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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Items Seized From Mangione Included Bullets and Note to Pluck Eyebrows
    Prosecutors showed body camera footage as they argued that some evidence the police said they collected from Luigi Mangiones backpack when he was arrested should be admitted at trial.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    US stocks hold in place in the countdown to the Federal Reserves meeting on Wednesday
    Options trader Steven Rodriguez works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Friday, Nov. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)2025-12-09T04:48:42Z NEW YORK (AP) U.S. stocks largely held in place on Tuesday as Wall Street waits to hear what the Federal Reserve will say Wednesday about where interest rates are heading.The S&P 500 edged down by 0.1% and remained near its all-time high set in October. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 179 points, or 0.4%, and the Nasdaq composite added 0.1%.JPMorgan Chase was the heaviest weight on the market after a top executive, Marianne Lake, said the banks expenses could rise to $105 billion next year.That would be up 9% from an estimated $95.9 billion in expenses this year, though Lake also said JPMorgan Chase is feeling pretty good about the underlying financial health of the borrowers in our portfolio. Its stock fell 4.7%.Another drop came from Toll Brothers, which lost 2.4% after the homebuilder reported weaker results for the latest quarter than analysts expected. CEO Douglas Yearley Jr. said demand for new homes remains soft across many markets, and he talked about affordability pressures that could be affecting potential homebuyers. One big factor in that affordability question is mortgage rates. Theyre cheaper than they were at the start of the year, though they perked up a bit after October. Thats largely because of questions in the bond market about how much more the Federal Reserve will cut its main interest rate. The widespread expectation is that the Fed will cut interest rates Wednesday afternoon, which would be the third such easing of the year. Lower interest rates can give the economy and prices for investments a boost, though the downside is they can worsen inflation. The U.S. stock market has run to the edge of its records in part because of the growing assumption that the Fed will cut rates again on Wednesday. The big question is what the Fed will say about where interest rates will go after that. Many on Wall Street are bracing for talk aimed at tamping down expectations for more cuts in 2026. Inflation has stubbornly remained above the Feds 2% target, and Fed officials are notably split in their opinions about whether high inflation or the slowing job market is the bigger threat to the economy.Treasury yields climbed in the bond market after a report on Tuesday showed that U.S. employers were advertising 7.7 million job openings at the end of October. Thats up a smidgen from the month before and the highest number since May. If the job market is not worsening, it may not need as much help from the Fed through more cuts to rates.After the report on job openings came out, the yield on the 10-year Treasury erased what had been an earlier dip and rose to 4.18% from 4.17% late Monday.The yield on the two-year Treasury, which moves more closely with expectations for what the Fed will do, rose to 3.60% from 3.57% late Monday.Elsewhere on Wall Street, Exxon Mobil climbed 2% after increasing its forecast for profit over the next five years, thanks in part to strength for its fields in the Permian basin in the United States and off Guyanas shore. Ares Management rallied 7.3% after S&P Dow Jones Indices said the investment company will join its widely followed S&P 500 index. It will replace Kellanova, the maker of Pringles and Pop-Tarts, which is being bought by Mars, the company behind Snickers and M&Ms.CVS Health rose 2.2% after unveiling new financial forecasts, including expectations for annual compounded growth in earnings per share at a mid-teens percentage over the next three years. AP AUDIO: Wall Street drifts near its record high as Exxon Mobil climbs U.S. stocks have been stable in early trading. Home Depot fell 1.3% after flipping between gains and losses. It gave a preliminary forecast for 2026 that said the broad home improvement market may shrink by up to 1%. But it also gave a separate set of forecasts saying its earnings per share could grow in the mid- to high-single digit percentages if the housing market recovers. The markets most influential stock, Nvidia, slipped 0.3% after President Donald Trump allowed it to sell an advanced chip used in artificial-intelligence technology to approved customers in China. The H200 is not Nvidias top product. All told, the S&P 500 fell 6.00 points to 6,840.51. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 179.03 to 47,650.29, and the Nasdaq composite rose 30.58 to 23,576.49.In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed Europe and Asia.Indexes fell 1.3% in Hong Kong and 0.7% in Paris for two of the worlds bigger moves. ___AP Business Writers Matt Ott and Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Pete Hegseth Says the Pentagon's New Chatbot Will Make America 'More Lethal'
    Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced the rollout of GenAI.mil today in a video posted to X. To hear Hegseth tell it, the website is the future of American warfare. In practice, based on what we know so far from press releases and Hegseths posturing, GenAI.mil appears to be a custom chatbot interface for Google Gemini that can handle some forms of sensitivebut not classifieddata.Hegseths announcement was full of bold pronouncements about the future of killing people. These kinds of pronouncements are typical of the second Trump administration which has said it believes the rush to win AI is an existential threat on par with the invention of nuclear weapons during World War II.Hegseth, however, did not talk about weapons in his announcement. He talked about spreadsheets and videos. At the click of a button, AI models on GenAI can be used to conduct deep research, format documents, and even analyze video or imagery at unprecedented speed, Hegseth said in the video on X. Office work, basically. We will continue to aggressively field the worlds best technology to make our fighting force more lethal than ever before.Emil Michael, the Pentagons under secretary for research and engineering, also stressed how important GenAI would be to the process of killing people in a press release about the sites launch.There is no prize for second place in the global race for AI dominance. We are moving rapidly to deploy powerful AI capabilities like Gemini for Government directly to our workforce. AI is America's next Manifest Destiny, and we're ensuring that we dominate this new frontier, Michael said in the press release, referencing the 19th century American belief that God had divinely ordained Americans to settle the west at the same time he announced a new chatbot.The press release says Google Cloud's Gemini for Government will be the first instance available on the internal platform. Its certified for Controlled Unclassified Information, the release states, and claims that because its web grounded with Google Searchmeaning itll pull from Google search results to answer queriesthat makes it reliable and dramatically reduces the risk of AI hallucinations. As weve covered, because Google search results are also consuming AI content that contains errors and AI-invented data from across the web, its become nearly unusable for regular consumers and researchers alike.During a press conference about the rollout this morning, Michael told reporters that GenAI.mil would soon incorporate other AI models and would one day be able to handle classified as well as sensitive data. As of this writing, GenAIs website is down.For the first time ever, by the end of this week, three million employees, warfighters, contractors, are going to have AI on their desktop, every single one, Michael told reporters this morning, according to Breaking Defense. Theyll start with three million people, start innovating, using building, asking more about what they can do, then bring those to the higher classification level, bringing in different capabilities, he said.The second Trump administration has done everything in its power to make it easier for the people in Silicon Valley to push AI on America and the world. It has done this, in part, by framing it as a national security issue. Trump has signed several executive orders aimed at cutting regulations around data centers and the construction of nuclear power plants. Hes threatened to sign another that would block states from passing their own AI regulations. Each executive order and piece of proposed legislation threatens that losing the AI race would mean making America weak and vulnerable and erode national security.The countrys tech moguls are rushing to build datacenters and nuclear power plants while the boom time continues. Nevermind that people do not want to live next to datacenters for a whole host of reasons. Nevermind that tech companies are using faulty AIs to speed up the construction of nuclear power plants. Nevermind that the Pentagon already had a proprietary LLM it had operated since 2024.We are pushing all of our chips in on artificial intelligence as a fighting force. The Department is tapping into America's commercial genius, and we're embedding generative AI into our daily battle rhythm, Hegseth said in the press release about GenAI.mil. "AI tools present boundless opportunities to increase efficiency, and we are thrilled to witness AI's future positive impact across the War Department."
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  • WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COM
    16 Sofas That Look Just Right in Small Spaces
    Plus, 15 more small-space friendly sofas we love.READ MORE...
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  • Bird Flu Is Suspected After Vulture Carcasses Sat Rotting Outside Ohio School
    The birds lingered for days at a Catholic school near Cincinnati as agencies haggled over who was responsible for removing them. Officials said the public health risk was low.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    End of Major Corruption Case Embarrasses N.Y. Cannabis Regulators
    A case against the Long Island-based cannabis company Omnium Health was halted on the eve of trial. A judge on Tuesday held off on dropping the matter.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Trump Pressures Ukraine
    Also, the Supreme Court considers campaign finance limits. Heres the latest at the end of Tuesday.
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  • DLana R.A. Dameron, Writer of the Black South, Dies at 40
    An award-winning poet and writer of fiction, she moonlighted as a competitive horsewoman and owned a horse farm outside Columbia, S.C.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Trump Calls Europe Decaying and Suggests Size Will Win in Ukraine War
    President Trumps comments deepened his rift with mainstream European leaders over defense and Ukraine policy.
