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    The Price of Remission
    by David Armstrong ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. The pain jolted me awake. It was barely dawn, a misty February morning in 2023. My side felt as if Id been stabbed.I had been dealing with pain for weeks a bothersome ache that felt like a bad runners cramp. But now it was so intense I had to brace myself against the wall to stand up.A few hours after arriving at the emergency room, I heard my name. A doctor asked me to follow him to a private area, where he told me a scan had uncovered something concerning. There were lesions, areas of bone destruction, on top of both of my hip bones and on my sternum. These were hallmarks of multiple myeloma. Cancer, he said.Multiple myeloma is a blood cancer that ravages bone, leaving distinctive holes in its wake. Subsequent scans showed innumerable lesions from my neck to my feet as well as two broken ribs and a compression fracture in my spine. There is no cure.I walked out of the ER in search of fresh air. I sat on a metal bench and did what many patients do. I turned to Google. The first link was a medical review stating that the average lifespan of a newly diagnosed patient was three to five years. My stomach churned.I soon learned that information was outdated. Most patients today live much longer, in large part due to a drug with a horrific past. It was a doctor at the hospital who first told me I would likely take a thalidomide drug as part of my treatment.That couldnt be possible, I told him. I knew the story of thalidomide, or at least I thought I did. It represented one of the darkest chapters in the history of modern medicine, having caused thousands of severe birth defects after it was given to pregnant women in the 1950s and 1960s. The drug was banned in most of the world, and the scandal gave rise to the modern-day U.S. Food and Drug Administration.It turns out the drug once relegated to a pharmaceutical graveyard had new life as a cancer fighter.That drug I take is called Revlimid. It is a derivative of thalidomide, a slightly tweaked version of the parent compound.Revlimid is now one of the bestselling pharmaceutical products of all time, with total sales of more than $100 billion. It has extended tens of thousands of lives including my own.But Revlimid is also, I soon learned, extraordinarily expensive, costing nearly $1,000 for each daily pill. (Although, I later discovered, a capsule costs just 25 cents to make.)That steep tab has put the drugs lifesaving potential out of reach for some cancer patients, who have been forced into debt or simply stopped taking the drug. The price also helps fuel our ballooning insurance premiums.For decades, Ive reported on outrageous health care costs in the U.S. and the burden they place on patients. Ive revealed the tactics used by drug companies to drive sales and keep the price of their products high.Even with my experience, the cost of Revlimid stood out. When I started taking the drug, Id look at the smooth, cylindrical capsule in my hand and consider the fact I was about to swallow something that costs about the same as a new iPhone. A months supply, which arrives in an ordinary, orange-tinged plastic bottle, is the same price as a new Nissan Versa.I wanted to know how this drug came to cost so much and why the price keeps going up. The price of Revlimid has been hiked 26 times since it launched. Some of what happened was reported at the time. But no one has pieced together the full account of what the drugmaker Celgene did, how federal regulators failed to rein it in and what the story reveals about unrestrained drug pricing in America.What I discovered astonished even me.My journey started with an indefatigable New York City lawyer on a quest to give her dying husband a chance. Tiny and Terrifying Beth Wolmers story begins on a moon-splashed beach in the Cayman Islands in the winter of 1995. She and her husband, Ira, were holding hands as they walked in the sand, enjoying a rare break from a hectic life as parents to a 1-year-old daughter and demanding jobs as 30-something professionals in New York City.They had met through friends and clicked from the start. On Sunday mornings, they sat together for hours, sharing sections of the newspaper and eating bagels. They planned trips to Europe and outings to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.Ira was an interventional cardiologist who followed his father into medicine. Beth was a lawyer at the high-powered firm Skadden Arps.We had a great life, Beth told me. I specifically remember coming home on the bus and thinking: My life is just perfect, perfect. Im not going to change a thing.As they walked that night in the Caribbean, Ira felt a sharp pain in his cheekbone. The pain flared several more times during the trip, becoming so intense that it brought tears to his eyes.When he got home, Ira made an appointment to figure out what was wrong. Imaging tests revealed multiple myeloma. The prognosis was grim. The couple was told Ira had two years to live.Specialists recommended treatments that would only provide a brief reprieve. The couple searched for someone who could offer something more. Thats when they found Dr. Bart Barlogie in Little Rock, Arkansas. Ive never been more scared of a spouse of a patient than I was of her. Dr. David Siegel, who treated Ira Wolmer Barlogie had been recruited to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences from the more prestigious MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. In Texas, Barlogie had been frustrated by a medical culture that he viewed as too timid in its approach to multiple myeloma.He remembers working on a Sunday when a newly diagnosed patient was admitted to the hospital. With few options, Barlogie decided to put the patient on a taxing, four-drug chemotherapy cocktail used for lymphoma patients. It didnt work. The patient died from a sepsis infection, a known complication of the treatment.The attending physician later admonished him, Barlogie said, saying, Bart, we have to learn to treat myeloma gently. Barlogie said he thought to himself, Fuck you.In Arkansas, Barlogie was in charge. He quickly developed a reputation as a practitioner willing to try anything to fight the fatal disease. Patients from around the world including the actor Roy Scheider from the movie Jaws flocked to his clinic.Beth and Ira heard Barlogie before they saw him. The cowboy boots hed taken to donning since his time in Houston clacked down the linoleum hallway floors. A short, slight man, Barlogie had a booming voice with a German accent. He wore leather jackets and round, red-framed glasses on his bald head.When he strode into the exam room, he hugged Beth and Ira and told them they had come to the right place.Now retired, Barlogie recalls being struck by Beths intensity. He said she told him you must do something to help Ira.I met Barlogie at his home in Little Rock. We sat in his office, which is filled with photos of the red Ducati motorcycle he used to ride to work. An old license plate with the letters MMCURED sat on a shelf, reflecting his goal to find a cure for multiple myeloma.When Beth and Ira found him, Barlogie told me, he had been having some success with a novel approach that put patients through two stem cell transplants a few months apart, which he called a tandem stem cell transplant. With a transplant, a patient is bombarded with high-dose chemotherapy to kill the cancerous plasma cells. The patient is then infused with healthy stem cells that travel to the bone marrow.The intense chemotherapy can be grueling and poses a small risk of death.Ira underwent three transplants. Each time, he relapsed. By the fall of 1997, after two years of treatment, Iras thick black hair was gone. He was losing weight. Then he had a stroke. His kidneys failed and required dialysis. He developed pneumonia and had to be intubated.Beth was determined to keep him alive long enough for their toddler daughter to remember him. With a photograph of Ira smiling with their baby as motivation, she applied her lawyers tenacity to the case. She pored over medical journals and peppered oncologists with questions about why what they were trying wasnt working or quizzing them about a promising study. When doctors told her there was nothing more they could do for her husband, she refused to accept it.She is a tiny person, but she is terrifying, said Dr. David Siegel, part of the team that treated Ira in Arkansas. Ive never been more scared of a spouse of a patient than I was of her. He meant it as a compliment.By late fall in 1997, Ira was dying and Beth was desperate.A researcher told her about the work of Dr. Judah Folkman, a surgeon and researcher at Boston Childrens Hospital. Folkman believed the growth of cancerous tumors could be stunted by starving them of a supply of new blood vessels. Thank You, God Folkman was a workaholic who, when he wasnt in the operating room or the research lab, was traveling across the world to promote his novel theory of how to attack cancer. Peers had ridiculed his idea since he first proposed it in the 1970s. The prevailing belief at the time was that tumors didnt need a new blood supply to grow.A young researcher in his lab, an ophthalmologist named Robert DAmato, was at work on the top question Folkman had posed. Could they come up with a drug, in pill form, that blocks the growth of new blood vessels?Folkman has since died, but it wasnt difficult for me to track down DAmato. He still works at Boston Childrens Hospital, where he has his own lab and holds the Judah Folkman Chair in Surgery. Now in his early 60s, DAmato has a youthful energy and speaks in a rapid, matter-of-fact clip.DAmato told me that he had set out to find existing drugs that block blood vessel growth. He started by thinking of his own body and side effects caused by certain drugs. A drug that causes hair loss might be the result of the blood supply to hair follicles being shut off, for example. But this exercise wasnt producing any viable candidates.After giving it some thought, DAmato realized he had myopically narrowed his search. What about a womans body? There were drugs that stopped menstrual cycles. Then there were drugs that caused birth defects in pregnant women. In both of those cases, it was possible the drug was inhibiting blood vessel growth. He came up with a list of 10 drugs. At the top of the list was one with a devastating history: thalidomide.Beginning in the 1950s, pregnant women in