• WWW.ESPN.COM
    Burrow: 'Fun' comments weren't aimed at Cincy
    Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow said his midweek comments "had nothing to do with Cincinnati."
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Gunshots at Brown University, Then 12 Hours of Lockdown and Fear
    As the shooter remained at large, students sheltered in place in classrooms and basements, waiting for the all clear.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    House Republicans Accuse D.C. Police of Manipulating Crime Statistics
    The committee cited interviews with police commanders in an effort to buttress President Trumps federal takeover of law enforcement and the National Guard deployment in the capital city.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    JetBlue flight near Venezuela avoids midair collision with US Air Force tanker
    A JetBlue logo is displayed on the side of a jet as it taxis at Boston's Logan International Airport, Jan. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File)2025-12-14T19:15:23Z WASHINGTON (AP) A JetBlue flight from the small Caribbean nation of Curaao halted its ascent to avoid colliding with a U.S. Air Force refueling tanker on Friday, and the pilot blamed the military plane for crossing his path. We almost had a midair collision up here, the JetBlue pilot said, according to a recording of his conversation with air traffic control. They passed directly in our flight path. ... They dont have their transponder turned on, its outrageous.The incident involved JetBlue Flight 1112 from Curaao, which is just off the coast of Venezuela, en route to New York Citys JFK airport. It comes as the U.S. military has stepped up its drug interdiction activities in the Caribbean and is also seeking to increase pressure on Venezuelas government. We just had traffic pass directly in front of us within 5 miles of us maybe 2 or 3 miles but it was an air-to air-refueler from the United States Air Force and he was at our altitude, the pilot said. We had to stop our climb. The pilot said the Air Force plane then headed into Venezuelan air space. Derek Dombrowski, a spokesman for JetBlue, said Sunday: We have reported this incident to federal authorities and will participate in any investigation. He added, Our crewmembers are trained on proper procedures for various flight situations, and we appreciate our crew for promptly reporting this situation to our leadership team. The Pentagon referred The Associated Press to the Air Force for comment. The Air Force didnt immediately respond to a request for comment. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on The Federal Aviation Administration last month issued a warning to U.S. aircraft urging them to exercise caution when in Venezuelan airspace, due to the worsening security situation and heightened military activity in or around Venezuela.According to the air traffic recording, the controller responded to the pilot, It has been outrageous with the unidentified aircraft within our air.___Associated Press writer Ben Finley contributed to this report. CHRISTOPHER RUGABER Rugaber has covered the Federal Reserve and the U.S. economy for the AP for 16 years. He is a two-time finalist for the Gerald Loeb award for business reporting. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Zootopia 2 reclaims No. 1 spot at box office, grosses $1B worldwide
    This image released by Disney shows Nick Wilde, voiced by Jason Bateman, left, and Judy Hopps, voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin, in a scene from "Zootopia 2." (Disney via AP)2025-12-14T18:12:57Z NEW YORK (AP) Zootopia 2 regained the No. 1 spot at the domestic box office with $26.3 million in its third weekend of release, according to studio estimates Sunday, as The Walt Disney Co. animated sequel became the years second film to gross $1 billion worldwide.With Avatar: Fire and Ash arriving Friday, it was a relatively quiet weekend in theaters. There were no major new releases, leaving holdovers Zootopia 2 and Five Nights at Freddys 2 to duke it out for the top spot.The edge went to Zootopia 2, which has quickly amassed $1.14 billion in global ticket sales thanks significantly to its enormous success in China. There, its grossed $502.4 million, making Zootopia 2 the biggest Hollywood hit in the country in years. The only other 2025 Hollywood title to surpass $1 billion worldwide was Disneys Lilo & Stitch ($1.04 billion). The highest grossing movie of the year, though, is the Chinese blockbuster Ne Zha 2, which collected nearly $2 billion just in China. In its second weekend of release, the Universal Pictures and Blumhouse Productions sequel Five Nights at Freddys 2 collected $15.4 million, a brutal drop of 70% from its above-expectations debut. Still, with a domestic total of $95.5 million, the $36 million production is a big win for Blumhouse, adding another horror franchise to its portfolio.The weekends most notable new release was James L. Brooks Ella McCay, his first directed film in 15 years. Ella McCay earned a scant $2.1 million from 2,500 locations, making it one of the years worst wide releases. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on But box-office expectations werent high coming in from Ella McCay, a comic drama about a 34-year-old woman (newcomer Emma Mackey) who becomes governor of her home state. Reviews (22% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) were poor, and the kind of award-winning comic dramas movies that Brooks (Terms of Endearment, Broadcast News) has long specialized in today seldom find large audiences in theaters. Ella McCay, featuring a supporting cast including Jamie Lee Curtis, Ayo Edebiri and Woody Harrelson, cost $35 million to make. With overall ticket sales on the year running close to even with last years disappointing grosses, according to Comscore data, Hollywood will be hoping the coming holiday corridor, traditionally the busiest moviegoing period of the year, ends 2025 on a high note. Movies on tap include Avatar: Fire and Ash, The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants, Marty Supreme, Anaconda and Song Sung Blue. Top 10 movies by domestic box officeWith final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:1. Zootopia 2, $26.3 million. 2. Five Nights at Freddys 2, $19.5 million. 3. Wicked: For Good, $8.6 million. 4. Dhurandhar, $3.5 million. 5. Now You See Me: Now You Dont, $2.4 million.6. Jujutsu Kaisen: Execution, $2.1 million. 7. Ella McCay, $ 2.1 million. 8. Dr. Seuss How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000), $1.9 million. 9. Eternity, $1.8 million. 10. Hamnet, $1.5 million. JAKE COYLE Coyle has been a film critic and covered the movie industry for The Associated Press since 2013. He is based in New York City. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.LGBTQNATION.COM
    Cis Squid Game actor says he didnt want his trans character to be a caricature
    South Korean actor Park Sung-hoon is opening up about his approach to his transgender character in the second season Squid Game.Netflixs hit thriller series drew criticism last month when it was revealed that the cisgender Park had been cast in the role of Hyun-ju, a former special forces soldier and transgender woman. Critics have long argued that apart from denying trans actresses work, casting cisgender men to play trans women reinforces the anti-trans perception that trans women are really men. That insidious belief is not only at the heart of efforts to deny trans women access to public bathrooms, changing rooms, and shelters, but can also lead to violence against them. Related Squid Game creator says it was impossible to cast a trans actor as season twos trans character While Park did not directly address the backlash, he noted in a January 8 interview with local reporters that he approached the role with caution, and consulted with actual trans people in an effort to make sure Hyun-ju would not come off as a caricature, according to Korea JoongAng Daily, the English language edition of South Korean daily newspaper JoongAng Ilbo. Never Miss a Beat Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights. Subscribe to our Newsletter today I never wanted to overdo the voice or exaggerate my gestures, and [Squid Game creator and director Hwang Dong-hyuk] fully agreed with me on that, Park said. Since my natural voice is quite deep, I felt that altering it too much would undermine the emotional authenticity.Park went on to explain that he worked closely with Hwang and the shows costume and makeup teams to develop the characters look. But, he said, Hyun-jus short bangs were my idea.He also noted that in a particular scene, Hwang asked him to think about how Hyun-jus mother would have felt when she first learned about his characters sexuality.Hwang wanted that emotion to come through, but at the same time, didnt want to overdo it, Park said.Park also explained that Hwang had spotted his feminine side and saw the character in him in his performance as a grieving father in a 2021 episode of the South Korean anthology series KBS Drama Special. I was raised with two older sisters, so it was difficult not to be influenced by them growing up, Park said. But I had kept this feminine side of me hidden.Hwang, meanwhile, addressed criticism of his casting of Park late last month, telling TVGuide.com that while he initially intended to cast a transgender actress, there are close to no actors that are openly trans, let alone openly gay, because unfortunately in the Korean society currently the LGBTQ community is rather still marginalized and more neglected, which is heartbreaking.In a subsequent interview with Decider, Hwang explained why he felt it was important to include a trans character in the shows second season.I saw the people who come to join the games in Squid Game as people who are usually marginalized or neglected from society, and not just financially speaking, he said. Today, unfortunately, in Korean society, the gender minority is a group that is not as accepted widely within society. Which is why I created the character Hyun-ju as a male to female transgender woman.Subscribe to theLGBTQ Nation newsletterand be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Lawrence 'on fire,' accounts for 6 TDs in Jags win
    Trevor Lawrence threw for 330 yards and a career-high five touchdowns and ran for another in the Jaguars' 48-20 rout of the Jets at EverBank Stadium.