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  • WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COM
    This $600 Staircase Makeover Has a Genius Detail Youll Want to Copy
    The homeowner wanted the transition from the first floor to the second floor to have a wow factor.READ MORE...
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Democrat wins Miami mayors race for the first time in nearly 30 years
    This combination of images shows candidates for mayor of Miami, from left, Republican Emilio Gonzalez and Democrat Eileen Higgins. (AP Photo/File)2025-12-09T05:05:43Z MIAMI (AP) Democrat Eileen Higgins won the Miami mayors race on Tuesday, defeating a Republican endorsed by President Donald Trump to end her partys nearly three-decade losing streak and give Democrats a boost in one of the last electoral battles ahead of the 2026 midterms.Tonight, the people of Miami made history, Higgins said in a statement after the results were announced. Higgins, 61, campaigned as a Democrat despite the race being officially nonpartisan. She spoke frequently in the Hispanic-majority city about Trumps immigration crackdown, saying she has heard of many people in Miami who were worried about family members being detained. She beat Trump-backed candidate Emilio Gonzalez, a former city manager, who said he called Higgins to congratulate her.Ive never been prouder to be a Democrat, Higgins told The Associated Press before her victory. Were living in the state of Florida, where we have people that are building cages for our residents rather than affordable housing for them. The local race is not predictive of what may happen at the polls next year. But it drew attention from the two major national political parties and their leaders. The victory provides Democrats with some momentum heading into a high-stakes midterm election when the GOP is looking to keep its grip in Florida, including in a Hispanic-majority district in Miami-Dade County. The area has shifted increasingly rightward politically in recent years, and the city may become the home of Trumps presidential library. Some nationally recognized Democrats supported Higgins, including former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. U.S. Sen. Ruben Gallego and former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel traveled to Miami on Sunday and Monday to rally voters for the Democrat who served as a Miami-Dade county commissioner for seven years. Higgins, who speaks Spanish, represented a district that leans conservative and includes the Cuban neighborhood of Little Havana. When she first entered politics in 2018, she chose to present herself to voters as La Gringa, a term Spanish speakers use for white Americans, because many people did not known how to pronounce her name. It just helps people understand who I am, and you know what? I am a gringa, so, what am I going to do, deny it? she told the AP. Republicans anxiety growsRepublicans in Florida have found strong support from voters with heritage from Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, because they likened some members of the Democratic partys progressive wing with politicians from the governments they fled. Trump and other GOP members have tapped into those sentiments over the past eight years.However, some local Republicans are growing increasingly frustrated since Novembers elections when Democrats scored wins in New Jersey and Virginia, where both winning gubernatorial candidates performed strongly with nonwhite voters. The results from those races were perceived as a reflection of concerns over rising prices and the Trump administrations aggressive immigration policies. U.S. Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar, a Republican whose district is being targeted by Democrats and includes the city of Miami, called the elections elsewhere a wake-up call. She said Hispanics also want a secure border and a healthy economy but some relief for those who have been here for years and do not have a criminal record.The Hispanic vote is not guaranteed, Salazar said in a video posted on X. Hispanics married President Trump, but they are only dating the GOP.Miami mayor-elect gains national platformHiggins will also be the first woman to lead the city of Miami, a position that is more ceremonial, but which she promised to execute like a full-time job.The city is part of Miami-Dade County, which Trump flipped last year, a dramatic improvement from his 30 percentage point loss to Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016.As Floridas second-largest city, Miami is considered the gateway to Latin America and attracts millions of tourists. Its global prominence gives Higgins a significant stage as mayor.Her pitch to voters included finding city-owned land that could be turned into affordable housing and cutting unnecessary spending. ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON Gomez Licon writes about national politics for The Associated Press. She is based in Florida. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Luigi Mangiones notes to self: Pluck eyebrows, Keep momentum, FBI slower overnight
    This image taken from video released by Pennsylvania State Police shows Luigi Mangione, a suspect in the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, at a McDonald's in Altoona, Pa., on Dec. 9, 2024. (Pennsylvania State Police via AP)2025-12-09T23:29:49Z NEW YORK (AP) Pluck eyebrows. Buy less conspicuous shoes. Take a bus or a train west toward Cincinnati and St. Louis. Move around late at night. Stay away from surveillance cameras.A to-do list and travel plans found during Luigi Mangiones arrest and revealed in court this week shed new light on the steps he may have taken or planned to take to avoid capture after UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompsons killing last year.Keep momentum, FBI slower overnight, said one note. Change hat, shoes, pluck eyebrows, said another.The notes, including a hand-drawn map and tactics for surviving on the lam, were shown on Monday at a pretrial hearing as Mangiones bid to prevent prosecutors from using evidence seized during his Dec. 9, 2024, arrest at a McDonalds in Altoona, Pennsylvania.Excerpts of body-worn camera footage of the arrest, previously unseen by the press or the public, were released on Tuesday. Police said they discovered the notes in Mangiones backpack, along with a 9 mm handgun that prosecutors said matches the one used to kill Thompson five days earlier; a loaded gun magazine and silencer; and a notebook in similar handwriting which he purportedly described his intent to wack a health insurance executive. Mangiones lawyers havent disputed the authenticity of the notes or the provenance of the gun, pocket knife, fake ID, drivers license, passport, credit cards, AirPods, protein bar, travel toothpaste, flash drives and other items seized from him and his backpack. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on But they argue that anything found in the bag should be barred because police didnt have a search warrant and lacked the grounds to justify a warrantless search. Prosecutors contend the search was legal officers said they were checking for a bomb and that police eventually obtained a warrant. The notes, along with other evidence highlighted at the pretrial hearing, underscore that Mangiones stop in Altoona, a city of about 44,000 people about 230 miles (370 kilometers) west of Manhattan, was only meant to be temporary. One note said to check for red eyes from Pittsburgh to Columbus, Ohio or part way to Cincinnati (get off early, it reads). The map drawn below shows lines linking those cities, as well as other possible destinations, including Detroit, Indianapolis and St. Louis.Thompson, 50, was killed as he walked to a Manhattan hotel for his companys investor conference on Dec. 4, 2024. Surveillance video showed a masked gunman shooting him from behind and then fleeing the area. Over the next hours and days, police released photos of a suspect first showing him in a mask and hooded coat and then his face and thick eyebrows.Mangione, 27, has pleaded not guilty to state and federal murder charges. The pretrial hearing, which resumes for a sixth day on Thursday, applies only to the state case. His lawyers are making a similar push to exclude the evidence from his federal case, where prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.Among the notes revealed this week was one with a heading 12/5 and a starred entry that said: buy black shoes (white stripes too distinctive). Another, also written in to-do list style, suggested spending more than three hours away from surveillance cameras and using different modes of transportation to Break CAM continuity and avoid tracking. Below that, it said: check reports for current situation, a possible reference to news reports about the search for Thompsons killer.According to prosecutors, Mangione fled to Newark, New Jersey, immediately after the shooting and took a train to Philadelphia. Among the evidence shown at the pretrial hearing was a Philadelphia transit pass purchased at 1:06 p.m. a little more than six hours after the shooting and a ticket for a Greyhound bus, booked under the name Sam Dawson, leaving Philadelphia at 6:30 p.m. and arriving in Pittsburgh at 11:55 p.m.A note with the heading 12/8 lists a number of tasks, including an apparent trip to Best Buy to purchase a digital camera and accessories, hot meal + water bottles, and trash bag(s). Under 12/9, the day of Mangiones arrest, the note lists tasks including Sheetz, an Altoona-based convenience store chain, masks and AAA bats. Under Future TO DO, it listed intel checkin and survival kit. Mangione had a Sheetz hoagie in his backpack when he was arrested, along with a loaf of Italian bread from a local deli, according to police officers testifying Monday and Tuesday. It had been raining, and the bag and items inside it were wet, the officers said. They were heard on body-worn camera footage played in court theorizing that Mangione had gotten soaked walking from the citys bus station.Police responded to the McDonalds after a manager called 911 to relay concerns from customers who thought that Mangione, eating breakfast in a back corner, resembled the man wanted for killing Thompson. On the call, played in court, the manager could be heard saying that because Mangione was wearing a medical mask, she could only see his eyebrows and that she searched online for a photo of the suspect for comparison. Altoona Police Officer Stephen Fox testified on Tuesday that Mangione, the Ivy League-educated scion of a wealthy Maryland family, expressed concern for the 911 callers wellbeing. Fox said Mangione asked if police had planned on releasing her name, which they didnt. The officer recalled him saying: It would be bad for her and there would be a lot of people that would be upset.At another point, Fox said, a shackled Mangione stumbled while trying to keep up with the brisk-moving officer. Fox said he apologized and said, I forgot you were shackled.He said Mangione responded: Its OK, Im going to have to get used to it. MICHAEL R. SISAK Sisak is an Associated Press reporter covering law enforcement, courts and prisons. He is based in New York. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Australias social media ban leaves a 15-year-old worried about losing touch with friends