Europe, Australia and other countries were frequently prescribed thalidomide as a treatment for morning sickness and to help them sleep. The drug was thought to be harmless and in Germany was sold over the counter. An advertisement for thalidomide in the United Kingdom claimed it could be given with complete safety to pregnant women and nursing mothers without adverse effect on mother or child.They were wrong.The drug was eventually linked to birth defects in more than 10,000 babies. Those babies were born without limbs or with shortened limbs, malformed hands, disfigured faces and damage to internal organs. Nearly half died within months of being born.By the early 1960s, the drug was widely banned, considered a shameful chapter in the history of pharmaceuticals. It was never sold in the U.S. thanks to the unwavering objections of a resolute reviewer at the FDA named Frances Oldham Kelsey. The close call, however, prompted Congress to require more rigorous safety and efficacy data from drug manufacturers and empower the FDA to monitor the industry more closely.DAmato theorized that the thalidomide birth defects were the result of the drug stopping the growth of new blood vessels that the fetus needs to develop. He walked me through his experiments: He cracked a fertilized chicken egg on a glass petri dish and placed thalidomide on the surface. After two days, if no blood vessels grow on the embryo, a halo should appear around the thalidomide sample, showing the drug worked. It didnt.Folkman told DAmato to move on. But DAmato couldnt shake the disappointing results. He did more research and realized thalidomide needs to first be broken down in the body to have an effect on humans. He purchased metabolites of thalidomide, repeated the test and this time found a halo around the sample.He kept experimenting and in 1994 published a paper finding that thalidomide had clear implications for treating tumors.So when Beth called three years later, Folkman told her they should try it.Barlogie told me he didnt think it would work. Beth said she had to convince him to try it.Barlogie agreed to test it on Ira and two other patients who were out of treatment options in early December. I wanted him alive forever. Beth Wolmer The drug did not work for Ira. Beth said just before he died, Ira sat up in bed, kissed her and smiled. It was March 10, 1998. He was 38.After years of frantically searching for anything that would help, the finality of his death was difficult to accept, she said. I wanted him alive forever.It is unclear what happened with the second patient. The third patient, however, started to get better.His name was Jimmy. Little more is known about him except that he was a patient of another oncologist at the hospital, Dr. Seema Singhal, and near death before he started the drug. I told him it might work, but at the very least it would help him sleep, Singhal said. Shortly after Jimmy took his first dose of thalidomide, Singhal left for a vacation. Dr. Bart Barlogie and Dr. Seema Singhal (Painting by James Lee Chiahan for ProPublica) When she returned two weeks later, her mailbox was full of lab results for Jimmy. He was still alive. She sat down to double-check the results, which showed declining amounts of a cancer marker. For 30 minutes, I was the only person in the world who knew this worked, she said.Singhal walked down to Barlogies office to give him the news. He took me by the hand, opened a window and shouted, Thank you, God, she said. Violent Arguments Word of Jimmys stunning recovery in Arkansas quickly made its way to the offices of Celgene Corp., located in a small corporate park in a rural patch of northern New Jersey.The company had just wrapped up a brutal year-end accounting, which showed losses of $27 million on revenue of just $1.1 million. Money was so tight that executives engaged in what one of them called violent arguments over whether to charge employees for coffee.Celgene had acquired the rights to thalidomide patents held by researchers at Rockefeller University in 1992. The company, which was new to pharmaceuticals, planned to use the experience of obtaining FDA approval for thalidomide to develop other drugs.It wasnt meant to be a blockbuster, said Sol Barer, who started at the company in 1987 and later became CEO.When Celgene announced plans to develop the disgraced drug for new uses, the only analyst following the company on Wall Street dropped coverage and told Celgene officials they didnt know what they were doing.The company thought the largest market would be as a treatment for AIDS patients experiencing dangerous weight loss. To win approval of the drug, however, Celgene selected a use that was already in practice in parts of the world for a small group of patients.In July 1998, the FDA approved thalidomide for the treatment of a painful complication of leprosy. It was a momentous decision, coming just a few decades after the drug caused so much harm.The market for leprosy was tiny, but what happened with Jimmy in Arkansas changed everything for the company. Blocked Exits The Arkansas doctors had been busy since first testing thalidomide on Ira Wolmer, Jimmy and the other patient. They quickly got approval to conduct a larger experiment funded by a grant from the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Now, in December 1998, they were ready to share their initial findings at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.It had been three decades since a new therapy for multiple myeloma had been approved, and there was a buzz among the oncologists gathered in Miami Beach for the conference. So many doctors crowded into the room for the presentation that the fire marshal had to intervene several times to clear exit ways. Word had already spread among multiple myeloma specialists about Jimmy. Now, the assembled doctors wanted to know whether it had been a fluke or a discovery that would fundamentally change how they practiced.Singhal was tasked with presenting the data. It was a big stage for the 32-year-old doctor, who had only been practicing in the U.S. for two years. It completely changed the treatment landscape. Dr. Seema Singhal The 89 patients in the study were high-risk cases who had undergone prior treatment. They were patients who, like Ira, had run out of options. Now, after thalidomide treatment, one-third had declines in myeloma activity.Those were stunning numbers, unlike anything seen before in the treatment of multiple myeloma. When Singhal finished, the room erupted in applause.It completely changed the treatment landscape, she said.I wasnt able to track down Jimmy, but I have a sense of how he might have felt when he realized the treatment was working.After my initial emergency room visit, it took time to confirm my diagnosis and do some additional testing. While I waited, the pain worsened. Painkillers barely made a dent. All I could picture was this cancer eating away at my bones, doing more damage every day. David Armstrong (Painting by James Lee Chiahan for ProPublica) Some patients wait months for care. I was lucky enough to meet my oncologist within weeks. He had a script for Revlimid ready to go, part of a regimen of four drugs I would take as standard induction therapy, and I was able to start it within days.The initial dose of Revlimid cost $18,255 for a months supply, and my insurance covered the cost.Within a month, my blood tests showed a massive drop in a key cancer indicator.My pain gradually subsided too. By the end of April, I wrote in my journal that the pain was a 3 or 4 instead of the usual 9 or 10. It doesnt hurt to get out of bed anymore, I wrote. A Piggy Bank The discovery in Arkansas made thalidomide, which Celgene sold as Thalomid, an instant hit.As a result, Celgenes revenue increased nearly sevenfold to $26.2 million in the year after the Miami presentation. It sold its thalidomide pills for $7.50 each.From those modest beginnings, Celgene took a slightly altered version of that pill and turned it into one of the bestselling and most expensive prescription drugs in history. Celgenes success with Thalomid was the result of remarkable good fortune, a case where the heavy lifting of discovery and initial testing had already been done, by Beth Wolmer, DAmato, Barlogie, Singhal and others.The development of the drug that would become Revlimid took me deep into the confounding, sharp-elbowed world of drug patents, which ostensibly protect drugmakers, allowing them to recoup the massive investments they made in developing a new product. Celgene drew on patent law, a drug safety system and even patient assistance programs to guard the exclusivity of its prized drug and the massive revenue it generated.Those tactics, detailed in reams of court filings, allowed Celgene to treat Revlimid like a piggy bank, tapping it whenever it wanted. There was a common internal theme at Celgene that cancer patients were willing to pay almost any amount Celgene charged. David Schmidt, a former Celgene executive Amid the early success of Thalomid, Celgene identified two potential threats: One was obvious. Thaldiomide caused birth defects, a looming risk that could result in it being pulled from the market. The other was that Celgene held limited patents on the drug. Patents are exclusive legal rights to inventions, and researchers file them on nearly every aspect of drug development as soon as they can, locking up everything from specific sets of ingredients to the way the drug is used and administered. The more robust patents a company has, the longer it can potentially ward off competitors.Thalidomide was an old drug and Celgenes patents did not cover the active ingredient, leaving it open to competition. The patents it did have, covering items such as the optimal dosages and its use in treating particular diseases, were considered weaker and open to a court challenge. If Celgene could create a new version of thalidomide ideally one that didnt cause birth defects the company could seek more and stronger patents that would extend beyond those of the original drug.So researchers at Celgene tested analogs of thalidomide, which are drugs that have a similar effect but are different from the parent compound in minor ways, such as having one less oxygen atom. The analogs are also more potent than the original, meaning they can achieve a similar effect at lower doses.Celgene was not alone in its efforts. DAmato was also studying thalidomide analogs and filing patents on their use, which he and Boston Childrens Hospital licensed to a Celgene