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    Henderson and Lawrence paint playoff masterpiece; more winners and losers of Week 15
    TreVeyon Henderson, Trevor Lawrence and Trey McBride led the way with big Week 15 performances, while Joe Burrow, Quinshon Judkins and Ladd McConkey were among the biggest disappointments.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Jos Antonio Kast Elected President of Chile
    Jos Antonio Kast won the race on Sunday after a contest marked by concerns over security and immigration.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    U.S. Military Plane and JetBlue Flight Nearly Collided Over Caribbean, Radio Traffic Shows
    The Air Force refueling tanker was flying without its location transponder activated and could not be detected by air traffic control.
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    His Job Is to Make the Subway Accessible. His Own Life Fuels His Work.
    Quemuel Arroyo, the New York transit systems chief accessibility officer, has used a wheelchair for half his life. He understands how difficult it is to navigate the subway.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Kenya Is Betting Its Economy on Women Willing to Risk It All
    We set out to investigate worker abuse in Saudi Arabia. We found a system that begins exploiting them before they ever leave home.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Aggies shock unbeaten volleyball No. 1 Huskers
    The NCAA women's volleyball tournament was rocked Sunday as Texas A&M upset previously unbeaten No. 1 Nebraska 3-2, sending the Aggies to the program's first final four.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Rams' Adams injures hamstring; TNF status TBD
    Rams WR Davante Adams is questionable to return due to a non-contact hamstring injury.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Rivers nearly helps Colts win in stunning return
    In his stunning return after nearly five full seasons in retirement, Philip Rivers started at quarterback for the Colts and positioned them to win before a late collapse by Indy in an 18-16 loss to the Seahawks on Sunday.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Has Trevor Lawrence leveled up? Will we see Bills-Pats again? Let's overreact to Week 15
    Has Liam Coen unlocked the Jags' mercurial QB? Will we see an AFC East rubber match? We overreact to Week 15.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Source: Pack's Parsons believed to have torn ACL
    The initial belief is that the Packers' Micah Parsons suffered a torn ACL, a source confirmed to ESPN.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Mahomes tears ACL as Chargers eliminate Chiefs from playoff contention with 16-13 victory
    Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) is checked on after being injured during the second half of an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Chargers Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ed Zurga)2025-12-14T21:34:40Z KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) The final images of the Kansas City Chiefs postseason pursuit were Patrick Mahomes getting helped to the locker room with what turned out to be a torn ACL in his left knee, a white towel draped over his head, and backup quarterback Gardner Minshew throwing an interception to Derwin James that gave the Los Angeles Chargers a win over one of their biggest rivals.It all happened in the final two minutes of their 16-13 victory Sunday.Justin Herbert, playing through a broken left hand, had helped the Chargers take the lead with a second-half rally, but Kansas City got the ball back with one more chance. Mahomes was sprinting toward the sideline and throwing the ball away when he was spun to the ground by defensive lineman DaShawn Hand, leaving the two-time MVP grabbing at his left knee.It didnt look good, Chiefs coach Andy Reid acknowledged afterward. Later, the Chiefs released an update, saying: An MRI has confirmed that Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes sustained a torn ACL in his left knee in todays game. Patrick and the club are currently exploring surgical options. Minshew took over and completed three straight passes, giving Chiefs fans hope on a day that began with wind chills near zero and their playoff chances about the same. But with 20 seconds to go, Minshew unloaded a pass for Travis Kelce, and James his longtime divisional foil leaped up to pick it off, allowing Los Angeles (10-4) to begin celebrating a second straight 10-win season. Perhaps soon, a second straight postseason appearance.Its a ball team. This is a ball team, Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh said. Starting to think this is my favorite ball team that Ive ever been on. Ive been on a lot of teams, none better than this team. Its a ball team. A real ball team. Love these guys.We know what that team has done the last eight, nine years, James added. Coming into Arrowhead Stadium and getting a win, it means a lot for out team, because were 5-0 in our division. Minshew will quarterback the Chiefs through the final three games of the season. One of them is a primetime showdown with the Denver Broncos on Christmas night.Ill do whatever the coaches ask of me, Minshew said, and well go try to win some games.The Chiefs (6-8) already are guaranteed to be watching the playoffs on TV for the first time since 2014, and Kelce was in no mood to talk about it. Just as hes done after several losses this season, the star tight end refused to answer questions from reporters.Sorry guys, its not the time, Kelce said.The Chargers had beaten the Chiefs in their opener in Brazil, ultimately setting each club on its season-long trajectory.Los Angeles arrived for the rematch Sunday trying to extend the momentum built in last weeks win over the Super Bowl champion Eagles. The Chiefs showed up knowing a loss, coupled with the wrong results elsewhere, would eliminate them completely.The Chiefs played appropriately inspired for most of the first half.They moved swiftly downfield with Mahomes darting in from 12 yards out for a touchdown on their opening drive. They added a field goal later in the first half, and another by Harrison Butker gave them a 13-3 lead with 38 seconds left before the break. Thats when the Chargers started playing like a playoff-bound team. And the Chiefs like one that should be sitting at home.Herbert completed three passes in five plays to cover 60 yards, and KeAndre Lambert-Smiths first career TD catch got the Chargers within a field goal. Cameron Dicker knotted the game on their opening possession of the second half, then he gave them the lead when he drilled a 49-yarder on a cold, windy day at Arrowhead Stadium with 2:40 to go in the third quarter.The Chiefs tried to answer down the stretch, despite a rash of injuries that had left them with a patchwork offensive line. But just like so often this season, a promising drive went haywire in the red zone. Tyquan Thorntons spectacular catch was immediately forgotten when Mahomes pass was picked off by Daiyan Henley on a jump ball thrown to Kareem Hunt at the goal line. Mahomes, who had just 189 yards passing, would ultimately end the game in the Kansas City locker room.The Chargers would end the Chiefs postseason hopes with one more interception.I thought it was really cool that we were able to close out a one-score game like that, how many times weve played them and had one-score games, Herbert said. For the defense to come out there with the turnovers and stops, it was awesome to see.Sent packingThornton landed in the concussion protocol after his late 20-yard reception following a vicious hit by cornerback Tony Jefferson, who helped to trigger a mild midfield scuffle. Jefferson was ejected, and Henley and James had to push him toward the tunnel.InjuriesChargers: WR Quentin Johnson (groin) was inactive. S R.J. Mickens left with a shoulder injury.Chiefs: CB Trent McDuffie (knee) was inactive. Thornton (concussion protocol) and RT Jaylon Moore (knee) left and did not return.Up nextChargers: At Dallas next Sunday.Chiefs: At Tennessee next Sunday.___AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl DAVE SKRETTA Skretta is a Kansas City-based sports writer for The Associated Press. He covers the Royals, the Chiefs and college sports along with auto racing, the Olympics and other sports.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Jimmy Lais Life, in Photos and Video
    He attributed his rags-to-riches ascent to the freedoms of Hong Kong, and has paid a hefty price for defending them.