    Hugo Winwood-Smith, right, Hardy Macpherson and Edan Abou, left, all 11-years-old, use their phones while sitting outside a school in Sydney, Monday, Dec. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)2025-12-09T10:39:47Z MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Riley Allen, a 15-year-old schoolboy living on an Outback sheep ranch, doesnt know how hell keep in touch with his circle of far-flung friends once Australias world-first social media ban takes effect on Wednesday.Rileys family lives 5 kilometers (3 miles) from Wudinna, a community of just over 1,000 in South Australia state. But some of his school friends live as far as 70 kilometers (43 miles) away.I dont think the impact will be very positive for us. We dont have a lot out here to get in contact with each other, Riley said.Im not sure how were going to keep in touch over the holidays with each other, he said, referring to the Southern Hemisphere summer break that starts on Thursday.Riley and others younger than 16 will be banned by law from holding accounts with Facebook, Instagram, Kick, Reddit, Snapchat, Threads, TikTok, X, YouTube and Twitch from Wednesday. The platforms face fines of up to 49.5 million Australian dollars ($32.9 million) if they fail to take reasonable steps to remove the accounts. Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and Threads, was the first tech giant to react, beginning to exclude suspected young children from last week.Riley holds accounts with most of the age-restricted platforms and had been asked by some to verify that he is at least 16. But by Monday, he had not been ousted by any. Mom wont help 15-year-old son bypass social media banRileys schoolteacher mother, Sonia Allen, said she wouldnt help her son get around the ban, but suspects other parents will.I wouldnt. I do know there are other people that would. If the rule is there, the rule is there. But I know what kids are like, and Ive been a kid before, and theyre going to get around it if they can, she said.While the law allows parents no discretion to allow their children to hold social media accounts, Allen said there was a role for parents in regulating their childrens social media use. A year ago, she banned Riley from social media for several weeks.In the past with Riley, weve had to take measures to limit his usage because we found him on social media at midnight and he wasnt getting his homework done and things like that. We ended up taking it off him for a couple of months, Allen said. From that, hes learned to use it a more responsibly. Riley, who turns 16 in April, said he understood the bans objectives, but there are other ways to achieve them. He suggested a 10 p.m. enforced social media curfew for young children to prevent them losing sleep.Teens challenge the ban in Australias highest court Riley has an ally in Australias largest city, Sydney: schoolboy Noah Jones, who turns 16 in August.Noah is one of two 15-year-old plaintiffs in a constitutional challenge to the law in the High Court. The other in the case brought by the Sydney-based rights group Digital Freedom Project is schoolgirl Macy Neyland.They claim the law improperly robs 2.6 million young Australians of a right to freedom of political communication implied in Australias constitution.The Australian government is committed to defeating the challenge on behalf of what they say is an overwhelming majority of parents who demand government action against social media harms. Many restricted children have told media they welcome their exclusion from platforms with design features that encourage them to spend more time on screens while also serving up content that can harm their health and well-being.The parents group Heaps Up Alliance, which lobbied for the social media age restriction, backs the theory behind the blanket ban that when everybody misses out, nobody misses out.Before Parliament passed the ban last year, more than 140 Australian and international academics with expertise in fields related to technology and child welfare signed an open letter to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese opposing a social media age limit as too blunt an instrument to address risks effectively.Noah said the ban would lead to young Australians swapping from age-restricted platforms to more dangerous, less regulated options.Im against this social media ban because as young Australians, well be completely silenced and cut off from our country and the rest of the world, Noah said. Weve just grown up with this our entire lives, and now its just being taken away from us all of a sudden. We wouldnt even know what else we could do. His mother, Renee Jones, is also involved in the court case as her sons litigation guardian, because as a child he cant make legal decisions himself.She considers herself a relatively strict parent on social media, and never allowed Noah or his two older brothers to take devices into their bedrooms. But she supports Noahs stance.My parents would never have dreamed that my children could be so fortunate to have this library of knowledge, Jones said.But I really credit Noah as a young person who recognizes the dangers of social media. Its not all sunshine and lollypops, she added. A plaintiff says tech giants money would be welcome Digital Freedom Project president John Ruddick, who is also a state lawmaker for the minor Libertarian Party, said he had initially intended to apply for a court injunction in a bid to prevent the ban taking effect on Wednesday. But his lawyers advised against it.A directions hearing will be held in late February to set a hearing date for the constitutional challenge that will be heard by the full bench of seven judges.Ruddick said the case wasnt funded by any tech giant, but they would be extremely welcome to make a financial contribution.Ruddick expected children would get around the ban by means including using virtual private networks to make them appear to be offshore.Theyre going to get around it so theyre then going to be on an underground social media and, to make it worse, without parental supervision, Ruddick said. Its much better for it to be out in the open and for parents to play a very, very active role in monitoring what theyre doing on social media, he added. ROD MCGUIRK McGuirk covers Australian and South Pacific news for The Associated Press. He is based in Melbourne. mailto
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Eileen Higgins Wins Miami Runoff Election to Become Citys First Female Mayor
    Eileen Higgins, a former Miami-Dade County commissioner, will also be the citys first female mayor and the first non-Hispanic mayor since the 1990s.
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    Ukraine Could Be Ready for Elections, Zelensky Says
    The Ukrainian president told reporters that a vote could be held in 60 to 90 days if the country received security protections from the United States.
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    Seattles Plans for a Pride Match at World Cup Infuriates Iran and Egypt
    The two countries, which criminalize homosexuality and impose severe punishments for it, were picked to play on a day celebrating L.G.B.T.Q. communities.
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    Why Trump Accounts, as Currently Planned, Risk Leaving Out Many Children
    Michael and Susan Dell are donating $6.25 billion to American children via the accounts, but the details matter.
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    Trumps Nvidia Chip Deal Reverses Decades of Technology Restrictions
    President Trumps decision to allow Nvidia to sell its chips to China has raised questions about whether he is prioritizing short-term economic gain over long-term American security interests.
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    At State Dept., a Typeface Falls Victim in the War Against Woke
    Secretary of State Marco Rubio called the Biden-era move to the sans serif typeface wasteful, casting the return to Times New Roman as part of a push to stamp out diversity efforts.
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    Asserting a Personal Role in Warner Bros. Battle, Trump Seeks to Expand His Powers Again
    The move comes as the Supreme Court also appears poised to put antitrust enforcement by the Federal Trade Commission under his control.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    FDA Expands Covid Vaccine Inquiry to Adult Deaths
    The agency claimed that 10 childrens deaths were linked to the shots, although it did not release evidence to support the assertions.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Stephen Millers Stock Sale Raises Questions, Ethics Experts Say
    Mr. Miller, one of President Trumps top advisers, sold shares in the mining company MP Materials following a lucrative deal between the company and the government.
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    Mackenzie Scott Announces $7 Billion of Giving This Year
    The philanthropist known for donating to historically Black colleges and nonprofits working on climate change offered the news by updating an October blog post.
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    Democrats Say Hegseth Balked at Call for Full Video of Boat Strike
    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth briefed congressional leaders on Tuesday about the monthslong military campaign targeting people suspected of being drug traffickers at sea.
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    Inside the Pentagons Scramble to Deal With Boat Strike Survivors
    Officials initially weighed sending survivors of U.S. attacks on boats suspected of drug smuggling to a notorious prison in El Salvador, to keep them away from American courts.
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    Nobel Peace Prize for Venezuelas Mara Corina Machado Draws Criticism
    Mara Corina Machado is being honored for her push for democracy even as she backs President Trumps military buildup and aggressive campaign against Venezuela.
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    Trumps Speech on Economy Veers Into an Anti-Immigrant Tirade
    President Trump vacillated between demonizing immigrants and assuring a crowd of his supporters that life was better than ever under his administration.
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    Trump Administration Withdraws Plan to Overhaul Homeless Aid
    The abrupt decision to revise the plan added new uncertainty and possible delays into the governments distribution of $3.9 billion in homelessness relief.
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    The Battle for Warner Bros. Discovery
    Nicole Sperling, a Times reporter who covers Hollywood and the streaming revolution, breaks down the competing bids from Netflix and Paramount to buy Warner Bros. Discovery.