competitor, EntreMed Inc.With dueling patents, the companies sued each other in 2002. Celgene was newly flush with cash from rising sales of thalidomide. EntreMed, on the other hand, was burning through money as it focused most of its resources on developing other drugs discovered in Folkmans lab.In December of 2002, the companies settled.Celgene agreed to pay Boston Childrens Hospital royalties from future sales of Revlimid. In exchange, the hospital and DAmato licensed their patents of thalidomide analogs to Celgene. Celgene also agreed to pay EntreMed $27 million.For Celgene, the fight with EntreMed was a valuable experience. It learned that competition can be neutralized. The Rise of Revlimid Celgene had kept the price of Thalomid low when it was initially intended for AIDS patients, CEO John Jackson told investors in 2004, as the company didnt want huge numbers of people demonstrating in front of its office.That wasnt a problem with cancer patients. There was plenty of room for very substantial increases in the price of the drug now, Jackson told investors. It is time for us to take Jimbo to the wood shed. A senior Celgene official discussing a doctor critical of Revlimid Just two days earlier, Celgene had hiked the price of Thalomid to $47 a pill.There was a common internal theme at Celgene that cancer patients were willing to pay almost any amount Celgene charged, wrote David Schmidt, a former national account manager at the company, in a whistleblower lawsuit he filed after his employment was terminated in 2008. The lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed by Schmidt. (Jackson didnt respond to requests for comment; Schmidt declined to talk to me.)When Celgene launched Revlimid in December of 2005, it set the initial price at $55,000 a year, or $218 a pill, which was about double what analysts expected.Seven months later, when the FDA approved the drug for multiple myeloma, the price jumped to $70,560 a year, or $280 a pill. The Price of Revlimid Has Increased 26 Times Since FDA Approval Each dot indicates a new manufacturer list price per pill. (Source: AnalySource) The cost to manufacture each Revlimid pill, meanwhile, was 25 cents. I found a deposition marked highly confidential in which a top Celgene executive testified that the cost started at a quarter and never changed.Even on Wall Street, which cheered higher pricing, the initial cost of Revlimid prompted concern among analysts who tracked the company that such aggressive maneuvering would cause insurers to push back. In the U.S., that is one of the only real checks on the price of prescription drugs. That fear turned out to be unfounded, and Celgene would repeatedly test the bounds of how high it could go.At the same time, Celgene worked to mute any criticism of Revlimid.In 2005, Celgene received reports that Los Angeles oncologist Dr. James Berenson was bashing Revlimid in presentations sponsored by patient groups.In one email, a senior company official said, it is time for us to take Jimbo to the wood shed. The company discussed a range of options for dealing with the doctor, from taking legal action to arranging a sit-down with Celgenes chief executive.Ultimately, the company appears to have decided on a friendlier course of action. Berenson became a frequent paid speaker and consultant for the company, with payments totaling at least $333,000, according to Celgene disclosures. Berenson declined to comment.He wasnt the only doctor the company befriended. Payment records show that between 2013 and 2018, Celgene paid doctors $11 million for speaking engagements and consulting work related to Revlimid. At one point, Celgene rented a suite at the Houston Astros baseball stadium to throw a party for the entire multiple myeloma department at the MD Anderson Cancer Center, according to court testimony. The center said it was unable to verify any of those details. They remind me of an octopus with many, many tentacles, and at the end of each tentacle is a wad of cash. David Mitchell, president of Patients For Affordable Drugs Celgene went on to spread its largess across the multiple myeloma world. It funded patient groups, sponsored medical meetings and contracted with prestigious academic medical centers.They remind me of an octopus with many, many tentacles, and at the end of each tentacle is a wad of cash, said David Mitchell, a former Washington, D.C., communications executive who launched a nonprofit organization to fight for lower prices after he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma. Everybody relies on the money. Mitchell said his group, Patients For Affordable Drugs, does not accept donations from any entity that profits from the development or distribution of pharmaceuticals.At the same time it showered doctors and patient groups with money, Celgene was shutting Beth Wolmer out. She told me that John Jackson, the CEO at the time, had promised her a paid board seat at the company as a way of compensating her for her role in the discovery before the company cut off communication.Wolmer sued Celgene in federal court in 2009, seeking $300 million or more for alleged misappropriation of her idea and what she termed the unjust enrichment of Celgene.Celgene said it never promised to compensate Wolmer. The company also suggested she greatly inflated her role in the discovery and, in any event, waited too long to take legal action.In 2010, a judge granted Celgenes motion for summary judgment in the case, agreeing that the statute of limitations had expired while at the same time expressing admiration for Wolmers contribution to the struggle against this terrible disease. Ira and Beth Wolmer in the Cayman Islands (Painting by James Lee Chiahan for ProPublica) Wolmer has remarried and changed her name to Jacobson. She remains disappointed about the way she was treated by Celgene. There was no ambiguity about who found the purpose of this drug, and Im thrilled that its helping so many people, she said. Why they treated me that way? I dont know. The Generic Threat After the FDA approved Revlimid in late 2005, it also granted Celgene something else: seven years of market exclusivity because the drug treats a rare disease. In those seven years, Celgene raised the price of the drug nine times, increasing the price per pill by 82% to $397 in 2012.The company also fended off challengers by claiming its patents protected the drug from competition until 2027.But by 2010 generic makers were already working on copies of the drug, preparing to challenge those patents and enter the market earlier. A government analysis has found that generics generally lower the price of brand name drugs by an average of 85% after just one year.Celgene was well aware of the danger generics posed and warned in a 2012 financial filing that their entry into the market could have a material adverse effect on its finances. At that point, Revlimid sales made up 70% of the companys revenue.Celgene needed another move.The drug still posed a risk of birth defects like the parent compound. In approving the drug, the FDA had mandated a strict safety program to control its prescription and distribution.Celgene realized early on that this could also be a tool to thwart competition. An internal company presentation at the time noted that the safety program could make it more difficult for generic companies to access thalidomide for testing.Generic drug makers are required by the FDA to test their version against the brand name drug, so they need to buy small amounts of Revlimid from the company.By 2012, at least six generic makers had requested to purchase Revlimid for testing. In every case, Celgene refused.Federal regulators took notice. The FDA had warned Celgene that it could not use the safety program to block or delay approval of generic competitors. Now, it appeared to be doing just that.The Federal Trade Commission, which enforces antitrust laws, had been investigating Celgene for years and in June of 2012 notified the company it was poised to take action.In a previously unreported letter, the FTC said that its staff had recommended filing a legal complaint against the company for refusing to sell to competitors, thereby keeping them out of the marketplace. The commissions patience is wearing thin. FTC official Richard Feinstein to a Celgene attorney In its letter, the FTC noted that while Celgene refused to sell its drugs to potential competitors, it routinely provided Revlimid to other third parties around the world, including researchers and universities studying the drug.Then, in August of 2012, the FDA directed Celgene to sell a small amount of Revlimid to a generic competitor.With both federal agencies bearing down on Celgene, a closed-door meeting was held at FDA headquarters at the end of August. The FTC sent five lawyers, and 11 FDA staffers attended. Celgene showed up with a large contingent that included in-house lawyers and outside counsel.Celgene started by denying it was using the safety program to block generics, according to minutes of the meeting. (The minutes were filed in a court case against Celgene, and it is unclear if they were prepared by the agencies or the company.) Citing the threat of birth defects, the company said that it had legitimate safety concerns about selling Revlimid to generic companies and that it needed to protect its investment in the drug.Jane Axelrad, an associate director for the FDA, told Celgene that it was raising safety concerns because the company does not want generics on the market, according to the minutes. She declined to comment.The meeting ended without a resolution. The FDA had no way of enforcing its directive to Celgene. The FTC staff, however, was still determined to act. The agency had spent more than two years investigating Celgene. It hired experts, deposed Celgene officials and obtained internal company documents.The staff drafted a complaint alleging the company engaged in unfair actions to maintain a monopoly, hoping either that it would push the company to agree to sell to competitors to avoid legal action or that Celgene would be forced to do so by the courts, according to a person familiar with the agencys stance.The commissions patience is wearing thin, FTC official Richard Feinstein wrote to the companys lawyer in February 2013. We have reached a point where the staff may be instructed in the very near future to commence litigation. (Feinstein did not respond to emails seeking a comment.)Celgene appeared to relent, telling the FTC that it would sell to generic makers, as long as the