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  • California Hires Former C.D.C. Officials Who Criticized Trump Administration
    A former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and a former chief medical officer of the agency will advise the state on public health issues.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Wiggin, coach who lost on 'The Play,' dies at 91
    Paul Wiggin, the former Stanford and Cleveland Browns star who was on the losing end of "The Play" as the coach of star quarterback John Elway and the Cardinal, died Friday. He was 91.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Jeanette Winter, Who Told Children About Artists Lives, Dies at 86
    Her picture books found models of perseverance and imagination in figures like Emily Dickinson, Georgia OKeeffe and Benny Goodman.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    2 people found dead in home owned by Rob Reiner, AP source says
    Rob Reiner arrives at the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network's Respect Awards, in Beverly Hills, Calif., Friday, Oct. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles, File)2025-12-15T02:56:14Z LOS ANGELES (AP) Two people were found dead at a Los Angeles home owned by director-actor Rob Reiner on Sunday, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation.The official could not publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.The Los Angeles Fire Department says it responded to a medical aid request Sunday afternoon and found a 78-year-old man and 68-year-old woman dead inside.Reiner was long one of the most prolific directors in Hollywood, and his work includes some of the most memorable movies of the 1980s and 90s, including This is Spinal Tap, A Few Good Men, When Harry Met Sally and The Princess Bride.His role as Meathead in the 1970s TV classic All in the Family alongside Carol OConnors Archie Bunker catapulted him to fame.He turned 78 in March, although authorities have not confirmed the identities of the people found dead in Reiners home in the upscale Brentwood neighborhood on the citys west side thats home to many celebrities. Messages to his representatives were not immediately returned Sunday night.The son of comedy legend Carl Reiner, Rob Reiner has been married to photographer Michele Singer Reiner since 1989. The two met while he was directing When Harry Met Sally and have three children together.Reiner was previously married to actor-director Penny Marshall from 1971 to 1981. He adopted her daughter, Tracy Reiner. Carl Reiner died in 2020 at age 98 and Marshall died in 2018.__Balsamo reported from Washington. MIKE BALSAMO Balsamo is the national law enforcement editor for The Associated Press. He oversees coverage of the Justice Department, federal courts and criminal justice. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Pavia sorry for 'disrespectful' Heisman reaction
    Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia, the Heisman Trophy runner-up, apologized Sunday for "being disrespectful" in a social media post he made after Indiana's Fernando Mendoza won the award as college football's best player.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Two Bodies Found at Home Owned by Director Rob Reiner
    The Los Angeles Police Department said it is investigating the deaths as an apparent homicide.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Trump Said It Would Be Easy to Free Jimmy Lai. He Should Prove It.
    The Hong Kong publishers fate will reveal whether democracies still have the resolve to defend their own values.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    What's next for Packers after Parsons, Watson injuries?
    How will injuries to Parsons and Watson affect the Packers after Sunday's loss to the Broncos?
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Rob Reiner, son of a comedy giant who became one, too, dies at 78
    Writer-director Rob Reiner poses for a portrait, May 2, 2016, in New York. (Photo by Brian Ach/Invision/AP, File)2025-12-15T05:27:22Z Rob Reiner, the son of a comedy giant who went on to become one, himself, as one of the preeminent filmmakers of his generation with movies such as The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally and This Is Spinal Tap, has died. He was 78. Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer, were found dead Sunday at their home in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. A law enforcement official briefed on the investigation confirmed that Reiner and Singer were the victims. The official could not publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. RELATED COVERAGE Rob Reiner and his wife found dead in Los Angeles home, AP source says Authorities were investigating an apparent homicide, said Capt. Mike Bland with the Los Angeles Police Department. The Los Angeles Fire Department said it responded to a medical aid request shortly after 3:30 p.m. Reiner grew up thinking his father, Carl Reiner, didnt understand him or find him funny. But the younger Reiner would in many ways follow in his fathers footsteps, working both in front and behind the camera, in comedies that stretched from broad sketch work to accomplished dramedies. Sally Struthers plants a kiss on the cheek of Rob Reiner, right, Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton hold hands during a reunion of the cast of "All in the Family," at O'Conner restaurant, Feb. 12, 1991, in Beverly Hill, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Martinez, File) Sally Struthers plants a kiss on the cheek of Rob Reiner, right, Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton hold hands during a reunion of the cast of "All in the Family," at O'Conner restaurant, Feb. 12, 1991, in Beverly Hill, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Martinez, File) 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 Rob Reiner talks on the phone at his office at Castle Rock Enterprises, seeking donations for anti-smoking campaigns, July 29, 1988, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File) Rob Reiner talks on the phone at his office at Castle Rock Enterprises, seeking donations for anti-smoking campaigns, July 29, 1988, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File) 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 My father thought, Oh, my God, this poor kid is worried about being in the shadow of a famous father, Reiner said, recalling the temptation to change his name to 60 Minutes in October. And he says, What do you want to change your name to? And I said, Carl. I just wanted to be like him. After starting out as a writer for The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, Reiners breakthrough came when he was, at age 23, cast in Norman Lears All in the Family as Archie Bunkers liberal son-in-law, Michael Meathead Stivic. But by the 1980s, Reiner began as a feature film director, churning out some of the most beloved films of that, or any, era. His first film, the largely improvised 1984 cult classic This Is Spinal Tap, remains the urtext mockumentary. After the 1985 John Cusack summer comedy, The Sure Thing, Reiner made Stand By Me (1986), The Princess Bride (1987) and When Harry Met Sally (1989), a four-year stretch that resulted in a trio of American classics, all of them among the most often quoted movies of the 20th century. Rob Reiner arrives at the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Networks Respect Awards, in Beverly Hills, Calif., Friday, Oct. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles, File) Rob Reiner arrives at the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Networks Respect Awards, in Beverly Hills, Calif., Friday, Oct. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles, File) 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 A legacy on and off screenFor the next four decades, Reiner, a warm and gregarious presence on screen and an outspoken liberal advocate off it, remained a constant fixture in Hollywood. The production company he co-founded, Castle Rock Entertainment, launched an enviable string of hits, including Seinfeld and The Shawshank Redemption. By the turn of the century, its success rate had fallen considerably, but Reiner revived it earlier this decade. This fall, Reiner and Castle Rock released the long-in-coming sequel Spinal Tap II: The End Continues. All the while, Reiner was one of the film industrys most passionate Democrat activists, regularly hosting fundraisers and campaigning for liberal issues. He was co-founder of the American Foundation for Equal Rights, which challenged in court Californias ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8. He also chaired the campaign for Prop 10, a California initiative to fund early childhood development services with a tax on tobacco products. Reiner was also a critic of President Donald Trump. That ran in the family, too. Reiners father opposed the Communist hunt of McCarthyism in the 1950s and his mother, Estelle Reiner, a singer and actor, protested the Vietnam War. If youre a nepo baby, doors will open, Reiner told the Guardian in 2024. But you have to deliver. If you dont deliver, the door will close just as fast as it opened.All in the Family to Stand By Me Robert Reiner was born in the Bronx on March 6, 1947. As a young man, he quickly set out to follow his father into entertainment. He studied at the University of California, Los Angeles film school and, in the 1960s, began appearing in small parts in various television shows. Carl Reiner, left, and his son Rob Reiner pose together following their hand and footprint ceremony at the TCL Chinese Theatre, April 7, 2017, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File) Carl Reiner, left, and his son Rob Reiner pose