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    Taiwan Invokes National Security Law to Protect TSMC Trade Secrets
    An executive left TSMC for Intel. Taiwans government says that could threaten its national security.
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    Chip Company Plotted to Send Technology to China, Ex-C.E.O. Says
    The former chief executive of Nexperia, a Dutch chipmaker, said Dutch officials had known for years that the companys Chinese owner sought to move its technology to China.
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    Rod Paige, Education Secretary Who Defended No Child Left Behind, Dies at 92
    He was both the first Black person and the first educator to hold the cabinet position, but resigned amid discord over George W. Bushs No Child Left Behind.
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    Trump Picked This Fight With Maduro. He Cant Back Down.
    If the Trump administration allows Nicols Maduro to endure, it would signal that a criminal dictatorship masquerading as a state can stare down the United States and win.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Trump Says Americans Are Doing Great, Even as Views on the Economy Sour
    President Trumps speech in Pennsylvania was meant to alleviate concerns about affordability. But he kept wandering off script and dwelling on his favorite targets, like immigration.
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  • Late Night Doesnt Want to Sweat at the Airport
    Ronny Chieng dissed new fitness plans from the Trump administration for travelers in American airports: We cant even walk to the gate. They had to invent floors that walk for us.
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    Machado Wont Pick Up Peace Prize in Person, Nobel Director Says
    The head of the Norwegian Nobel Institute told the state broadcaster that Mara Corina Machado would not attend Wednesdays event in Oslo.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Social media ban for children under 16 starts in Australia
    Hugo Winwood-Smith, right, Hardy Macpherson and Edan Abou, left, all 11-years-old, use their phones while sitting outside a school in Sydney, Monday, Dec. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)2025-12-10T05:02:42Z MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese welcomed a world-first social media ban for children younger than 16 that took effect Wednesday as families taking back power from tech giants but warned the implementation would be difficult.Many children posted farewell messages, while parents reported distraught children discovering theyd been shut out of platforms as the landmark law took effect. Some young children reported fooling the platforms age estimation technology by drawing on facial hair. Parents and older siblings are also expected to help some children circumvent the restrictions. This is the day when Australian families are taking back power from these big tech companies and theyre asserting the right of kids to be kids and for parents to have greater peace of mind, Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reacts as he cooks on a barbecue at an event to mark the beginning of the social media ban for children under 16 years of age, at Kirribilli House, in Sydney, Australia, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP) Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reacts as he cooks on a barbecue at an event to mark the beginning of the social media ban for children under 16 years of age, at Kirribilli House, in Sydney, Australia, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP) Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More This reform will change lives. For Australian kids ... allowing them to just have their childhood. For Australian parents, enabling them to have greater peace of mind. But also for the global community, who are looking at Australia and saying: well, if Australia can do it, why cant we? Albanese later told a gathering of reform supporters at his official Sydney residence, including parents who blame social media for a childs suicide.Facebook, Instagram, Kick, Reddit, Snapchat, Threads, TikTok, X, YouTube and Twitch face fines of up to 49.5 million Australian dollars ($32.9 million) from Wednesday if they fail to take reasonable steps to remove the accounts of Australian children younger than 16. Australia to report by Christmas if social media ban is working The ban will be enforced by Australias eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant. She said the platforms already had the technology and personal data about their users to enforce the age restriction with precision.She would send the 10 targeted platforms on Thursday notices demanding information on how the age restriction was being implemented and how many accounts had been closed.We will provide information to the public before Christmas on how these age restrictions are being implemented and whether preliminarily we see them working, Inman Grant said.The responses to these notices will form the baseline against which we will measure compliance, she added. Communications Minister Anika Wells said the age-restricted platforms may not agree with the law and thats their right we dont expect 100% universal support, but that all had undertaken to comply with the Australian law. She said more than 200,000 TikTok accounts in Australia had already been deactivated by Wednesday. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese watches as Minister for Communications Anika Wells speaks at an event to mark the beginning of the social media ban for children under 16 years of age, at Kirribilli House in Sydney, Australia, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP) Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese watches as Minister for Communications Anika Wells speaks at an event to mark the beginning of the social media ban for children under 16 years of age, at Kirribilli House in Sydney, Australia, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP) Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Wells also warned young children who had so far evaded detection that they would eventually be caught. A child who used a virtual private network to appear to be in Norway would be caught out if they were routinely posting images of Australian beaches, Wells said.Just because they might have avoided it (detection) today doesnt mean they will be able to avoid it in a weeks time or a months time because social media platforms have to go back and routinely check under-16 accounts, Wells said.These social media platforms have so much data on us because we choose to give it to them because we like social media and because youve had your older brother scan their face for you today, which has bought you a bit of time, doesnt mean that these accounts arent going to see you talking to other 14-year-olds tonight about the under-16 soccer carnival on weekend, about your upcoming school holidays and what your Year 10 teacher is next year, she added.Albanese said the implementation would be difficult and wont be perfect. This is about, importantly, pushing back against big tech, saying that social media companies have a social responsibility, he said. Father of sextortion scam victim says social media ban is a start Wayne Holdsworth, who became an age restriction advocate because his son Mac took his own life after falling victim to an online sextortion scam, described the new law as a start. Children must now be educated about online dangers before they turn 16.Our kids that weve lost havent died in vain because today theyll be looking down very proud of the work that weve all done, Holdsworth told the Sydney gathering.Flossie Brodribb, a 12-year-old advocate for a social media ban for young children, told the gathering she hoped other countries would follow Australias lead.This ban is bold and brave and I believe it will help kids like me to grow up healthier, safer, kinder and more connected to the real world, Flossie said.Simone Clements said the social media ban would come at a financial cost to her 15-year-old twins Carlee and Hayden Clements. Carlee is an actor, model, dancer, singer and influencer. Her brother is an actor and model.I know that our situation is unique to our family because the kids are in the entertainment industry and social media goes hand-in-hand with the entertainment industry. We have used social media in the most positive way. And its a platform for them to basically show their portfolio, and this is an income stream for the children, the mother said. Privacy commissioner unclear how social media will verify ages Australias Privacy Commissioner Carly Kind said the platforms could potentially ask all account holders across the country to prove they were 16 or older.The platforms age verification options were to ask for copies of identification documents, use a third party to apply age estimation technology to analyze an account holders face, or make inferences from data already available such has how long an account has been held, Kind said.Theres quite strong privacy protections in the legislation. They require social media platforms to delete any data they collect for the purpose of age assurance under this scheme and to not use it for secondary purposes unless they have individuals consent. And thats a really strong and important safeguard, Kind said.The government has said requesting all account holders verify their ages would not be a reasonable step, given the platforms already held sufficient personal data of most people to perform that task.The platforms also cannot compel users to provide government-issued identification. ROD MCGUIRK McGuirk covers Australian and South Pacific news for The Associated Press. He is based in Melbourne. mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Venezuelan opposition leader Mara Corina Machado will miss Nobel Peace Prize ceremony
    Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado greets supporters during a protest against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro the day before his inauguration for a third term in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix, file)2025-12-10T07:27:36Z OSLO, Norway (AP) Venezuelan opposition leader Mara Corina Machado will miss the ceremony to award her the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo on Wednesday, the head of the Norwegian Nobel Institute said.Machado last appeared in public 11 months ago. Nobel Institute director Kristian Berg Harpviken told public broadcaster NRK the Venezuelan opposition leader was not in the Norwegian capital on the day of the ceremony and her daughter will accept the prize on Machados behalf.The institute did not immediately respond to emails or calls from The Associated Press seeking comment. On Tuesday, a news conference that Machado was expected to attend was canceled after being delayed for several hours.Prominent Latin American figures planned to attend Wednesdays ceremony in a signal of solidarity with Machado, including Argentine President Javier Milei, Ecuadors President Daniel Noboa, Panamas President Jos Ral Mulino and Paraguayan President Santiago Pea. Machado has been living in hiding and has not been seen in public since Jan. 9, when she was briefly detained after joining supporters in a protest in Caracas, Venezuelas capital. The 58-year-olds win for her struggle to achieve a democratic transition in her South American nation was announced on Oct. 10, and she was described as a woman who keeps the flame of democracy burning amid a growing darkness.Machado won an opposition primary election and intended to challenge President Nicols Maduro in last years presidential election, but the government barred her from running for office. Retired diplomat Edmundo Gonzlez took her place. The lead-up to the July 28, 2024 election saw widespread repression, including disqualifications, arrests and human rights violations. That increased after the countrys National Electoral Council, which is stacked with Maduro loyalists, declared the incumbent the winner. Gonzlez sought asylum in Spain last year after a Venezuelan court issued a warrant for his arrest. U.N. human rights officials and many independent rights groups have expressed concerns about the situation in Venezuela, and called for Maduro to be held accountable for the crackdown on dissent.Five past Nobel Peace Prize laureates were detained or imprisoned at the time of the award, according to the prizes official website, most recently Iranian activist Narges Mohammadi in 2023 and Belarusian human rights advocate Ales Bialiatski in 2022. The others were Liu Xiaobo of China in 2010, Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar in 1991 and Carl von Ossietzky of Germany in 1935.There is a long tradition that when a Peace Prize laureate cannot be present, close family members represent them, Harpviken said. That happened with Narges Mohammadi, and with Ales Bialiatski; both were imprisoned at the time. And the same will happen with Maria Corina Machado today. The daughter will deliver the statement her mother has written.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Renewed Thailand-Cambodia border fighting displaces hundreds of thousands
    An wounded Thai soldier is carried to be transferred to a hospital, in Surin province, Thailand, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025, following clashes between Thai and Cambodian soldiers. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)2025-12-10T09:01:39Z SURIN, Thailand (AP) Renewed border fighting between Thailand and Cambodia showed no signs of abating Wednesday, leaving hundreds of thousands of displaced people in both countries living in strained conditions as more flooded into temporary shelters.Associated Press reporters on the Thai side of the border heard sounds of outgoing, indirect fire Wednesday.About 400,000 people have been evacuated from affected areas in Thailand and around 700 schools closed while fighting was ongoing in four border provinces, Thai military spokesperson Rear Adm. Surasant Kongsiri said Wednesday.Cambodia evacuated more than 127,000 villagers and hundreds of schools closed, the defense ministry said.Thailands military announced that casualties this week include five soldiers killed and dozens wounded. Cambodia said seven civilians died and 20 others were wounded, though it did not update those figures on Wednesday. There is not yet a clear path to peace as Thailands Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul vowed to continue to fight and Cambodias powerful Senate President Hun Sen promised a fierce response. A knock-on effect of the fighting and bad blood between the nations was Cambodias withdrawal of its entire team from the 33rd Southeast Asian Games, which began Tuesday in Thailand. A Wednesday announcement from the National Olympic Committee of Cambodia said it regretted the action but the families of competitors were concerned about their safety. Trump says he will return sides to peaceThe new, widespread fighting followed a skirmish Sunday that wounded two Thai soldiers and derailed a ceasefire pushed by U.S. President Donald Trump that ended armed combat in July. The five days of fighting over territorial disputes left dozens dead on both sides and forced the evacuation of thousands of civilians. The ceasefire was brokered by Malaysia and pushed through by pressure from Trump, who threatened to withhold trade privileges from the two nations unless they agreed. Late Tuesday at a Pennsylvania political event, Trump said he would use his sway to end the renewed combat.Tomorrow Ill have to make a phone call, Trump said. Who else could say, Im going to make a phone call and stop a war between two very powerful countries, Thailand and Cambodia?U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio earlier called on the two sides to live up to the commitments made at an October meeting in Malaysia that reaffirmed the July ceasefire and called for removing heavy weapons from the border, coordinating removal of land mines and other steps.Thai foreign ministry spokesperson Nikorndej Balankura said Wednesday that there had not yet been any contact with the United States on the matter. He added that Thailand will not likely accept if another third party proposes to mediate since the line has been crossed.The ceasefire was fragile from the start as both nations carried on a bitter propaganda war and minor incidents of cross-border violence continued.Thailand deployed jet fighters to carry out airstrikes on what it says are military targets, while Cambodias most fearsome weapons are BM-21 rocket launchers with a range of roughly 30-40 kilometers (19-25 miles). They are capable of firing salvos of 40 rockets at a time and mounted on trucks, making them less vulnerable to attack.A Thai army statement said Cambodia on Tuesday launched approximately 125 salvos from BM-21 launchers totaling about 5,000 rockets and that some had hit civilian areas, though no casualties were reported. Shelters provide safe haven but concerns remainAway from the battlefronts, anxious evacuees are the most visible sign of the crisis. In a gymnasium in the northeastern Thai city of Surin, around 550 people are waiting out the combat, many having hurriedly fled after the first shots were fired Sunday.Officials have provided food and diversions for children. The cooler, winter temperatures have kept the situation in the shelter bearable, but there is inevitable boredom and concern about what they left behind including homes, valuables and animals.Thidarat Homhual, a 37-year-old farmer in the shelter with her family, said her mind is on cows, ducks, four dogs and nine cats left to fend for themselves. We are behind the front line. We can live like this. Its OK, she said. But I want it to be over. I miss my pets. I really miss my pets, all the animals at home. I cant really put it into words.___Sopheng Cheang in Srei Snam, Cambodia, Wasamon Audjarint in Bangkok and Matthew Lee and Lou Kesten in Washington contributed to this report.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Chinas Tencent quits Paramounts bid for Warner Bros to avert national security questions
    A man rides past the Tencent headquarters in Beijing, China on Aug. 7, 2020. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)2025-12-10T07:22:01Z BANGKOK (AP) Chinese gaming and social media giant Tencent Holdings has withdrawn from Paramount Skydance Corp.s bid to buy Warner Bros Discovery, according to a revised filing of its takeover bid by Paramount with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.The filing seen Wednesday shows the Chinese company dropped its $1 billion financing commitment for the takeover bid. Paramount said the Chinese companys participation in the bid had raised concern, since it would be a non-U.S. equity financing source, that its bid might be subject to a review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, known as CFIUS. That was even though approval by CFIUS or by the Federal Communications Commission was not a condition of the bid.The SEC filing, dated Monday, said that foreign sovereign wealth funds of Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Qatar, which are providing $24 billion for Paramounts bid, had agreed to give up a right to participate in Warner Bros management to avoid the additional scrutiny. On Monday, Paramount launched a hostile $77.9 billion takeover offer for Warner Bros. Discovery, competing with rival bidder Netflix to buy the company behind HBO, CNN and a famed movie studio.Big deals that involve foreign companies are sometimes subject to national security reviews by CFIUS, a U.S. government group chaired by the Treasury Secretary that studies mergers for national-security reasons. It has the power to force companies to change ownership structures or divest completely from the U.S. Under former President Joe Biden as well as President Donald Trump, the Treasury Department has sought to strengthen its powers as national security concerns related to foreign investment have increased.Tencent is among dozens of Chinese companies that the U.S. Defense Department has included in a list of companies it said have ties to Chinas military. Tencent, whose shares are listed in Hong Kong, denies that. Based in the southern technology and financial hub of Shenzhen, Tencent owns the League of Legends developer Riot Games and has ties with other big U.S. entertainment brands. It also has a streaming deal with the National Basketball Association.It is the worlds largest equity investor in online games and a major entertainment and social media company, operating the WeChat messaging and payments service in popular China and with Chinese emigrants abroad. Tencent has a market capitalization of over $700 billion, according to Hong Kongs stock exchange. There was no immediate comment from Tencent. ELAINE KURTENBACH Based in Bangkok, Kurtenbach is the APs business editor for Asia, helping to improve and expand our coverage of regional economies, climate change and the transition toward carbon-free energy. She has been covering economic, social, environmental and political trends in China, Japan and Southeast Asia throughout her career. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    They Came to the U.S. Legally. Then Trump Stripped Their Status Away.