FDA approved their safety plan. In July, the FDA approved the safety protocols of generic maker Mylan.Still, Celgene refused to sell.Jon Leibowitz, who was the chairman of the FTC at the time, told me that Celgenes promise to cooperate, even if it didnt result in any sales to generic makers, lessened interest in the case among his fellow commissioners. Three of five commissioners need to vote in favor of commencing litigation. Now, in retrospect, he said that if we knew then what we know now about the delays, we certainly would have brought a case.The agency would close its case in 2017 without taking any action.With would-be generic competitors sidelined by Celgenes refusal to sell drugs for testing, the company continued to raise the price of Revlimid. They could raise their price any time they wanted to. Francis Brown, former Celgene sales executive On a Saturday morning in early March of 2014, Celgene President Mark Alles sent an internal email complaining of disappointing first quarter Revlimid sales. Revenue from the star drug, which had surpassed $1 billion the previous quarter, was down by about 1% or $11.4 million.I have to consider every legitimate opportunity available to us to improve our Q1 performance, he wrote. But the only idea he proposed was a familiar one: raise the price of the drug.Alles said he wanted a meeting the following Monday to discuss an immediate 4% price increase, followed by another increase of 3% at the beginning of September.The company implemented those hikes, along with a third in December. It brought the price of Revlimid to $9,854 a month, or $469 a pill, and helped boost Revlimid sales for the year to $5 billion. Alles didnt respond to my requests for comment.They could raise their price any time they wanted to, said Francis Brown, a former sales executive at the company, in a 2015 deposition. I wasnt able to reach Brown for comment.Celgene found a solution to the generic threat when it struck a deal to settle a lawsuit brought by generic maker NATCO Pharma in 2015. NATCO could bring a generic to market, Celgene agreed, but not for seven more years in March 2022. Even then, the generic would be limited to less than 10% of the total market for Revlimid in the first year, with gradual increases after that. The deal set the bar for deals with other rivals for limited generic sales, and it ensured that unlimited generic competition and lower prices would not arrive until 2026.The delayed entry of generics may have been bad news for patients and health care payors, but there was one constituency that was thrilled with the 2015 deal. Celgenes stock jumped nearly 10% the day after it was announced. Ridiculous, Ugly and Killer Revlimid turned out to be a unicorn for Celgene, a drug whose financial success proved impossible to replicate.In October of 2017, Celgene announced it was abandoning a once-promising effort to develop a drug for Crohns disease. Shares of Celgene declined by 11%.As it had done so many times in the past, Celgene tapped Revlimid to try to mitigate the damage. The day it announced the failure of the Crohns drug, it quietly raised the price of Revlimid by 9%.By the end of the year, Celgene had cumulatively raised the cost 20% to $662 a pill, the largest one-year increase in the drugs history.That made Revlimid the most expensive Medicare drug that year, with the government insurance program spending $3.3 billion to provide it to 37,459 patients.At Celgene, the brash increases triggered rare internal dissent. Betty Swartz, the companys vice president of U.S. market access, objected to the measures in a pricing meeting with the CEO, who at the time was Alles, and other top executives. She said her concerns were swiftly dismissed, according to a whistleblower lawsuit she filed and later dismissed.Why would you be afraid to take an increase on our products? she said the CEO told her. What could be the worst thing that happens ... a tweet here or there and bad press for a bit. Swartz declined to comment.The price increases added to the burden faced by many patients. In online groups, patients use words like ridiculous, ugly and killer when talking about the financial pain they have experienced related to the high costs associated with Revlimid. Some have taken out mortgages, raided retirement funds or cut back on everyday expenses like groceries to pay for Revlimid. Others have found overseas suppliers who ship the drug for pennies on the dollar, although doctors caution theres no way to guarantee quality. Some just decide not to take the drug.By increasing the price of Revlimid, Celgene executives in several instances boosted their pay. Thats because bonuses were tied to meeting revenue and earnings targets. In some years, executives would not have hit those targets without the Revlimid price increases, a congressional investigation later found.In total, Celgene paid a handful of top executives about a half-billion dollars in the 12 years after Revlimid was approved.Robert Hugin, who worked as Celgenes CEO and then executive chairman, received $51 million in total compensation from 2015 to 2017. Hugin retired in 2018 to launch an unsuccessful Senate bid. Even sales reps earned more than $1 million a year and were rewarded with trips to resorts such as the Four Seasons in Maui. That pay is more than two times what the average oncologist earns.I connected with Hugin just before Christmas while he was driving. He was ardent in his defense of the pricing of Revlimid. He told me the drug passes any cost-benefit analysis because of its impact on multiple myeloma patients like myself. People recognize when you have a breakthrough therapy and you have an opportunity to deliver that, you want to deliver that across the world, he said. And I think Revlimid is an example of a product that ends up to be a global lifesaver because of what it did.Hugin told me that when Revlimid has unlimited generic competition, the price will be cheaper than aspirin and patients will benefit from that low price for many decades.Celgene also cited the cost of developing drugs and its expansive research efforts as reasons for the high cost of Revlimid. Celgene said it spent $800 million to develop Revlimid and spent several hundred million more on additional trials to study the use of the drug in other cancers. Those combined figures represent about 2% to 3% of Revlimid sales through 2018. The drug didnt get any better. The cancer patients didnt get any better. You just got better at making money. You just refined your skills at price gouging. Former Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif. By the end of 2018, Celgenes stock was down 56% over the past 15 months amid development failures. Despite the raft of bad news, Alles total pay that year increased by $3 million to $16.2 million.Celgene tried desperately to boost its flagging stock price by buying back $6 billion of its own shares that year.Ultimately, the buyback was not enough. Just days into the new year in 2019, Celgene announced it had agreed to be acquired by Bristol Myers Squibb in a deal valued at $74 billion.As part of a severance agreement, top Celgene executives stood to make millions once the deal closed. For Alles, that meant a potential estimated payday of $27.9 million.In the fall of 2020, Alles appeared before the House Oversight Committee, which was investigating the high cost of prescription drugs. He said pricing decisions reflected our commitment to patient access, the value of a medicine to patients and the health care system, the continuous effort to discover new medicines and new uses for existing medicines, and the need for financial flexibility.When it came time for questions, then-Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif., quizzed Alles in rapid-fire style about Revlimid. Did the drug change as the price increased? Did it work faster? Were there fewer side effects? The drug was the same, Alles responded.So, to recap here, Porter said. The drug didnt get any better. The cancer patients didnt get any better. You just got better at making money. You just refined your skills at price gouging. The Drumbeat Continues High prices have consequences beyond individual patients. While there have been tremendous advancements in the treatment of my disease, there is still no cure. The specter of relapse hovers over every blood test, every new ache or pain.The day I learned I was in remission, in November 2023, was bittersweet. I wrote at the time that I didnt get to ring a bell the traditional sign that a cancer patient has finished treatment. Instead, my doctor explained the next step: maintenance treatment.This includes not only continuing Revlimid, but making monthly visits to my cancer center to get a shot of a bone-strengthening drug, have another drug injected into my stomach and blood drawn for lab tests.The visit, I wrote that day, only reinforced the fact that Im a patient, and I always will be.For most of us, cancer will return at some point after treatment. And for most patients, the drugs eventually stop working.Revlimid can also be difficult to live with. Some patients quit the drug after developing severe gastrointestinal issues, infections or liver problems. The drug also poses an increased risk of stroke, heart attack and secondary cancers.Those are the trade-offs for keeping multiple myeloma in check.Meanwhile, the drumbeat of price increases continues under Bristol Myers Squibb, helping the company bring in $48 billion in revenue from Revlimid since it purchased Celgene. Bristol said its pricing reflects the continued clinical benefit Revlimid brings to patients, along with other economic factors. The company said it is committed to achieving unfettered patient access to our medicines and provides some financial support for eligible patients. While BMS develops prices for its medicines, we do not determine what patients will pay out of pocket.Last July, the cost of my monthly Revlimid prescription increased by 7% to $19,660.At the beginning of this year, my insurer switched me to generic Revlimid. I didnt fight it, thinking it would result in a dramatic decrease in what ProPublicas health plan pays for the drug.It turns out it is not much of a savings: The generic costs $17,349 a month. Alec Glassford contributed research.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    U.S. Trade Deal Could Help UK Economy, but Wont Transform It
    The deal could help some sectors and boost confidence among consumers and businesses, but the British economy faces other challenges.