together following their hand and footprint ceremony at the TCL Chinese Theatre, April 7, 2017, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File) 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 But when Lear saw Reiner as a key cast member in All in the Family, it came as a surprise to the elder Reiner.Norman says to my dad, You know, this kid is really funny. And I think my dad said, What? That kid? That kid? Hes sullen. He sits quiet. He doesnt, you know, hes not funny. He didnt think I was anyway, Reiner told 60 Minutes. On All in the Family, Reiner served as a pivotal foil to Carroll OConnors bigoted, conservative Archie Bunker. Reiner was five times nominated for an Emmy for his performance on the show, winning in 1974 and 1978. In Lear, Reiner also found a mentor. He called him a second father. It wasnt just that he hired me for All in the Family, Reiner told American Masters in 2005. It was that I saw, in how he conducted his life, that there was room to be an activist as well. That you could use your celebrity, your good fortune, to help make some change.Lear also helped launch Reiner as a filmmaker. He put $7.5 million of his own money to help finance Stand By Me, Reiners adaptation of the Stephen King novella The Body. The movie, about four boys who go looking for the dead body of a missing boy, became a coming-of-age classic, made breakthroughs of its young cast (particularly River Phoenix) and even earned the praise of King. With his stock rising, Reiner devoted himself to adapting William Goldmans 1973s The Princess Bride, a book Reiner had loved since his father gave him a copy as a gift. Everyone from Franois Truffaut to Robert Redford had considered adapting Goldmans book, but it ultimately fell to Reiner (from Goldmans own script) to capture the unique comic tone of The Princess Bride. But only once he had Goldmans blessing.At the door he greeted me and he said, This is my baby. I want this on my tombstone. This is my favorite thing Ive ever written in my life. What are you going to do with it? Reiner recalled in a Television Academy interview. And we sat down with him and started going through what I thought should be done with the film. Actor and director Rob Reiner, center, poses for photographs while stumping along with actor Martin Sheen, not seen, for Democratic presidential hopeful Howard Dean, Jan. 14, 2004, at the University of Northern Iowa, in Cedar Falls, Iowa. (Rick Chase/The Courier via AP, File) Actor and director Rob Reiner, center, poses for photographs while stumping along with actor Martin Sheen, not seen, for Democratic presidential hopeful Howard Dean, Jan. 14, 2004, at the University of Northern Iowa, in Cedar Falls, Iowa. (Rick Chase/The Courier via AP, File) 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 Though only a modest success in theaters, the movie starring Cary Elwes, Mandy Patinkin, Wallace Shawn, Andr the Giant and Robin Wright would grow in stature over the years, leading to countless impressions of Inigo Montoyas vow of revenge and the risky nature of land wars in Asia. When Harry Met Sally ... Reiner was married to Penny Marshall, the actor and filmmaker, for 10 years beginning in 1971. Like Reiner, Marshall experienced sitcom fame, with Laverne & Shirley, but found a more lasting legacy behind the camera. After their divorce, Reiner, at a lunch with Nora Ephron, suggested a comedy about dating. In writing what became When Harry Met Sally Ephron and Reiner charted a relationship between a man and a woman (played in the film by Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan) over the course of 12 years.Along the way, the movies ending changed, as did some of the films indelible moments. The famous line, Ill have what shes having, said after witnessing Ryans fake orgasm at Katzs Delicatessen, was a suggestion by Crystal delivered by none other than Reiners mother, Estelle. The movies happy ending also had some real-life basis. Reiner met Singer, a photographer, on the set of When Harry Met Sally In 1989, they were wed. They had three children together: Nick, Jake and Romy.Reiners subsequent films included another King adaptation, Misery (1990) and a pair of Aaron Sorkin-penned dramas: the military courtroom tale A Few Good Men (1992) and 1995s The American President.By the late 90s, Reiners films (1996s Ghosts of Mississippi, 2007s The Bucket List) no longer had the same success rate. But he remained a frequent actor, often memorably enlivening films like Sleepless in Seattle (1993) and The Wolf of Wall Street (2013). In 2023, he directed the documentary Albert Brooks: Defending My Life.In an interview earlier this year with Seth Rogen, Reiner suggested everything in his career boiled down to one thing.All Ive ever done is say, Is this something that is an extension of me? For Stand by Me, I didnt know if it was going to be successful or not. All I thought was, I like this because I know what it feels like. JAKE COYLE Coyle has been a film critic and covered the movie industry for The Associated Press since 2013. He is based in New York City. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Rob Reiner, Actor Who Went on to Direct Classic Films, Dies at 78
    Mr. Reiner, who was in All in the Family, directed films including This Is Spinal Tap, When Harry Met Sally , The Princess Bride and A Few Good Men.
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    China Approaches First Investment Decline in 3 Decades
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    LeBron seals win after Brooks antics earn ejection
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    McCarthy hits 'Griddy' before TD, irking O'Connell
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Jimmy Lai Faces Up to Life in a Hong Kong Jail After Guilty Verdicts
    Jimmy Lai, the publisher of a popular tabloid, was convicted of national security charges on Monday after spending decades supporting the citys vanquished pro-democracy movement.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    How the Bondi Beach Community Rushed to Help Shooting Victims
    I lived and worked around Bondi for years. The emergency response tells you everything you need to know about the area.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Australian Prime Minister Albanese proposes tougher national gun laws after mass shooting in Sydney
    A couple lay flowers at a tribute to shooting victims outside the Bondi Pavilion at Sydney's Bondi Beach, Monday, Dec. 15, 2025, a day after a shooting. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)2025-12-15T03:39:09Z SYDNEY (AP) Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Monday proposed tougher national gun laws after a mass shooting targeted a Hanukkah celebration on Sydneys Bondi Beach, leaving at least 15 people dead.Albanese said he would propose new restrictions, including limiting the number of guns a licensed owner can obtain. His proposals were announced after the authorities revealed that the older of the two gunmen who were a father and son had held a gun license for a decade and amassed his six guns legally.The government is prepared to take whatever action is necessary. Included in that is the need for tougher gun laws, Albanese told reporters.Peoples circumstances can change. People can be radicalized over a period of time. Licenses should not be in perpetuity, he added.At least 38 people were being treated in hospitals after the massacre on Sunday, when the two shooters fired indiscriminately on the beachfront festivities. Those killed included a 10-year-old girl, a rabbi and a Holocaust survivor. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on Australia has gun laws meant to prevent mass attacksThe horror at Australias most popular beach was the deadliest shooting in almost three decades in a country with strict gun control laws primarily aimed at removing rapid-fire rifles from circulation. Albanese called the massacre an act of antisemitic terrorism that struck at the heart of the nation.He pledged swift change, planning on Monday afternoon to present his gun law proposals to a national cabinet meeting that includes state leaders. Some of the measures would also require state legislation.Some laws are commonwealth and some laws are implemented by the states, the Australian leader said. What we want to do is to make sure that were all completely on the same page. Christopher Minns, premier of New South Wales where Sydney is the state capital, agreed with Albanese that gun licenses should not be granted in perpetuity. Minns said his states gun laws would change, but he could not yet detail how. It means introducing a bill to Parliament to I mean to be really blunt make it more difficult to get these horrifying weapons that have no practical use in our community, Minns told repoters.If youre not a farmer, youre not involved in agriculture, why do you need these massive weapons that put the public in danger and make life dangerous and difficult for New South Wales Police? Minns asked.Australias gun laws were revised after a 1996 massacre in the Tasmanian town of Port Arthur, where a lone gunman killed 35 people. Jewish leaders lambast antisemitism measures Meanwhile, the massacre provoked questions about whether Albanese and his government had done enough to curb rising antisemitism. Jewish leaders and the massacres survivors expressed fear and fury as they questioned why the men hadnt been detected before they opened fire.Theres been a heap of inaction, said Lawrence Stand, a Sydney man who raced to a Bar Mitzvah celebration in Bondi when the violence erupted to find his 12-year-old daughter. But the people were warned about this. ... And still not enough has been done by our government.I think the federal government has made a number of