    It was a chilly afternoon in January, just a week after President Donald Trump returned to the White House, when I met Yineska, a Venezuelan mother who had been living in the United States for nearly two years. Trumps election, she told me, had put her in a bind. On his first day back in office, Trump announced that he planned to end the humanitarian parole program that had allowed her, her children and more than 100,000 other Venezuelans to come to the United States in recent years. She feared that the new life she had worked so hard to build was about to unravel.I went to her home and we talked for hours in the small kitchen. She told me about her two boys, Sebastin and Gabriel, and about Eduard, her partner, who worked as a cook in a restaurant nearby in Doral, Florida, a city beside Miami. She described how difficult it had been to leave her family and small business behind in a once-thriving part of Venezuela, now hollowed out by years of economic decline. The journey to the U.S. was grueling. It took almost seven months for Yineska, her boys and a nephew to cross the dangerous Darin Gap and then Mexico before reuniting with Eduard in Miami.They managed to rent a safe space to live on the edge of Doral, found work and enrolled the boys in school. Yineskas oldest was excited about getting an American high school diploma. And then, with the swipe of his pen, the president threatened to take away the stable lives they had finally begun to build. I could hear the fear in her voice as we spoke.I introduced myself to Yineska because I knew she wasnt alone. Im a journalist and filmmaker at ProPublica, and I moved to the U.S. from Venezuela nearly a decade ago. I was fortunate to arrive with a visa that allowed me to work legally.As I watched Trumps second presidential campaign, I sensed what might be coming. His return to office would thrust so many Venezuelans who had recently settled in the U.S. between two storm clouds: an American government turning against them and a repressive regime back home that offered no future. Many of my Venezuelan friends saw something entirely different. They believed his return would be a blessing for our community, that he would cast out only those who had brought trouble and shield the rest.When I left Yineskas house that first night, I wrote in my notebook: This is a good family. A working family. They represent so many Venezuelans who came here seeking safety and opportunity and, in many ways, they represent me, too. In her story, I saw the chance to highlight the quiet anxiety growing in some corners of Doral that the sense of safety we had found in America could disappear overnight.Doral is the heart of the Venezuelan diaspora in the U.S. About 40% of those who live there emigrated from my country to escape the deep economic, political and social collapse that has unfolded in the nearly 12 years President Nicols Maduro has been in power. His authoritarian grip and the countrys unraveling economy caused nearly 8 million people to flee, mostly to other Latin American countries and the Caribbean. Its the largest mass displacement in the Western Hemispheres recent history.When I came to the U.S., most Latinos were facing the first waves of Trumps anti-immigrant rhetoric. At the time, Trump called Mexican people bad hombres. Venezuelans, by contrast, were not viewed negatively. Trump took a hard line against Maduro, imposing heavy economic sanctions meant to weaken his autocratic hold on power. The stance earned Trump broad support among Venezuelan exiles in the U.S., especially in South Florida and in Doral. In the final days of his first term, Trump recognized the danger Venezuelans faced if they were forced to return and issued a memorandum that temporarily shielded those already in the U.S. from deportation.In the following years, President Joe Biden opened several temporary pathways that allowed more than 700,000 Venezuelans to live legally in the U.S. His administration granted humanitarian parole to Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, like Yineska and her sons, allowing them to reside and work in the U.S. for up to two years if they passed background checks and secured financial sponsors. He also expanded Temporary Protected Status to Venezuelans already living here, which prevented them from being sent back to an unstable Venezuela and granted them work permits.After securing humanitarian parole and entering the U.S. in April 2023, Yineska and her two sons made their way to Florida to reunite with Eduard. He was in Miami and had applied for TPS. Traveling with Yineska was a nephew who applied for asylum. All of them entered the U.S. legally.Even as some in the community benefitted from Bidens policies, many Venezuelans counted themselves among the Latinos who argued that the Biden administration was giving asylum-seekers preferential treatment and not carefully vetting those entering the country. They said that lax oversight had allowed criminals, including members of the Venezuelan gang known as Tren de Aragua, to cross into the U.S. They also wanted Biden to take a stronger stance against Maduro. In 2024, the Venezuelan American vote helped Trump win handily in Miami-Dade County.Since Trump returned to the White House, that loyalty has been shaken. His administration has targeted Venezuelans in some of its most dramatic and punitive operations. In February, the federal government flew more than 230 Venezuelans to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador where men described being beaten and berated. The administration branded them the worst of the worst.My colleagues found that the U.S. government knew the vast majority had not been convicted of any crime here. Its own data indicated that of the 32 men with convictions, only six were for violent crimes. In response to that reporting, Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin insisted, without providing evidence, that the deportees were terrorists, human rights abusers, gang members and more they just dont have a rap sheet in the U.S.At the same time, the Trump administration has sought to end legal protections for families like Yineskas. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in April that Temporary Protected Status was only supposed to be used in times of war or storm or destruction in the home countries of these migrants. It was completely abused.Its as if youre standing on a rug thats pulled from under you, Yineska told me during one of our many conversations in her kitchen. For Venezuelan families like hers, the idea of temporary relief feels detached from reality. They have followed the rules and envisioned a future for their children. To tell them that their safety has an expiration date while their home country remains mired in the same crisis they fled and is now in the crosshairs of the U.S. military is a painful contradiction.Venezuelans I spoke with, including Yineska and Eduard, said migrants who break the law should face consequences, but those who follow the rules should have an opportunity to stay. And even as they confront the administrations crackdown, many still cheer Trumps hard-line stance against Maduro because they see a glimmer of hope that Venezuela might finally move toward a brighter future, something Venezuelans everywhere myself included dream of. But the future is dimming for those in Doral with temporary status. I see the impact every day. Restaurants are quieter. More apartments are listed for rent. The energy that once defined this community isnt the same.I am now a U.S. citizen, but this milestone feels bittersweet as I watch friends pack their belongings to seek opportunities abroad. Few plan to return to Venezuela.As the hostility of the administration pressed down on people like Yineska and her family, they worried they, too, would be forced to pack their bags. My new film, Status: Venezuelan, follows them as they weigh fear against hope, struggling to decide whether to fight for the life they have built or leave everything behind.The post They Came to the U.S. Legally. Then Trump Stripped Their Status Away. appeared first on ProPublica.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    The Contradictions of Gavin Newsom
    How the California governor became the 2028 Democratic front-runner.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Is your brain tired? Researchers are discovering the roots of mental fatigue
    Nature, Published online: 10 December 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03974-wBetter ways to measure cognitive exhaustion could point to treatments for long COVID and other debilitating disorders.
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    He Spent Funds Meant for Native Hawaiians on Polo and Porsches. The Federal Government Failed to Stop Him.
    At a congressional oversight hearing in 2019, Linda McMahon, then head of the Small Business Administration, lavished praise on a Native Hawaiian defense contractor as a shining example of a federal program designed to uplift Indigenous people.Christopher Dawson and his companies had won hundreds of millions of dollars in no-bid government contracts through the SBA based on the promise that his profits would primarily be used to help Native Hawaiians by, in part, promoting the culture, building homes and supporting orphaned children.Oh my goodness, McMahon gushed to senators. They bring so many businesses in and support so many businesses. She added she wanted to work more closely with them because they seem to have such a great footprint.Two months before the hearing, however, a former employee had met with federal investigators and filed a whistleblower lawsuit accusing Dawson and executives of cheating the SBAs 8(a) program. That program, which dates to the 1960s, was designed to help business owners from historically disadvantaged groups, including racial and ethnic minorities, to win federal contracts. For Native American tribes, Alaska Native corporations and certain Native Hawaiian nonprofits, such as Dawsons Hawaiian Native Corp., the opportunity comes with no cap on the size of those no-bid contracts.Internal company records and other documents in the SBAs possession would later show just how much Dawson had indulged. There were private jets and Porsches, luxury homes in Hawaii and Florida, memberships to private social clubs, and a nearly $1 million annual salary. Dawson also funneled millions into polo, investing in a beachfront horse farm on Oahus famed North Shore and a horse breeding operation in Argentina.Justice Department prosecutors would eventually describe Dawsons actions as part of a fraud scheme and embezzlement, one that victimized the people he was supposed to be helping.The SBA has known for years about its failures in policing its business development program. Audits and investigations by the Government Accountability Office and the SBA inspector general over the past two decades have found a lack of oversight by the agency, and in 2019, just months after McMahons testimony, the GAO again cited the agency for persistent weaknesses. McMahon did not respond to a request for comment.Controversies have included large corporations using Indigenous firms to access big contracts, government officials accepting bribes to steer no-bid