISIS claimed its American hostage, aid worker Kayla Mueller, was killed in a Jordanian airstrike, the terror group has not presented any hard evidence to back up its claim – a failure that has prompted doubts in ISIS’s story and inspired the Mueller family to cling to long-held hope that she’s alive.
A statement from ISIS that circulated online Friday said Mueller, 26, was killed when Jordanian bombs hit a building outside Raqqa, Syria. The statement used Mueller’s full name, which had not been made public.
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