missteps on antisemitism, Alex Ryvchin, spokesperson for the Australian Council of Executive Jewry, told reporters gathered on Monday near the site of the massacre. I think when an attack such as what we saw yesterday takes place the paramount and fundamental duty of government is the protection of its citizens, so theres been an immense failure.An investigation was needed, Ryvchin said, into how that was allowed to take place. Those investigations were beginning to unfold Monday.More details about the shooters emergeLittle was publicly confirmed about the men. Police said they were a father and son but wouldnt supply their names.The father, 50, who was shot dead, had a gun license that allowed him to legally acquire the six firearms recovered from his property and also held a gun club membership, New South Wales Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon said.The particular gun license he held entitled an adult with a genuine reason to own a rifle or shotgun. Accepted reasons include target shooting, recreational hunting and vermin control, but self-defense is not an accepted reason. The man arrived in Australia in 1998 on a student visa, authorities said, and was an Australian resident when he died. Officials wouldnt confirm what country he had migrated from.His 24-year-old Australian-born son, who was shot and wounded, is being treated at a hospital. Lanyon said the man may well face criminal charges and police wouldnt divulge what they knew about him to avoid marring a prosecution case against him.Albanese confirmed that Australias main domestic spy agency, the Australian Security Intelligence Agency, had investigated the son for six months in 2019.Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported that ASIO had examined the sons ties to a Sydney-based Islamic State group cell. Albanese did not describe the associates, but said ASIO was interested in them rather than the son.He was examined on the basis of being associated with others and the assessment was made that there was no indication of any ongoing threat or threat of him engaging in violence, Albanese said. Victims included children and the elderlyNone of the dead or wounded victims have been formally named by the authorities. Identities of those killed, who ranged in age from 10 to 87, began to emerge in news reports Monday.Among them was Rabbi Eli Schlanger, assistant rabbi at Chabad of Bondi and an organizer of the family Hanukkah event that was targeted, according to Chabad, an Orthodox Jewish movement that runs outreach worldwide and sponsors events during major Jewish holidays.Israels Foreign Ministry confirmed the death of an Israeli citizen, but gave no further details. French President Emmanuel Macron said a French citizen, identified as Dan Elkayam, was among those killed.Larisa Kleytman told reporters outside St Vincents Hospital that her husband, Alexander Kleytman, was among the dead. The couple were both Holocaust survivors, according to The Australian newspaper.The violence erupted at the end of a summer day when thousands had flocked to Bondi Beach, an icon of Australias cultural life. They included hundreds gathered for the Chanukah by the Sea event celebrating the start of the eight-day Hanukkah festival with food, face painting and a petting zoo.On Monday, hundreds arrived near the scene to lay flowers at a growing pile of floral tributes. There were words of pride, too, for a man who was captured on video appearing to tackle and disarm one gunman, before pointing the mans weapon at him, then setting the gun on the ground.The man was identified by Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke as Ahmed al Ahmed. The 42-year-old fruit shop owner and father of two was shot in the shoulder by the other gunman and survived.Massacre followed a surge in antisemitic crimesAustralia, a country of 28 million people, is home to about 117,000 Jews, according to official figures. Over the past year, the country was rocked by antisemitic attacks in Sydney and Melbourne. Synagogues and cars were torched, businesses and homes graffitied and Jews attacked in those cities, where 85% of the nations Jewish population lives.The Australian government has enacted various measures to counter a surge in antisemitism since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and Israel launched a war on Hamas in Gaza in response. Measures included appointing a special enjoy to combat antisemitism, toughening laws and investing in enhanced security for Jewish schools and synagogues.Israels Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that he warned Australias leaders months ago about the dangers of failing to take action against antisemitism. He claimed Australias decision, in line with scores of other countries, to recognize a Palestinian state pours fuel on the antisemitic fire.Albanese on Monday vowed the violence would be met with a moment of national unity where Australians across the board will embrace their fellow Australians of Jewish faith. There is no place in Australia for antisemitism, he said.Albanese in August blamed Iran for two of the previous attacks and cut diplomatic ties to Tehran. Authorities have not suggested Iran was linked to Sundays massacre.___Graham-McLay reported from Wellington, New Zealand and McGuirk from Melbourne, Australia. CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-MCLAY Graham-McLay is an Associated Press reporter covering regional and national stories about New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific Islands by putting them in a global context. She is based in Wellington. twitter mailto ROD MCGUIRK McGuirk covers Australian and South Pacific news for The Associated Press. He is based in Melbourne. mailto KRISTEN GELINEAU Gelineau is a global investigative reporter for The Associated Press, based in Sydney. She covers human rights issues across the Asia-Pacific. twitter mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Former Hong Kong pro-democracy media mogul Jimmy Lai convicted in landmark national security trial
    People wait to enter the West Kowloon Magistrates' Courts ahead of the verdict for Hong Kong activist publisher Jimmy Lai's national security trial, in Hong Kong, Monday, Dec. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Chan Long Hei)2025-12-15T00:24:29Z HONG KONG (AP) Jimmy Lai, the pro-democracy former Hong Kong media mogul and outspoken critic of Beijing, was convicted in a landmark national security trial in the citys court on Monday, which could send him to prison for the rest of his life.Three government-vetted judges found Lai, 78, guilty of conspiring with others to collude with foreign forces to endanger national security and conspiracy to publish seditious articles. He pleaded not guilty to all charges. Lai was arrested in August 2020 under a Beijing-imposed national security law that was implemented following massive anti-government protests in 2019. Lai has spent five years in custody, much of it in solitary confinement, and appears to have grown more frail and thinner. He has also been convicted of several lesser offenses related to fraud allegations and his actions in 2019.Lais trial, conducted without a jury, has been closely monitored by the U.S., Britain, the European Union and political observers as a barometer of media freedom and judicial independence in the former British colony, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997. Court said Lai spent years plotting against BeijingReading from an 855-page verdict, Judge Esther Toh said that Lai had extended a constant invitation to the U.S. to help bring down the Chinese government with the excuse of helping Hong Kongers.Lais lawyers admitted during the trial that he had called for sanctions before the law took effect, but insisted he dropped these calls to comply with the law.But the judges ruled that Lai had never wavered in his intention to destabilize the ruling Chinese Communist Party, continuing though in a less explicit way.Toh said the court was satisfied that Lai was the mastermind of the conspiracies and that Lais evidence was at times contradictory and unreliable. The judges ruled that the only reasonable inference from the evidence was that Lais only intent, both before and after the security law, was to seek the downfall of the ruling Communist Party even at the sacrifice of the people of China and Hong Kong. This was the ultimate aim of the conspiracies and secessionist publications, they wrote. Among the attendees were Lais wife and son, and Hong Kongs Roman Catholic Cardinal Joseph Zen. Lai nodded to his family before being escorted out of the courtroom. His verdict is also a test for Beijings diplomatic ties. U.S. President Donald Trump said he has raised the case with China, and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said his government has made it a priority to secure the release of Lai, who is a British citizen. Lai could face life in prisonThe founder of the now-defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily will be sentenced on a later day. The collusion charge carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. Hearings were set to begin Jan. 12 for Lai and other defendants in the case to argue for a shorter sentence.The Apple Daily, a vocal critic of the Hong Kong government and Beijing, was forced to shut in 2021 after police raided its newsroom and arrested its senior journalists, with authorities freezing its assets. During Lais 156-day trial, prosecutors accused him of conspiring with senior executives of Apple Daily and others to request foreign forces to impose sanctions or blockades and engage in other hostile activities against Hong Kong or China. The prosecution also accused Lai of making such requests, highlighting his meetings with