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    Russias Military Show of Strength Masks Economic and Diplomatic Cracks
    The annual Moscow parade marking victory over Nazi Germany is expected to be the largest in years, with world leaders in attendance, as the Kremlin tries to link that triumph to the war in Ukraine.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    What to Know About mRNA Vaccines
    We asked experts about how the technology works, its safety and its potential in medicine.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Aja Wilson Now Has a Nike Signature Shoe. Why Did It Take So Long?
    The marketability of Aja Wilson offers a case study in race, fame and gender.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    For Embattled Starmer, U.S.-U.K. Trade Deal Will Count as a Win
    Prime Minister Keir Starmer has spent months nurturing his relationship with President Trump. Is that about to pay off?
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Mistrial for Michigan police officer charged in fatal shooting of Congolese immigrant
    Former Grand Rapids Police officer Christopher Schurr sits in court during the second day of his trial at the Kent County Courthouse in Grand Rapids, Mich., Tuesday, April 29, 2025. Schurr is charged with second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of Patrick Lyoya, a 26-year-old Congolese immigrant during a traffic stop on April 4, 2022. (WOOD-TV via AP, Pool)2025-05-08T14:00:34Z GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) A judge declared a mistrial Thursday after the jury couldnt reached a unanimous verdict in the second-degree murder trial of a Michigan police officer who shot Patrick Lyoya, a Black man, following a traffic stop in 2022.The judge declared a mistrial and ended the proceedings, a partial victory for Christopher Schurr, who still could face another trial. Lyoyas death had sparked weeks of protest in Grand Rapids, especially after the citys police chief released video of the confrontation. Schurr shot Lyoya, a Congolese immigrant, in the back of the head while the 26-year-old lay facedown on the ground. Schurr told jurors that he feared his life was at stake after losing control of his Taser during an intense struggle in a residential neighborhood. Schurr, a seven-year veteran of the Grand Rapids police department, was fired shortly after he was charged in 2022. The mistrial came a day after three former Memphis police officers were acquitted in the beating death of Tyre Nichols after a traffic stop. His death more than two years ago was the first post-George Floyd case that revealed the limits of an unprecedented reckoning over police reform and racial injustice in Black America. Heavy security was present in the small courtroom Thursday morning. Relatively few members of the general public were present compared to the rest of the trial, when the rows were filled with people in support of either Schurr or the Lyoya family. Schurr stared straight ahead as the mistrial was declared. One spectator sitting on the side of the courtroom near the Lyoya family loudly objected to the mistrial as he left the courtroom.Thank you for your time, Judge Christina Mims told the jury. Schurr stopped a Nissan Altima driven by Lyoya for improper license plates on April 4, 2022.Body camera and dash camera footage showed Lyoya running after Schurr requested his drivers license. Schurr tackled him and a struggle ensued. The officer tried to subdue Lyoya by firing his Taser but he was unsuccessful. Lyoya eventually got control of the device, which fires electrically charged probes, and Schurr repeatedly demanded that he stop resisting and drop the Taser.Schurr was on top of Lyoya when he shot him in the head. Videos were a key part of trial and were repeatedly shown to the jury.The struggle with the Taser was central to Schurrs defense. He testified that he was running on fumes after the fight and in great fear because a Taser can cause excruciating pain and injury.I believed that if I hadnt done it at that time, I wasnt going to go home, Schurr said of shooting Lyoya.The prosecutor, however, argued that the Taser had already been deployed twice by Schurr by that time and could only be used in a different mode if Lyoya had decided to turn it against the officer.Its not known why Lyoya was trying to flee. Records show his drivers license was revoked at the time and there was an arrest warrant for him in a domestic violence case, though Schurr didnt know it. An autopsy revealed his blood-alcohol level was three times above the legal limit for driving, according to testimony. Lyoya ultimately joined a list of other Black immigrants who sought better lives in the U.S., only to suffer abuse or death at the hands of law enforcement. Before him were Botham Jean, Amadou Diallo and Abner Louima all men whose cases increased awareness around the global impact of systemic racism in policing.As in many U.S. cities, Grand Rapids police have been occasionally criticized over the use of force, particularly against Black people, who make up 18% of the population. ISABELLA VOLMERT Volmert covers Michigan government and politics for The Associated Press, with a focus on women in state government. She is based in Lansing. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Cancer before age 50 is increasing. A new study looks at which types
    A radiologist uses a magnifying glass to check mammograms for breast cancer in Los Angeles, May 6, 2010. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)2025-05-08T14:01:39Z Cancer before age 50 is rare, but increasing, in the United States and researchers want to know why.A new government study provides the most complete picture yet of early-onset cancers, finding that the largest increases are in breast, colorectal, kidney and uterine cancers. Scientists from the National Cancer Institute looked at data that included more than 2 million cancers diagnosed in people 15 to 49 years old between 2010 and 2019.Of 33 cancer types, 14 cancers had increasing rates in at least one younger age group. About 63% of the early-onset cancers were among women. These kinds of patterns generally reflect something profound going on, said Tim Rebbeck of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, who studies cancer risk and was not involved in the research. We need to fund research that will help us understand.The findings were published Thursday in Cancer Discovery, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. How many extra cancers are we talking about?The researchers compared cancer rates in 2019 to what would be expected based on 2010 rates. Breast cancer made up the largest share of the excess cancers, with about 4,800 additional cases. There were 2,000 more colorectal cancers compared with what would be expected based on the 2010 rates. There were 1,800 more kidney cancers and 1,200 additional uterine cancers.Reassuringly, death rates were not rising for most cancers in the young adult age groups, although increasing death rates were seen for colorectal, uterine and testicular cancers. Why is this happening?Explanations will take more research. The big databases used for the study dont include information on risk factors or access to care. Theories abound and a big meeting is planned later this year to bring together experts in the area.Several of these cancer types are known to be associated with excess body weight and so one of the leading hypotheses is increasing rates of obesity, said lead author Meredith Shiels of the National Cancer Institute. Advances in cancer detection and changes in screening guidelines could be behind some early diagnoses. For breast cancer, the trend toward women having a first child at older ages is a possible explanation. Pregnancy and breastfeeding are known to reduce risk.Its not a uniform trend for all cancersThis isnt happening across the board. Cancer rates in people under 50 are going down for more than a dozen types of cancer, with the largest declines in lung and prostate cancers. Cigarette smoking has been declining for decades, which likely accounts for the drop in lung cancer among younger adults. The drop in prostate cancer is likely tied to updated guidelines discouraging routine PSA testing in younger men because of concerns about overtreatment.___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. CARLA K. JOHNSON Johnson covers research in cancer, addiction and more for The Associated Press. She is a member of APs Health and Science team. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • APNEWS.COM
    US and UK expected to announce a trade deal that Trump says will cement their relationship