awards, and white contractors pretending to be Native to win federal work. Congressional lawmakers have launched their own inquiries into the program, saying at different times that it was rife with waste, fraud and abuse. Federal prosecutors, too, have pursued numerous criminal cases, including a $30 million bribery scandal that investigators described as one of the most brazen corruption schemes in the history of federal contracting. Four men later pleaded guilty in that case.Yet as was the case with Dawson, the SBA has often been slow to act and done little to make meaningful reforms. The agency did not respond to detailed questions from Honolulu Civil Beat and ProPublica.The allegations targeting Dawson are the first major controversy where the founder of a Native Hawaiian organization is at its center, and it comes as President Donald Trumps second administration has begun auditing the 8(a) program, with officials saying it is plagued by rampant fraud.Robin Danner, a prominent figure in the Native Hawaiian community who was an early advocate for expanding no-bid contracting privileges to Native Hawaiians through the 8(a) program, has cautioned for years about the potential for abuse in the program and now worries about its future.Its a handful of people making millions of dollars off the backs of our people and our suffering, Danner said, referring to the historical plight of Native Hawaiians. What theyre giving back is pennies.Yet even after allegations of wrongdoing began to surface, Dawsons companies, operating under the brand DAWSON and including a suite of defense, construction and environmental firms, pulled down more than $500 million in new and existing contract payments on no-bid work ranging from cybersecurity operations at an air base in Qatar to plowing snow in Colorado.It wasnt until the summer of 2023 that federal agents raided the Hawaiian Native Corp. and DAWSON company offices in Honolulu, seizing computers and cellphones; workers were told to go home and the offices were closed. Five months later, Justice Department prosecutors took steps to seize four of Dawsons properties that prosecutors said were bought using money he stole from Native Hawaiians.Honolulu offices for Chris Dawsons Hawaiian Native Corp. stood empty in 2023 following a federal raid. Kevin Fujii/Civil BeatWhen the SBA eventually took action in early 2024, it was in the form of a letter threatening to suspend or terminate the Hawaiian Native Corp. and DAWSON companies from the program. In the letter, Donna Peebles, an administrator overseeing the 8(a) program, said the SBA had evidence, including an audit presentation, tax records, credit card statements and other documents, some dating back to 2015, showing funds paying for luxury car leases, mortgages on private residences, stays at extravagant hotels and an opulent trip to Dubai. More than $1.6 million went to Dawsons North Shore polo farm.Peebles alleged that Dawson also diverted $25,000 per month to Hawaii Polo Life, describing it in records as a subcontractor even though it was actually his personal brand, which included a line of luxury athleisure wear.The amount of money pulled out of the companies for Dawsons use in just five years far exceeded what the Hawaiian Native Corp. gave back over 10, Peebles wrote, and was the antithesis of the programs intent and a gross breach of trust.The Hawaiian Native Corp. and DAWSON companies said in written statements that they have been cooperating with the DOJ and working with the SBA on reforms. They said that the investigation focused on individual employees and does not allege criminal activities by Hawaiian Native Corp. or the DAWSON operating companies. Neither agency, the statement said, has ever issued a finding of any wrongdoing by the Hawaiian Native Corp. or its companies.Almost immediately after Dawson became the target of the criminal investigation, the companies said they took swift action to suspend and then fire him.It was a blow from which he would never recover.If you or someone you know needs help, here are a few resources:Call theNational Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 988Text theCrisis Text Linefrom anywhere in the U.S. to reach a crisis counselor: 741741Dawsons family would later tell Honolulu police officers that after he was cut off, he said he was worried about running out of money. He faced six-figure tax debts, growing legal fees and costs related to his polo horses.As Christmas 2024 neared, he discussed the federal investigation at the familys home in the Nuuanu Valley, telling one of his sisters that he felt like he was in no-mans-land.The next morning, he was found off a nearby hiking trail, where he had died by suicide.Program in Need of Tailored OversightDawson came from a well-heeled family with deep political connections. He was the son of a Canadian businessman, and his mother, Beadie Kanahele Dawson, was a Native Hawaiian activist and lawyer. They lived in a historic villa and owned a contracting firm that focused on environmental remediation.As an adult, Dawson began running the family company. He also dabbled in politics, including making a bid for the state House and giving political contributions to lawmakers, most notably U.S. Sen. Dan Inouye, then the states most powerful politician.Native American tribes and Alaska Native corporations already had federal contracting advantages through the 8(a) program. The intention was that in exchange for access to the largest no-bid contracts, they would use company profits to support their people and provide other benefits, such as dividends, scholarships and burial assistance.Alaska Natives, in particular, had made good use of these privileges and by the early 2000s were winning hundreds of millions of dollars in federal contracts. Dawson and his mother wanted in, so they made the 5,000-mile pilgrimage from Hawaii to Washington, D.C., to lobby Inouye.For Inouye, the SBA program was a way to right the wrongs Native Hawaiians endured after U.S.-backed plantation owners overthrew their kingdom in 1893, stripping them of their political sovereignty and 1.8 million acres of land. For the Dawsons, it wasnt just about equity; it was about protecting their turf from Alaska Native firms.Beadie Dawson recalled in an oral history years later that Alaska Natives had told her and other Native Hawaiian contractors that the only way their businesses would succeed would be by working for the Alaskans.My son and I decided that wasnt going to happen, she said.But in trying to open up access to Native Hawaiians, Inouye faced a problem. Native Hawaiians did not have a federally recognized tribe or tribal government that could direct how company profits would flow back into the community and that would be accountable to its members. To get around that, Inouye and the SBA adopted a system that would allow private nonprofits, known as Native Hawaiian Organizations, to act as stand-ins. Even then they were treated differently from their tribal and Alaska Native peers in that the contracting advantages the 8(a) program provided them, including access to no-bid awards of unlimited size, only applied to defense contracts.Around the same time NHOs were finding their footing, the SBA was coming under scrutiny for failures of oversight in Alaska.As Alaska Native corporations won more contracts, particularly after 9/11, members of Congress called for an investigation. In 2005, one GOP lawmaker noted, This could be turning into a scam because of the sole-source nature of these contracts.The following year the Government Accountability Office issued its first report finding that the 8(a) program, as applied to Native groups, needed tailored oversight. It found that the SBA was ill-equipped to handle the complexities of the growing program in part due to poor staffing and shoddy data collection. Auditors noted that the SBA could not provide the GAO with reliable data on revenues or how those funds were spent.Its a handful of people making millions of dollars off the backs of our people and our suffering.Robin Danner, who early on pushed to make Native Hawaiian organizations eligible to win large no-bid contracts through the Small Business Administrations 8(a) programBy then some of the first signs of worry about bad actors in the Native Hawaiian program were beginning to emerge. In 2007, Inouyes chief of staff warned him in a memo that some NHO founders, including Dawsons mother, feared some of their peers really have no idea what theyre doing and had formed their own trade group to help police themselves.We cannot afford to have a few ill-informed or ill-motivated NHOs to screw it up for everybody, the staffer wrote.Every few years the SBA 8(a) program saw a new scandal, including a 2008 revelation that two Alaska Native firms agreed to funnel more than $23 million to non-Native companies and news reports in 2010 by The Washington Post and ProPublica showing that Alaska Native shareholders received little while non-Native contractors took huge payouts.The SBA responded by requiring participants to self-report each year how they were giving back to their communities. But the agency declared those reports confidential, leaving no opportunity for outside scrutiny. Information is also limited because NHOs are not required to file public disclosures and many dont reveal comprehensive information voluntarily.The public usually only hears about NHO giveback efforts when a company promotes them either on its own websites or in press releases. One of Chris Dawsons most recognizable contributions to Native Hawaiians was a 30-second radio spot on Hawaii Public Radio known as the Hawaiian Word of the Day, which was listed on the Hawaiian Native Corp.s website under the heading Community Impact. The company also sponsored the broadcast of the Merrie Monarch hula competition on the Big Island and helped pay the electric bills at Iolani Palace, a historic Honolulu landmark that once served as the official residence for the rulers of the Hawaiian Kingdom.Such voluntary reports should be met with skepticism, according to Colin Kippen, a Native Hawaiian lawyer who worked to set up the NHO program in the early 2000s.Anecdotal evidence is whatever part of the elephant you touch as a blind man, Kippen said. You could get misled.Polo, a Porsche and a Private JetOne set of expenditures that caught the eye of federal investigators and SBA officials was Dawsons investment in polo.Polo was a decadeslong obsession for Dawson and one that he connected to his Native Hawaiian heritage. He was fond of talking about polos arrival in the islands during the 1880s when British naval officers challenged local residents to a match while King Kalakaua still reigned over the kingdom. But he also tied it back to the islands paniolo, or cowboy, culture that itself was imported to the islands from Mexico in the 1800s.A promotional image of Dawson from the Hawaii Polo Life Instagram account Screenshot by ProPublicaHe boasted on various websites, including his own, about his growing stature in the sport and how it benefitted Native Hawaiians. As one site declared: Chris is dedicated to supporting the Native Hawaiian community through philanthropy, his business enterprises, and his work to teach Hawaiian history and culture through