former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in July 2019 at the height of the protests.It also presented 161 publications, including Apple Daily articles, to the court as evidence, as well as social media posts and text messages. Lai testified for 52 days in his own defense, arguing that he had not called for foreign sanctions after the sweeping security law was imposed in June 2020. His legal team also argued for freedom of expression. Health concerns raised during marathon trialAs the trial progressed, Lais health appeared to be deteriorating. Lais lawyers in August told the court that he suffered from heart palpitations. After the verdict, lawyer, Robert Pang, said his client is in okay spirits as the legal team studies the verdict.Before the verdict, his daughter Claire told The Associated Press that her father has become weaker and lost some of his nails and teeth. She also said he suffered from infections for months, along with constant back pain, diabetes, heart issues and high blood pressure.His spirit is strong but his body is failing, she said.Hong Kongs government said no abnormalities were found during a medical examination that followed Lais complaint of heart problems. It added this month that the medical services provided to him were adequate. Hong Kong leader John Lee said Lai harmed the fundamental interests of the country, calling his intentions malicious. Steve Li, chief superintendent of Hong Kong polices National Security Department, disputed claims of Lais worsening health outside the court building. Lais conviction is justice served, he told reporters. UK and rights groups slam outcome, as China defends itU.K. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said on X that her country condemned the politically motivated prosecution that resulted in the guilty verdict, saying it would continue to call for his release. In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said China expressed firm opposition to the vilification of the citys judiciary by certain countries, urging them to respect the citys legal system.Rights groups, including global media watchdog Reporters Without Borders and Amnesty International, criticized the verdict. It is not an individual who has been on trial it is press freedom itself, and with this verdict that has been shattered, said Reporters Without Borders director general Thibaut Bruttin. But Hong Kong Secretary for Security Chris Tang said the verdict has nothing to do with press freedom. Before sunrise, dozens of residents queued outside the court building to secure a courtroom seat.Former Apple Daily employee Tammy Cheung arrived at 5 a.m., saying she wanted to know about Lais condition after reports of his health.She said she felt the process was being rushed since the verdict date was announced only last Friday, but added, Im relieved that this case can at least conclude soon. ___Associated Press writer Chan Ho-him in Hong Kong contributed to this report. KANIS LEUNG Leung covers Hong Kong, Macao and mainland China for The Associated Press. She is based in Hong Kong. twitter
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    Transfer rumors, news: Man United ready to make January move for Semenyo
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    Immigrants in Alabama Can Face Harsher Sentences Than Citizens for the Same Crimes
    Time and again in Alabama, immigrants face harsher punishments for the same crimes as citizens, even when they have fewer prior convictions, a ProPublica review of more than 100 court cases found.The cases include a Mexican immigrant who caused a fatal car crash and received a 61-year sentence which exceeds the sentences of about 93% of all inmates convicted of similar crimes. Sent to prison in 2000, hes one of the noncitizens whos been incarcerated in Alabama the longest.An immigrant detainee who set fire to his mattress inside a jail cell received a sentence twice as long as a citizen with a similar criminal history who committed the same offense in the same facility three months later.And in a case ProPublica recently covered, a Mexican immigrant who crashed into a car and killed the driver received a sentence four times longer than anyone else involved in fatal crashes in that circuit court.We identified these cases using data provided by the Alabama Department of Corrections covering the 156 currently incarcerated people who self-identified as noncitizens. They represent a tiny slice of the overall inmate population, less than 1%.The U.S. Supreme Court has consistently ruled that noncitizens accused of crimes are entitled to the same rights as citizens. That extends to sentencing, which should not be influenced by the nationality or immigration status of the defendant. In the cases identified by ProPublica, defendants said they believe their citizenship status tipped the scales of justice against them.The small number of inmates on the list and the complicated nature of criminal sentencing make it difficult to draw broad conclusions. Sentences can be longer if the defendant has a criminal history, targeted a young child or used a gun.But academic research has found that incarcerated immigrants face tougher punishment on average, with sentences that are longer by months or years than nonimmigrants. Michael Light, a sociology professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, looked at the role of citizenship in both federal and state courts in California and Texas, which, unlike Alabama, keep detailed information about defendants citizenship status.He found the starkest differences in Texas, where noncitizens received sentences 62% longer than citizens, even with the same charges and criminal backgrounds. The disparities exceed those between white and nonwhite citizens. Another researcher, University of California, Los Angeles law professor Ingrid Eagly, found similar results in her study of Harris County cases in Houston.Several factors can increase sentences for immigrants convicted of crimes. In some cases, Eagly said, the differences could come down to the judge.Judges could be punishing them for their immigration status in addition to punishing them for the criminal conduct, she said. Of course, punishing someone for their immigration status isnt what we do in criminal courts, right? Its something that the immigration system is supposed to handle.In October, ProPublica published a story detailing what lawyers consider one of the most egregious cases of excessive sentencing of an immigrant in Alabama: the 99-year prison sentence handed to Jorge Ruiz for a fatal car crash. Ruiz was not charged with DUI or even reckless speeding. He had a clean criminal history. Yet his 2018 sentence was almost four times longer than those handed down for similar crimes in the same circuit court over the past two decades.Last year, a court reduced that sentence to 50 years, which is still twice as long as any other crime involving a fatal car crash in the county. His appeal of the sentence is pending. The prosecutor in Ruizs case said he did not treat the defendant differently because of his race or citizenship status and that the long sentence was warranted because Ruiz was a minor driving with alcohol in his system. Neither the judge who handed down the 99-year sentence nor the one who handed down the 50-year one responded to requests for comment.In the course of examining Ruizs case, we looked for examples of other immigrants in Alabamas criminal justice system to see whether they too were serving a more severe sentence than citizens who commit similar crimes. One happens to be a friend hed made at Ventress Correctional Facility.Heriberto Arevalo Robles is 25 years into his 61-year sentence. Thats the longest sentence for any Alabama inmate currently incarcerated for assault, manslaughter or both who has no prior felony convictions.Robles has spent more than half his life locked up for a July 1999 fatal car crash near the small town of Heflin in east Alabama. It was raining hard that night and Robles had been drinking. He crashed head on into a van carrying six people, killing the driver.A blood test found alcohol in his system at a level that exceeded the legal limit. Initially, the criminal justice system seemed forgiving. Although he couldnt pay his bond, the sheriff at the time allowed him to work nights to support his family. He even let Robles come home for a long weekend on Easter. His wife, Johnnie Arevalo, took it as a sign that she would soon be reunited with her husband.As the trial approached, her hopes dimmed. In a bond reduction hearing, a police officer testified that he had heard Robles say that as quick as he gets a chance, hes going back to Mexico, according to the transcript. (Robles attorney disputed at a bond hearing that his client said that.) The sheriff stopped letting him out to work.Almost a year after the crash, a jury found Robles guilty of manslaughter for the death of the driver, as well as five counts of assault for each of the five passengers. Some of them sustained serious injuries, including one woman who suffered so much damage to her face that she later told authorities that she couldnt look in the mirror for a year.The family and the prosecutor asked the judge to run the sentences for each charge back-to-back for a total of 82 years behind bars. The prosecutor, whos now the judicial circuits district attorney, did not respond to requests for comment.Heriberto Robles with his sister Veronica Arevalo at Ventress Correctional Facility in 2005. After his arrest, Arevalo moved to Alabama to assist with his case, and she now lives about an hour from Birmingham with her youngest daughter. Courtesy of Veronica ArevaloCourts rarely punish defendants in car crash cases with prison sentences that are stacked that way. ProPublica found only one