    Shipping containers wait to be processed at London Gateway port, in Stanford-le-Hope, on the Thames estuary east of London, England, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025. (AP Photo, File)2025-05-08T09:01:55Z WASHINGTON (AP) The United States and Britain are expected to announce a trade deal on Thursday that will lower the burden of President Donald Trumps sweeping tariffs and deliver a political victory for U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer.Trump posted on his Truth Social platform that a deal due to be announced at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT) will be a full and comprehensive one that will cement the relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom for many years to come.Its the first bilateral trade deal announced since Trump began slapping tariffs on U.S. trading partners. He said: Many other deals, which are in serious stages of negotiation, to follow!Starmers office said the prime minister would give an update about U.S. trade talks later Thursday.As you know, talks with the U.S. have been ongoing and youll hear more from me about that later today. Starmer said at a defense conference in London. The agreement is likely to fall short of a full free trade deal, but will provide tariff relief to certain sectors.The president has imposed a 10% tax on imports from Britain, as well as 25% tariffs on autos, steel and aluminum on the premise that doing so would foster more factory jobs domestically. A major goal of British negotiators has been to reduce or lift the import tax on U.K. cars and steel. The U.S. is the largest destination for British cars, accounting for more than a quarter of U.K. auto exports in 2024, according to the Office for National Statistics. Britain has also sought tariff exemptions for pharmaceuticals, while the U.S. wants greater access to the British market for agriculture products. Starmers government has said it wont lower U.K. food standards to allow in chlorine-rinsed American chicken or hormone-treated beef.The British government will see a deal it as a vindication of Starmers emollient approach to Trump, which has avoided direct confrontation or criticism. Unlike the European Union, Britain did not announce retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods in response to Trumps import taxes. A trade deal with the United Kingdom would be symbolically important, and a relief for British exporters. But an agreement would do little to address Trumps core concern about persistent trade deficits that prompted him to impose import taxes on countries around the world.The U.S. ran a $11.9 billion trade surplus in goods with the U.K. last year, according to the Census Bureau. The $68 billion in goods that the U.S. imported from the U.K. last year accounted for just 2% of all goods imported into the country.The U.S. is much more important to the U.K. economy. It was Britains biggest trading partner last year, according to government statistics, though the bulk of Britains exports to the U.S. are services rather than goods. Trump has shown a desire to strike a trade agreement with the U.K. since it voted in 2016 to leave the European Union. Yet as recently as Tuesday, Trump showed no awareness of the possible terms of the deal when asked about its possibility. Theyre offering us concessions? Trump told reporters. I hope so... They do want to make a deal very badly.Trump has previously said that his leverage in talks would be U.S. consumers, but he appeared to suggest that the U.K. would also start buying more American-made goods.I think that the United Kingdom, like every other country, they want to ... go shopping in the United States of America, he said. A trade deal with the U.S. is one of several that Starmers government is seeking to strike. On Tuesday, Britain and India announced a trade after three years of negotiations. The U.K. is also trying to lift some of the barriers to trade with the EU imposed when Britain left the bloc in 2020.___Jill Lawless reported from London. Josh Boak contributed to this report from Washington. ZEKE MILLER Miller leads coverage of the president and the presidency for The Associated Press. He is based in Washington. twitter mailto JILL LAWLESS Lawless is an Associated Press reporter covering U.K. politics and more. She is based in London. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    80 years ago World War II in Europe was over. Celebrating V-E Day is now tinged with some dread
    Thousands celebrate the announcement of Germany's unconditional surrender to the Allies in World War II, on May 7, 1945, at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris on VE Day. (AP Photo/File)2025-05-08T05:00:45Z LONDON (AP) Even if the end of World War II in Europe spawned one of the most joyous days the continent ever lived, Thursdays 80th anniversary of V-E Day is haunted as much by the specter of current-day conflict as it celebrates the defeat of ultimate evil.Hitlers Nazi Germany had finally surrendered after a half-decade of invading other European powers and propagating racial hatred that led to genocide, the Holocaust and the murdering of millions.That surrender and the explosion of hope for a better life is being celebrated with parades in London and Paris and towns across Europe while even the leaders of erstwhile mortal enemies France and Germany are bonding again.Germanys new foreign minister, Johann Wadephul, paid tribute to the enormous sacrifices of the Allies in helping his country win its freedom from the Nazis and said that millions of people were disenfranchised and tormented by the Nazi regime. Hardly any day has shaped our history as much as May 8, 1945, he said in a statement. Our historical responsibility for this breach of civilization and the commemoration of the millions of victims of the Second World War unleashed by Nazi Germany gives us a mandate to resolutely defend peace and freedom in Europe today. His comments underscore that former European enemies may thrive to the extent that the 27-nation European Union even won the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize but that the outlook has turned gloomy over the past year. Bodies continue to pile up in Ukraine, where Russias 2022 full-scale invasion started the worst war on the continent since 1945. The rise of the hard right in several EU member states is putting the founding democratic principles of the bloc under increasing pressure. And even NATO, that trans-Atlantic military alliance that assured peace in Europe under the U.S. nuclear umbrella and its military clout, is under internal strain rarely seen since its inception. The time of Europes carefree comfort, joyous unconcern is over. Today is the time of European mobilization around our fundamental values and our security, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said at a Dutch memorial event in the lead-up to the celebrations.It makes this unlikely stretch of peace in Europe anything but a given. This peace is always unsure. There are always some clouds above our heads. Lets do what we can, so that peace should reign forever in Europe, Robert Chot, a Belgian World War II veteran, told a solemn gathering of the European legislature.European Parliament President Roberta Metsola sounded gloomy.Once again war has returned to our continent, once again cities are being bombed, civilians attacked, families torn apart. The people of Ukraine are fighting not only for their land, but for freedom, for sovereignty, for democracy, just as our parents and our grandparents once did, she told the legislature on Wednesday. The task before us today is the same as it was then to honor memory, to protect democracy, to preserve peace, Metsola said. Commemorations have been going all week through Europe, and Britain has taken a lead. Here too, the current-day plight of Ukraine in its fight against Russia took center stage. The idea that this was all just history and it doesnt matter now somehow, is completely wrong, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer said. Those values of freedom and democracy matter today. In London later Thursday, a service will be held in Westminster Abbey and a concert, for 10,000 members of the public, at Horse Guards Parade. In Paris, French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to oversee a ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the Arc de Triomphe. And in Berlin, Chancellor Friedrich Merz will again highlight how Germany has remodeled itself into a beacon of European democracy by laying a wreath at the central memorial for the victims of war and tyranny. And, symbolically, Russia and President Vladimir Putin will be totally out of lockstep with the rest of Europe, celebrating its Victory Day one day later with a huge military parade on Red Square in central Moscow to mark the massive Soviet contribution to defeat Nazi Germany.___Raf Casert reported from Brussels. Mike Corder in Wageningen, Netherlands, and Jamey Keaten in Geneva, contributed to this report. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • APNEWS.COM
    South Korea says North Korea has fired several missiles toward its eastern waters
