‘NYPD Blue’ Child Star Austin Majors Dead At 27

Austin Majors, the child actor who became famous for his role as Theo Sipowicz in “NYPD Blue” has died, reportedly from fentanyl poisoning.

Majors, 27, also known as Austin Setmajer-Raglin, appeared in 48 episodes of “NYPD Blue” as well as “E.R.,” “NCIS,” and “How I Met Your Mother.”

Majors “was a loving, artistic, brilliant, and kind human being. Austin took great joy and pride in his acting career. He was an active Eagle Scout and graduated Salutatorian in High School. He went on to graduate from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts with a passion of directing and music producing,” the family said in a statement to TMZ.

“Austin’s younger sister, Kali, says her fondest memories with Austin were growing up on set with him, volunteering at events with ‘Kids With a Cause,’ and backpacking together,” the statement continued. “Austin was the kind of son, brother, grandson and nephew that made us proud and we will miss him deeply forever.”

Kali Raglin told Fox News Digital that officials said her brother’s cause of death came from “suspected fentanyl poisoning with an ongoing investigation.”

According to Variety, Majors had been staying at a Los Angeles facility for the homeless.

On Sunday, Kali Raglin wrote on Instagram. “My big brother, Austin, is gone. He died last night. It’s so surreal to me still. He was only 27 with so much life left to live.”

“NYPD Blue, “ created by Steven Bochco and David Milch, ran from September 21, 1993 to March 1, 2005 and became ABC’s longest-running primetime one-hour drama until passed by “Grey’s Anatomy” in 2016. Actor Dennis Franz played the lead character, NYPD detective Andy Sipowicz, father of Theo.

A 2003 episode of the show, titled “Nude Awakening,” showed Theo entering a bathroom where Connie, played by actress Charlotte Ross, was nude. Ross’ nudity from behind, which lasted seven seconds, prompted protests from viewers and the FCC to levy a a $1.2 million indecency fine against ABC which was later vacated by the U.S. Court of Appeals in New York.

Bochco later told GQ that he and then-ABC president Bob Iger (now CEO of Disney) “sat in his office like two little boys, drawing dirty pictures: naked men and women” while considering “How much of this can you see? How much of that?” without angering the Federal Communications Commission.

Lawyer Says Trump Used ‘Classified’ Folder As Lampshade

The controversy over former President Donald Trump’s handling of documents is being cast in a new light.

One of Trump’s lawyers, Timothy Parlatore, reportedly said his boss used an empty manilla folder marked “Classified Evening Summary” as a make-shift lampshade to block the light on his bedroom landline telephone that was keeping him up at night.

“He has one of those landline telephones next to his bed, and it has a blue light on it, and it keeps him up at night. So he took the manilla folder and put it over so it would keep the light down so he could sleep at night,” Parlatore told CNN. “It’s just this folder. It says ‘Classified Evening Summary’ on it. It’s not a classification marking. It’s not anything that is controlled in any way. There is nothing illegal about it.”

Parlatore is representing Trump in Jack Smith’s special counsel investigation into the former president’s handling of government documents after leaving office and circumstances leading up to the breach of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.

CNN previously reported, based on unnamed sources, that the folder was given to the Justice Department along with materials with classified markings and a laptop belonging to an aide to Trump sometime between December and January following a subpoena in May.

The aide copied some pages with classified markings onto the laptop without realizing they classified, Parlatore reportedly assured CNN. “We’ve tried to do searches of all the relevant places, and anytime we’ve found anything, we’ve immediately turned it over,” he said.

Trump has broadly denied any wrongdoing. He has been severely critical of the investigation ever since it entered the public’s view in August 2022 when the FBI raided Trump’s residence at Mar-a-Lago, the former president’s Florida resort, to recover classified documents that Trump had allegedly refused to hand over to the government.

Contrary to Parlatore’s claim of cooperation, Trump responded to Attorney General Merrick Garland’s appointment of Smith as special counsel just days after Trump announced his 2024 presidential campaign in November by telling Fox News he “won’t partake” in the inquiry. Trump also lamented what he described as the “worst politicization of justice in our country.”