other case in a review of the dozens of inmates incarcerated for manslaughter and assault. The judge in Robles case decided to give him stacked, back-to-back sentences: 20 years for manslaughter and an additional 41 years for the five assaults.Robles said in an interview from prison that he believes his status as an immigrant, even though he was a lawful permanent resident, affected his sentence.When asked whether Robles status played a role in his long sentence, Judge Malcolm Street, whod presided over the case, said no. But Street, who is now retired, also said he couldnt immediately recall all the details of the case or why he gave such a long sentence.In 2000, Robles missed a key deadline to appeal his case. In a federal court filing, he blamed his lack of English proficiency and unfamiliarity with the court system. Instead, he has sought relief from the court where he was convicted.In a recent filing, his attorney argued that the court erred by ordering the sentences to run back-to-back because it punished Robles several times for a single reckless act. If he had crashed into a car with one driver, he would be out of prison by now.He has already been in prison for over 25 years, five years more than the entirety of his manslaughter sentence, according to his brief. There is no benefit to the State, no benefit to the victims, and no public interest served by keeping Robles incarcerated for his one act of impaired driving.Inmates light fires in jail frequently and for a host of reasons: to mask the smell of smoking, to draw attention to their grievances or in the midst of mental health crises. One organization estimated that 600 fires break out in prisons every year.Many fires get extinguished quickly and go unreported. Others can lead to chaos and tragedy. In 2017, a series of fires set at the Etowah County Detention Center in east Alabama illustrate the differences in punishment for nearly identical crimes.In May 2017, a group of Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainees held at the jail through an agreement with the federal government started a fire to draw attention to the facilitys conditions, which advocates had described as inhumane. (An Etowah County Sheriffs Office spokesperson said the current sheriff has worked to fix the problems: Substantial improvements have been made in the safety, security and overall conditions, he said.)Nigerian-born Okiemute Omatie had been in the facility for more than five months. He and three other men used a wire brush and an electrical outlet to ignite a piece of paper. Omatie then placed it on his mattress, which caught fire. His cell filled with smoke and officers evacuated several detainees. It created a potentially dangerous scene, law enforcement would later say, but no one was injured.Omatie pleaded guilty to arson in February 2018. Etowah County Circuit Court Judge David Kimberley sentenced him to 20 years in state prison, which is what the prosecutor recommended.I got 20 years for a burned mattress, Omatie said.Over the next six months, other inmates who were not immigrant detainees started fires inside the Etowah County Detention Center. In August 2017, two inmates used an electronic cigarette to ignite debris on a food tray. Then, a few weeks later, another inmate sparked a fire inside the jail. Officers quickly extinguished both blazes.The three men pleaded guilty and each received the prosecutors recommended sentence of 10 years in prison for arson.Prosecutors pointed out that Omatie had a prior felony, second-degree assault. But so did one of the detainees who received a 10-year sentence. Hed been convicted of burglary, theft, breaking and entering into a vehicle and fraudulent use of a credit card. Hed received a longer sentence for those crimes than Omatie did for his prior felony.The green card holder had received an 11-month sentence for second-degree assault in New Hampshire, where hed lived with his mother. He was later arrested for robbery, but the charge was dropped because officials had initiated deportation proceedings.Omatie described being distraught due to the separation from his mother and his young son and said he made a bad decision regarding the fire. He also said he felt he should be deported rather than tried for the arson.The prosecutor, when asking for the 20-year sentence, said Omatie should not be allowed to return to Nigeria. Neither the Etowah County district attorneys office nor the judge who oversaw the case responded to requests for comment.If he doesnt go to prison, he will be getting just what he wanted, said Etowah County Chief Deputy District Attorney Marcus Reid. His whole ploy, his whole scheme to start a fire to endanger everybody in the jail will have worked.Omatie told ProPublica he believed he was punished more harshly because he was an immigrant.I think it was racism and because of where Im from, he said.Immigrant crime has become a potent political issue in recent years, and states have rushed to consider bills that would punish them more harshly than citizens. Although an Alabama bill that would have automatically increased the severity of some felonies and misdemeanors committed by undocumented immigrants died in 2025, other measures succeeded. A bill in Florida adding additional punishments for undocumented immigrants passed, but it has been challenged and is on hold.Judges and district attorneys in Alabama are elected, and both play key roles in sentencing. Most defendants take plea deals offered by prosecutors, who recommend a sentence length to the judge. Judges ultimately determine the sentences both for those who plead guilty and those who go to trial.Judges tend to sentence noncitizens to longer sentences than U.S. citizens, said Juliet Stumpf, a professor at Lewis and Clark Law School who studies the intersection of immigration and criminal justice. And theres some theories about why thats true, but some of them have to do with maybe the judges or prosecutors who are asking for these longer sentences are seeing these particular noncitizens as more dangerous or more undesirable.But well before a judge hands down a sentence, bias can factor into a case in a way that leads to longer sentences.The truth is, were almost all saddled with all the packaging we came with, Madison County District Attorney Robert Broussard said. If the defendant is from another country in front of 12 U.S. citizens, wed be kidding each other if we said justice is blind.If the defendant is from another country in front of 12 U.S. citizens, wed be kidding each other if we said justice is blind.Robert Broussard, Madison County district attorneyBroussard said his office doesnt treat people differently because of their race or citizenship. But he conceded some juries might be less forgiving in cases involving immigrant defendants.We had reached out to Broussard about a 2015 case hed prosecuted against a Nigerian immigrant charged with attempted murder of a police officer. Olusola Kuponiyi got a 40-year sentence, which is only slightly higher than the average sentence for that crime. But Kuponiyis case stood out in that most people who face that charge fired a gun at an officer, while Kuponiyi got into a fight with an officer who drew his own knife, and each man stabbed the other.Broussard said that since Kuponiyi tried repeatedly to pull the officers gun out of its holster, it needed to be elevated to attempted murder.But some citizens also charged with attempted murder received much shorter sentences than Kuponiyis. A man who shot an off-duty state trooper and a 6-year-old received 21 years in prison. Another was sentenced to five years for shooting an officer in the shoulder. And a woman who fired a high-powered rifle at agents serving a search warrant got a 30-year sentence.When asked about those shorter sentences, Broussard said that comparing any of them to Kuponiyis is problematic. It is impossible to compare discrepancies in sentencing of cases under the same charge when considering the variables in arriving at any particular sentence, he said. Each case has its own unique set of facts, its own unique inherent strength or weakness in proving the case, its own unique cast of characters, i.e., defendants, lawyers, judges and juries, and its own jurisdictional philosophy on severity in sentencing.Northern Alabama defense attorney Ivannoel G. Dollar points out that judges sometimes show more mercy to defendants who can bring character witnesses to speak on their behalf. He said such witnesses can be difficult to source for people in the country without documentation.It can be hard to get them to come to court because they may not have documentation, he said.Federal sentencing policy shifted after President Donald Trump took office in January. A key change excluded some noncitizens from the First Step program that reduced sentences.A bill in Congress would take that further, adding extra prison time to all undocumented immigrants convicted of felonies in state and federal court. If it passes, Stumpf said, it could lead to many more instances of the type of disparities that have been playing out in Alabama and beyond. She said the law essentially would create a blueprint by which the court system could mete out vastly different punishments for two defendants identical in every way except their citizenship status even those who committed the same crime together.That would be a serious departure from the principles of our nations criminal law system, Stumpf said, which focus on a persons actions, not their status, when imposing punishment.The post Immigrants in Alabama Can Face Harsher Sentences Than Citizens for the Same Crimes appeared first on ProPublica.
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  • Trumps Diplomats Act More Like Cowboys. Could That Be a Good Thing?