    A TV screen shows a file image of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during a news program at Seoul Railway Station in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)2025-05-07T23:31:50Z SEOUL, South Korea (AP) North Korea on Thursday fired various types of short-range ballistic missiles into its eastern sea, South Koreas military said, adding to a run in military displays that raised animosities in the region. South Korean military officials were analyzing whether the tests were linked to the Norths weapons exports to Russia during its war in Ukraine.South Koreas Joint Chiefs of Staff said multiple missiles were launched from the area around the eastern port city of Wonsan from about 8:10 to 9:20 a.m., with the farthest traveling about 800 kilometers (497 miles). It didnt immediately confirm the exact number of the missiles it detected. Lee Sung Joon, spokesperson for the Joint Chiefs, said in a briefing the North Korean launches were possibly intended to test the performance of weapons it plans to export, as the country continues to send military equipment and troops to fuel Russias warfighting against Ukraine. Lee said the tests likely involved a short-range ballistic missile system launched from vehicles possibly modeled after Russias Iskander missile and also large-caliber rocket artillery systems, which experts say blur the line between traditional artillery and ballistic systems due to their self-propulsion and guided flight. The Joint Chiefs said South Korean and U.S. intelligence authorities detected the launch preparations in advance and tracked the missiles after they were launched. The countries were sharing the launch information with Japan, the Joint Chiefs said. It issued a statement denouncing the launches as a clear act of provocation that threatens peace and stability in the region. Japanese Defense Minister Gen Nakatani told reporters that none of the North Korean missiles reached Japans exclusive economic zone and there was no damage to vessels or aircraft in the area. Nakatani said Japans government sternly protested and strongly condemned the launches through the North Korean embassy in Beijing. It was the Norths first known ballistic activity since March 10, when it fired several ballistic missiles hours after U.S. and South Korean troops began an annual combined military exercise, and the countrys sixth launch event of the year. Tensions on the Korean Peninsula have escalated in recent months as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un continues to accelerate the development of his nuclear and missile program and supply weapons and troops to support Russias war against Ukraine.Thursdays launch came a day after North Korean state media said Kim urged munition workers to boost the production of artillery shells amid his deepening alignment with Moscow.After denying its war involvement for months, North Korea last month confirmed for the first time that it had sent combat troops to help Russia in recapturing parts of the Kursk region, which had fallen to a surprise Ukrainian incursion last year. Moscow also acknowledged the North Korean involvement, with Russian President Vladimir Putin issuing a statement thanking the North for sending troops to support his forces and promising not to forget their sacrifices. Recent South Korean intelligence assessments suggest that North Korea has sent about 15,000 soldiers to Russia, and that nearly 5,000 of them have been killed or injured while fighting against Ukrainian forces. Washington and Seoul have also accused North Korea of supplying Russia with various types of military equipment, including artillery systems and shells and ballistic missiles.Analysts say North Koreas official acknowledgment of its military support for Russia is likely aimed at cementing a deeper, long-term partnership with Moscow and securing greater compensation, potentially including advanced military technology that could enhance the threat posed by Kims nuclear-armed forces.By formalizing its role as a participant in the war, North Korea may also be positioning itself to seek compensation in future negotiations to end the conflict in Ukraine, according to a recent report by the Institute for National Security Strategy, a think tank affiliated with South Koreas intelligence agency.___AP writer Mari Yamaguchi contributed to the story from Tokyo. KIM TONG-HYUNG Kim has been covering the Koreas for the AP since 2014. He has published widely read stories on North Koreas nuclear ambitions, the dark side of South Koreas economic rise and international adoptions of Korean children. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Guess how much of the ocean floor humans have explored
    Nature, Published online: 08 May 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01431-2Hint: its less than 1% a lot less.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Beckham, Neville complete Salford City takeover
    Salford City have been acquired by a new ownership group led by former England internationals David Beckham and Gary Neville, who were already investors in the club.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    'Annoyed' Arteta says best team in UCL 'are out'
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Raleigh in fantasy's top 25? Webb destined for Cy Young? Don't be surprised
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Red-hot Rantanen sets records with G1 hat trick
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Putin and Xi Rebuke U.S. and Vow to Strengthen Ties
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Mistrial in Murder Case Against Michigan Officer Who Shot Motorist
    The jury deadlocked in the trial of Christopher Schurr, who testified that he feared for his life when he fatally shot Patrick Lyoya during a traffic stop in Grand Rapids, Mich., in 2022.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    The Democratic Senator Taking Cues From Trumpism
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    An Entertainment Tax
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Hochul, Looking to 2026, Pushed to Weaken Oversight of Religious Schools
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    Never Throw Away Boring Plastic Plant Hangers Again With This "Genius" Trick
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Eggs are less likely to crack when dropped on their side, according to science
    A hen stands on eggs inside her coop at at a farm in Glenview, Ill., on Friday, Feb. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley, File)2025-05-08T15:00:50Z NEW YORK (AP) Eggs are less likely to crack when they fall on their side, according to experiments with over 200 eggs.What does this mean for the best way to crack an egg for breakfas t? Not much, since a break around the middle is the best way to get the golden yolk and runny whites to ooze out. But scientists said it could help with hard-boiling eggs in a pot: Dropping eggs in horizontally may be less likely to cause a stray crack that can unleash the eggs insides in a puffy, cloudy mess.Its commonly thought that eggs are strongest at their ends after all, its how theyre packaged in the carton. The thinking is that the arc-shaped bottom of an egg redirects the force and softens the blow of impact.But when scientists squeezed eggs in both directions during a compression test, they cracked under the same amount of force. The fun started when we thought we would get one result and then we saw another, said Hudson Borja da Rocha with Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who helped run the experiments. The researchers also ran simulations and dropped eggs horizontally and vertically from three short heights up to 0.4 inches (10 millimeters). The egg result? The ones dropped horizontally cracked less . The common sense is that the egg in the vertical direction is stronger than if you lay the egg down. But they proved thats not the case, said materials scientist Marc Meyers with the University of California, San Diego who was not involved with the new study. Scientists found that the eggs equator was more flexible and absorbed more of the energy of the fall before cracking. The findings were published Thursday in the journal Communications Physics.Eggs are also usually nestled top-down into homemade contraptions for egg drop challenges as part of school STEM projects, which partially inspired the new study. Its not yet clear whether the new results will help protect these vulnerable eggs, which are dropped at much loftier heights. Its a bit counterintuitive that the oblong side of an egg could hold up better against a tumble, said study co-author Tal Cohen with Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Countless broken eggs show the courage to go and challenge these very common, accepted notions, Cohen said.___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. ADITHI RAMAKRISHNAN Ramakrishnan is a science reporter for The Associated Press, based in New York. She covers research and new developments related to space, early human history and more. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Renewal of NIH grants linked to more innovative results, study finds
    Nature, Published online: 08 May 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01420-5Survey of hundreds of scientists work suggests that cutting off funding disrupts focus and reduces the novelty of research.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    How quickly do humans mutate? Four generations help answer the question
    Nature, Published online: 08 May 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01473-6DNA sequencing of a family from children to great-grandparents reveals more mutations than previously seen.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Projecting how good the expansion Valkyries will be in their inaugural WNBA season
    Historically, WNBA expansion teams have struggled in their first season. How many games might Golden State win in 2025?
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Post-spring Way-Too-Early Top 25: Where do Texas and Notre Dame rank?