the lens of polo.Some of Dawsons spending on polo began around 2015 when SBA records show he started diverting $1.6 million into Anuenue Farms Hawaii, his oceanfront polo training and horse riding stable on the North Shore. The SBA said internal accounting records showed he often would label these transfers as payments for marketing and branding.By 2019, budget documents show, he started paying Hawaii Polo Life $25,000 a month as a subcontractor to the Hawaiian Native Corp. The money was paid through one of Dawsons personal businesses that federal prosecutors later described as a shell company that did not provide any goods or services to the nonprofit or its subsidiaries. Around the same time, Dawson was hosting swanky polo tournaments in the islands and sponsoring some of the top polo players in the world, including a womens team that would go on to win multiple national championships.Eventually he would partner with Argentinian polo star Adolfo Cambiaso, one of the greatest to ever play the game, to start the horse breeding operation in Argentina where he planned to clone some of the sports top specimens.Court records show that the DOJ considered Dawsons investments in polo, and in particular his purchase of a six-bedroom Florida estate next to the national polo grounds, to be indications he had shortcharged Native Hawaiians because financial records obtained by prosecutors showed that he purchased the home using $1.3 million he took from one of his 8(a) companies.A Department of Justice document compared the intended process for the Small Business Administrations 8(a) program to the practices they say Dawson used, showing that he diverted funds for personal use. Diverted funds circled by ProPublica. Obtained by Honolulu Civil Beat and ProPublicaFrom 2015 to 2020, Dawsons company saw its annual revenue from federal contracts grow from $72 million to more than $200 million. By 2019, Dawson was paying himself a $946,500 salary, according to the SBAs letter. The agency called the salaries Dawson paid himself during that period exorbitant. It found he had also set aside $2.3 million over three years to pay his credit cards.Dawson and other executives had allegedly used shell companies and hollow invoices to line their own pockets, according to the DOJs asset forfeiture case. One of these shell companies, prosecutors said, siphoned off over $17 million between 2015 and 2021 nearly double the amount given to the Hawaiian Native Corp. for the benefit of Native Hawaiians.In short, prosecutors wrote, the investigation revealed Mr. Dawson and his associates abused the SBA 8(a) program to perpetuate a fraud scheme and embezzlement that victimized HNC and Native Hawaiians.Dawsons criminal defense attorney, Michael Purpura, said in a statement to Civil Beat and ProPublica that Dawson and his companies had for years filed detailed financial statements with the agency and relied on the advice of fully informed accountants and attorneys at all times and on all issues related to the SBA 8(a) program.A police record included a photograph of a set of polo mallets in one of Dawsons cars. Obtained by Honolulu Civil Beat and ProPublicaThe Dawson familys historic villa, photographed after Chris Dawson was found dead Obtained by Honolulu Civil Beat and ProPublicaBlowing the Whistle on Phantom WorkYears before the DOJ investigators raided Dawsons company, two of his employees witnessed similar behavior and filed federal lawsuits detailing their concerns.Eugene Sellers worked for Dawson for four years between 2014 and 2018 and said he was invited to attend one of his polo exhibitions in the islands. While he heard the Hawaiian Word of the Day on the local radio and participated in the annual day of service named after Dawsons mother, Sellers didnt see much in terms of meaningful investment in the Native Hawaiian community, such as the purchase of ancestral lands or paying for housing.Its like the old commercial, Sellers said in an interview. Wheres the beef?In 2018, Sellers filed a federal whistleblower lawsuit that foreshadowed many of the accusations contained in the DOJs asset forfeiture case. His complaint detailed how side companies were used to bill for phantom work to get around SBA limits on excessive withdrawals, including for salaries. There were suspicious expenditures, too, he alleged, including season tickets to Dallas Cowboy football games and courtside seats for the San Antonio Spurs.His complaint also pointed to an unexplained payment of $500,000 to a Texas-based company managed by Dawson and two other high-ranking executives. To Sellers, a retired fraud investigator for the Air Force, that payment was a red flag for an illegal disbursement, the lawsuit stated, because it was a round number and it was going to a side company owned by insiders.Among the executives referenced in Sellers complaint were Hawaiian Native Corp. chief financial officer Bryan Hara and Billy Cress, the DAWSON president and chief operating officer. Both would eventually be accused by the DOJ in court records of working with Dawson to divert money away from Hawaiian Native Corp. and DAWSON companies.Tommy Otake, a Honolulu-based criminal defense attorney representing Hara, declined to comment on the allegations Sellers made in his civil suit and did not reply to requests for comment on the DOJ allegations. Cress did not respond to phone calls and emails. Neither Cress nor Hara have been charged with any crimes. In a statement to Civil Beat and ProPublica, the Hawaiian Native Corp. and DAWSON companies denied Sellers allegations.Shortly after filing his lawsuit, Sellers met with federal investigators in San Diego, including representatives from the DOJ and SBA office of inspector general, but said in an interview that nothing ever came of that meeting. The DOJ and SBA inspector generals office declined to comment.Three years later, another senior executive at one of Dawsons 8(a) companies filed a lawsuit, alleging he was fired after discovering irregularities in the companys finances.Lyan DeSouza alleged that subcontracting firms owned by Dawson executives were getting paid for management and consulting services that didnt exist, leading DeSouza to believe Dawson was defrauding the Federal Government.DeSouza also said in his complaint that Hara, the chief financial officer, was withdrawing large sums of money and writing them off as personal loans to Mr. Dawson. When DeSouza raised these concerns, the complaint states, he was fired. The company denied the allegations and Haras attorney declined to comment.Both suits ended in confidential settlement agreements in 2020 and 2023.By 2022, SBA officials proposed reforms that would have required a set percentage of company revenues to be used as cash contributions to Indigenous communities. The SBA also considered whether tribes, Alaska Native corporations and NHOs should be penalized if they didnt make good faith efforts to follow through on their promises to help their people.The proposal, the agency explained, came in response to an observation that not all entities appear to be allocating an appropriate share of their 8(a) receipts to the communities they serve.Dawson and other NHO leaders, including his sister Lani Dawson Arena, who was the president of the Native Hawaiian Organization Association, testified that the one-size-fits-all approach would hurt businesses with small margins that might not be able to afford the giveback percentages the SBA put in place.They were part of a chorus of opposition that ultimately helped sink the proposal.Raymond Jardine, a Native Hawaiian contractor who relied on SBA contracting privileges, was among the few who hoped for more oversight. Like others, he saw the high potential for misuse of the NHO program. He had also seen for himself Dawsons sumptuous spending, particularly on polo, and was worried Dawson might be taking advantage of the SBAs loose rules and lax oversight.So when he heard in 2023 that federal investigators were sniffing around Dawsons companies and talking to current and former employees, he decided to call Dawson directly.Despite rumors going around the islands, he tried to assure me that nothing really was going on and that my information was not accurate, Jardine said. I told him, Chris, the coconut wireless is rarely wrong.Corruption a Fact of LifeOnce federal agents walked through the door, the Hawaiian Native Corp. and DAWSON company officials moved quickly to salvage their contracting privileges.Dawson and his family were removed from their positions within the Hawaiian Native Corp., according to a joint statement to ProPublica and Civil Beat from the nonprofit and its companies. Dawsons sister Donne Dawson, and his mother, Beadie Dawson, who served with him on the Hawaiian Native Corp. board of directors, did not return multiple calls seeking comment.The Hawaiian Native Corp. board of directors was reconstituted to include Andy Winer, a Washington lobbyist who was previously chief of staff to Hawaii U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz, the top Democrat on the Indian Affairs Committee. And the companies have hired a forensic accountant to the leadership team to make sure theyre adhering to SBA rules.You cant manage toward the 1% of the bad actors.John Shoraka, a former associate administrator for the Small Business AdministrationIn addition, the Hawaiian Native Corp. has vowed to be more transparent. For the first time, it posted a detailed report on its website showing how much it gave back to Native Hawaiians. The report shows that in 2024 it provided $3.8 million to various Native Hawaiian causes, including canoe paddling clubs, a language immersion center and a group promoting the preservation of lua, a Native Hawaiian martial art.In a joint statement, nonprofit and company officials said they plan to continue to do so even though the SBA regulations on impact reporting do not require public posting.They are also working to liquidate assets that Dawson owned so that the proceeds can be properly directed in accordance with SBA 8(a) regulations.Rather than cut the Hawaiian Native Corp. and DAWSON companies out of the program, the SBA entered into an administrative agreement that company officials said includes enhanced mandates, although neither side provided specifics.At the same time, the companies have continued to win large, no-bid contracts, including immediately following the raid, to help clean up toxic debris from the Lahaina wildfire burn site on Maui.Although current agency officials have declined to discuss Dawsons case, John Shoraka, who oversaw the 8(a) program during the Obama administration, said the SBA is not built to catch everyone who is cheating the system and that fraud, waste and abuse in government contracting is a fact of life.You cant manage toward the 1% of the bad actors, he said. He also pointed to high case loads and short staffing, which he said can turn oversight into an exercise of checking the box.While the Trump administration has vowed to audit the program, it has not yet announced any results or proposed reforms.The post He Spent Funds Meant for Native Hawaiians on Polo and Porsches. The Federal Government Failed to Stop Him. appeared first on ProPublica.
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