    Where do the top teams stand after spring practice and roster movement from the transfer portal? Mark Schlabach updates the rankings.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Bird gets newly made role on U.S. women's team
    Sue Bird is giving another assist to USA Basketball, becoming the first managing director of the women's national team.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    King of TikTok: 'LeBron James' song trend
    Professional athletes have long been name-dropped in hip-hop songs, but R&B songs comprised solely of LeBron and Curry's names? That's a more recent phenomenon.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    USWNT star Mallory Swanson expecting first child
    United States forward Mallory Swanson is expecting her first child with husband Dansby Swanson, shortstop for the Chicago Cubs.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Proposed Medicaid Cuts Put Vulnerable Republicans in a Political Bind
    G.O.P. lawmakers from swing districts face tough votes as soon as next week, when key House panels are scheduled to consider legislation that would cut popular programs to pay for President Trumps agenda.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Migrants Are Skipping Medical Care, Fearing ICE, Doctors Say
    Since President Trump announced plans for mass deportations and rescinded protections for hospitals and clinics, health care facilities have seen a jump in no-shows.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Intelligence Agencies Increase Focus on Greenland, U.S. Officials Say
    A growing number of reports about the island have been included in information circulated in the executive branch and Congress, officials said.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    E.U. Unveils Plan for Retaliatory Tariffs on U.S. Products, if Negotiations Fail
    Boeing and big American food producers could end up in the cross-hairs if the bloc follows through on its threat to impose tariffs on more American goods.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    In Israels Demolition Path, West Bank Residents Pack Up Their Lives
    A monthslong Israeli military operation in the northern West Bank has displaced tens of thousands of people. Some are now learning they may not return.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Nervous Man Introduces Date To His Hives
    TORONTOAdmitting that he had butterflies in anticipation, local man Greg Fitzsimmons reported feeling nervous Friday before introducing his date to his hives for the first time. They can get irritated pretty easily, so I really hope everybody gets along, said the 33-year-old, confessing that it had been quite some time since he had brought a woman home to meet his urticaria. Ive had them for a while now, so theyve seen plenty of women come and go, but they dont always react well to new interactions. Sometimes theyll blow up and I dont even know what it was that triggered them. Maybe a little liquid Benadryl would help everybody play it cool. Fitzsimmons went on to say that if everything went well, he hoped he would soon be meeting her bunions.The post Nervous Man Introduces Date To His Hives appeared first on The Onion.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Archaeologists Uncover Embarrassing Egyptian Rockabilly Dynasty
    CAIROIn what many are calling the most cringe discovery of the century, a team of archaeologists reportedly uncovered evidence this week of a completely embarrassing Egyptian Rockabilly dynasty. While excavating an area around the Valley of the Kings, we were able to unearth tombs containing artifacts that appear to date from a long-forgotten and groan-inducing dynasty centered around a reverence for Rockabilly, said lead researcher Dr. Donovan Tilly, explaining that the sight represented a treasure trove of incredibly lame fertility idols with intact pompadours, hieroglyphs depicting high priestesses attending ceremonial sock hops in poodle skirts, and pin-up mummies with winged eyeliner and bright-red lipstick. Its obvious from looking at the painfully uncool leather jackets from the reign of Pharaoh Jeepers Creepers IV why the ancient Egyptians felt the need to bury the pathetic artifacts so deep underground. These large belt buckles emblazoned with images of the sun deity Ra shed new light on one of the most mortifying periods of antiquity. At press time, clay pomade vessels and other ancient Rockabilly relics were handed over to the Egyptian government to ensure their destruction.The post Archaeologists Uncover Embarrassing Egyptian Rockabilly Dynasty appeared first on The Onion.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    AP PHOTOS: Cardinals return to the Sistine Chapel for a second day of voting to elect a new pope
    Faithful hold a banner reading "Up with the pope", after white smoke billows from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel during the conclave to elect a new pope, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)2025-05-08T08:11:01Z VATICAN CITY (AP) Cardinals returned to the Sistine Chapel on Thursday to resume voting for a new pope after the first conclave ballot failed to find a winner, sending billowing black smoke through the chapel chimney. A view of St. Peters Square during the conclave to elect a successor of late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) A view of St. Peters Square during the conclave to elect a successor of late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Meryl Espiniero from New York holds her dog Romeo Valentino at St. Peters square where people wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Meryl Espiniero from New York holds her dog Romeo Valentino at St. Peters square where people wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Television crews working at St. Peters square wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Television crews working at St. Peters square wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A nun prays at St. Peters Basilica waiting for smoke to billow from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) A nun prays at St. Peters Basilica waiting for smoke to billow from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Faithful gather at St. Peters square during the conclave to elect a new Pope, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Faithful gather at St. Peters square during the conclave to elect a new Pope, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More People wait in St. Peters Square where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor of late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) People wait in St. Peters Square where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor of late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A man prays during the conclave to elect a new pope, in St. Peters Square at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) A man prays during the conclave to elect a new pope, in St. Peters Square at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Group of faithful from France chant religious songs as they arrive at St. Peters Square at the Vatican where 133 cardinals gather on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Group of faithful from France chant religious songs as they arrive at St. Peters Square at the Vatican where 133 cardinals gather on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Group of faithful arrive at St. Peters Square at the Vatican where 133 cardinals gather on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Group of faithful arrive at St. Peters Square at the Vatican where 133 cardinals gather on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More People react after white smoke billowed from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel during the conclave to elect a new pope, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) People react after white smoke billowed from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel during the conclave to elect a new pope, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A drone used for TV broadcast is attacked by a seagull above St. Peters Square where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) A drone used for TV broadcast is attacked by a seagull above St. Peters Square where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Nuns from Vietnam eat their lunch at St. Peters square during the cardinals conclave to elect a new pope, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Nuns from Vietnam eat their lunch at St. Peters square during the cardinals conclave to elect a new pope, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A woman looks up during the conclave to elect a new pope, in St. Peters Square, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) A woman looks up during the conclave to elect a new pope, in St. Peters Square, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More People at St. Peters square wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) People at St. Peters square wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A person holds a rosary while people at St. Peters square wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) A person holds a rosary while people at St. Peters square wait to see smoke pour from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel where 133 cardinals are gathering on the second day of the conclave to elect a successor to late Pope Francis, at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Faithful gather at St. Peters Square at the Vatican where 133 cardinals gather on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Faithful gather at St. Peters Square at the Vatican where 133 cardinals gather on the second day of the conclave to elect successor of late Pope Francis, Thursday, May 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Trump says hell pull the nomination of Ed Martin, who defended Jan. 6 rioters, for DC US Attorney
    Ed Martin speaks at an event hosted by Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., at the Capitol in Washington, June 13, 2023. (AP Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades, File)2025-05-08T15:58:04Z WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trump said Thursday that he would pull the nomination of conservative activist Ed Martin Jr. to be the top federal prosecutor for the nations capital, after a key Republican senator said he could not support him for the job due to his defense of Jan. 6 rioters. We have somebody else that will be great, Trump told reporters in the Oval Office when asked about the status of Martins confirmation. He said it was disappointing, but thats the way it works sometime.A spokesperson for Ed Martin didnt immediately respond to messages seeking comment.Martin has served as acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia since Trumps first week in office. But his hopes of keeping the job faded amid questions about his qualifications and background, including his support for rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol over four years ago. Martin stirred up a chorus of critics during his brief but tumultuous tenure leading the nations largest U.S. Attorneys office. He fired and demoted subordinates who worked on politically sensitive cases. He posted on social media about potential targets of investigations. And he forced the chief of the offices criminal division to resign after directing her to scrutinize the awarding of a government contract during Democratic President Joe Bidens administration. Martins temporary appointment is due to expire on May 20. North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis said Tuesday that he wouldnt support Martins nomination. Tillis, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said his opposition stemmed from Martins defense of rioters who breached the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Other Republicans seemed likely to oppose Martins nomination as well.In response to a committee questionnaire, Martin initially failed to disclose that he made over 150 appearances on the Russian government-funded RT and Sputnik networks before he took office. He later included them in a follow-up letter. Dozens of former prosecutors from the office publicly opposed Martins nomination. In a letter to the committee, more than 100 office veterans described him as an affront to the singular pursuit of justice for which this Office has stood for more than two centuries.Martin also had some prominent supporters, including Elon Musk, Charlie Kirk and Donald Trump Jr. His backers touted his record of fighting for conservative causes and his efforts to reduce violent crime in Washington.Martin was a leading figure in Trumps Stop the Steal movement. He spoke at a rally in Washington on the eve of the Capitol riot. He represented three Jan. 6 defendants and served on the board of the nonprofit Patriot Freedom Project, which reports raising over $2.5 million to support riot defendants.In office, Martin oversaw the dismissals of hundreds of Jan. 6 cases after Trump pardoned defendants, commuted sentences or vowed to throw them out. Martin also ordered an internal review of prosecutors use of a felony charge against hundreds of Capitol rioters, directing employees to hand over files, emails and other documents. Martins opponents also honed in on his public praise for a Capitol riot defendant, Timothy Hale-Cusanelli, who openly espoused white supremacist and antisemitic ideology and photographed himself sporting a Hitler mustache. He referred to Hale-Cusanelli as a friend who is an extraordinary guy. Martin told committee members that he condemns Hale-Cusanellis hateful comments as abhorrent and deplorable. He claimed he didnt learn about them until after he presented him with the award during an event at Trumps golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.Martin practiced law in Missouri but never worked as a prosecutor or tried a case before Trump appointed him in January. Martin chaired the Missouri Republican Party before becoming president of conservative activist Phyllis Schlaflys Eagle Forum in April 2013. He co-authored a book about Trump with Schlafly, who died in 2016. SEUNG MIN KIM Kim covers the White House for The Associated Press. She joined the AP in 2022 and is based in Washington. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Cease loses no-hit bid, exits with forearm cramp
    Moments after losing a no-hit bid in the seventh inning, San Diego Padres pitcher Dylan Cease left his start against the New York Yankees because of a cramp in his right forearm.
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