    Sometimes Trumps unconventional foreign policy just works.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    What We Know About Rob Reiner and His Death
    The directors family said that he and his wife, Michele, had died on Sunday. The police said they had found two bodies at the Reiner home in Los Angeles.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    European leaders expected to cement support for Ukraine amid US pressure to accept peace deal
    Jared Kushner, U.S. President Donald Trumps son-in-law, exits from the American Embassy in Berlin, Monday Dec. 15, 2025. (Fabian Sommer/dpa via AP)2025-12-15T06:00:26Z BERLIN (AP) European leaders are expected to cement support for Ukraine Monday as it faces Washingtons pressure to swiftly accept a U.S.-brokered peace deal.After Sundays talks in Berlin between U.S. envoys and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukrainian and European officials are set to continue a series of meetings in an effort to secure the continents peace and security in the face of an increasingly assertive Russia.Finnish President Alexander Stubb, one of the key European interlocutors between U.S. President Donald Trump and Zelenskyy, was spotted Monday morning in downtown Berlin.Zelenskyy sat down Sunday with Trumps special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trumps son-in-law Jared Kushner in the German federal chancellery in the hopes of bringing the nearly four-year war to a close.Washington has tried for months to navigate the demands of each side as Trump presses for a swift end to Russias war and grows increasingly exasperated by delays. The search for possible compromises has run into major obstacles, including control of Ukraines eastern Donetsk region, which is mostly occupied by Russian forces. The U.S. government late Sunday said in a social media post on Witkoffs account after the five-hour meeting that a lot of progress was made. Earlier in the day, Zelenskyy voiced readiness to drop his countrys bid to join NATO if the U.S. and other Western nations give Kyiv security guarantees similar to those offered to NATO members. But Ukraine continued to reject the U.S. push for ceding territory to Russia. Putin wants Ukraine to withdraw its forces from the part of the Donetsk region still under its control among the key conditions for peace.The Russian president also has cast Ukraines bid to join NATO as a major threat to Moscows security and a reason for launching the full-scale invasion in February 2022. The Kremlin has demanded that Ukraine renounce the bid for alliance membership as part of any prospective peace settlement. Zelenskyy emphasized that any Western security assurances would need to be legally binding and supported by the U.S. Congress.The Kremlin said Monday that it expected to be updated on the Berlin talks by the American side once the talks had finished.Asked whether the negotiations could be over by Christmas, presidential spokesperson Dmitry Peskov described trying to predict a potential time frame for a peace deal as a thankless task.I can only speak for the Russian side, for President Putin, Peskov said. He is open to peace, to a serious peace and serious decisions. He is absolutely not open to any tricks aimed at stalling for time.In London, meanwhile, the new head of the MI6 spy agency is set to warn on Monday of how Putins determination to export chaos around the world is rewriting the rules of conflict and creating new security challenges.Blaise Metreweli will use her first public speech as chief of the United Kingdoms foreign intelligence service to say that Britain faces increasingly unpredictable and interconnected threats, with emphasis on aggressive, expansionist Russia. Drone strikes continueRussia fired 153 drones of various types at Ukraine overnight Sunday into Monday, according to Ukraines Air Force. The air force said early Monday that 133 drones were neutralized, while 17 more hit their targets.In Russia, the defense ministry on Monday said forces destroyed 130 Ukrainian drones overnight. An additional 16 drones were then destroyed between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. local time Monday. Eighteen drones were shot down over Moscow itself, the Russian defense ministry said.Flights were temporarily halted at the citys Domodedovo and Zhukovsky airports as part of safety measures, officials said.Damage details and casualty figures were not immediately available. Pax Americana is overGerman Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who has spearheaded European efforts to support Ukraine alongside French President Emmanuel Macron and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, said Saturday that the decades of the Pax Americana are largely over for us in Europe and for us in Germany as well.Pax Americana refers to the U.S.s postwar dominance as a superpower that has brought relative peace to the globe.Merz warned that Putins aim is a fundamental change to the borders in Europe, the restoration of the old Soviet Union within its borders.If Ukraine falls, he wont stop, Merz warned during a party conference in Munich.Macron, meanwhile, vowed Sunday on social platform X that France is, and will remain, at Ukraines side to build a robust and lasting peace one that can guarantee Ukraines security and sovereignty, and that of Europe, over the long term.Putin has denied plans to attack any European allies. __Ciobanu reported from Warsaw, Poland. Pietro De Cristofaro in Berlin, Illia Novikov in Kyiv, Ukraine, and Katie Marie Davies in Manchester, England, contributed to this report. STEFANIE DAZIO Dazio covers Northern Europe from Berlin for The Associated Press. She previously covered crime and criminal justice from Los Angeles. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • APNEWS.COM
    What to know about the attack on the Jewish festival in Australia that killed 15 people
    New South Wales Premier Chris Minns, right, and Kellie Sloane, leader of the opposition, the New South Wales Liberal Party, lay wreaths at a tribute for shooting victims outside the Bondi Pavilion at Sydney's Bondi Beach, Monday, Dec. 15, 2025, a day after a shooting. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)2025-12-15T09:40:56Z SYDNEY (AP) A father and son are suspected by officials to have killed 15 people on a popular Australian beach, shocking a country where gun violence is rare. The government on Monday, a day after the shootings, proposed tougher new gun laws amid criticism that officials didnt take seriously enough a string of antisemitic attacks.Heres a look at what to know from the attack at Bondi Beach: The suspects attacked a Jewish beachside gatheringLittle is known about the suspects in the attack on Sydneys famous Bondi Beach, but there was widespread shock when officials said that the two men pictured firing weapons in social media videos were related.The 50-year-old father, who was killed, arrived in Australia in 1998 on a student visa, authorities said, and was an Australian resident when he died. Officials wouldnt confirm what country he had migrated from.His 24-year-old Australian-born son, who was shot and wounded, is being treated at a hospital The target was a Hanukkah celebration where hundreds had gathered to celebrate the first day of the eight-day Jewish holiday. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called it an act of antisemitic terrorism. The dead included a 10-year-old girl, a rabbi and a Holocaust survivor. Dozens of others were injured, some seriously. Police said officers were examining a number of suspicious items, including improvised explosive devices found in one of the suspects car. One dramatic clip broadcast on Australian television showed a man appearing to tackle and disarm one of the gunmen, before pointing the mans weapon at him, then setting the gun on the ground. Police said the father held a firearms license that entitles an adult with a genuine reason to own a rifle or shotgun, other than a rapid-fire variety. Accepted reasons include target shooting, recreational hunting and vermin control. Self-defense is not an accepted reason. Police say the father was a member of a gun club, which suggests he was a target shooter. Hate crimes targeting Jews in Australia are on the riseA wave of antisemitic attacks have shocked and angered many in Australia over the last year. Australia has 28 million people and about 117,000 Jews. Antisemitic incidents, including assaults, vandalism, threats and intimidation, surged more than threefold in the country during the year after Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and Israel launched a war on Hamas in Gaza in response, the governments Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism Jillian Segal reported in July. Last year, there were antisemitic attacks in Sydney and Melbourne. Synagogues and cars have been torched, businesses and homes vandalized with graffiti, and Jews attacked in cities where 85% of the nations Jewish population lives. Albanese in August blamed Iran for two of the attacks and cut diplomatic ties to Tehran.Israel urged Australias government to address crimes targeting Jews. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he warned Australias leaders months ago about the dangers of failing to take action against antisemitism. He claimed Australias decision in line with scores of other countries to recognize a Palestinian state pours fuel on the antisemitic fire. This is the deadliest shooting in Australia in three decadesAustralia has strict gun control laws.Mass shootings are extremely rare. A 1996 massacre in the Tasmanian town of Port Arthur, where a lone gunman killed 35 people, prompted the government to drastically tighten gun laws, making it much more difficult to acquire firearms.Significant mass shootings this century included two murder-suicides with death tolls of five people in 2014 and seven in 2018, in which gunmen killed their own families and themselves.In 2022, six people were killed in a shootout between police and Christian extremists at a rural property in Queensland state. The prime minister said he was pushing for tougher gun laws.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Grant cuts, arrests, lay-offs: Trump made 2025 a tumultuous year for science
    Nature, Published online: 15 December 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-04051-yHow the Trump administration caused seismic disruptions to the worlds premier scientific superpower.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Despite all the negatives, 2025 showcased the power, resilience and universality of science
    Nature, Published online: 15 December 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-04049-6There were huge disruptions to the global scientific enterprise this year but immense bright spots for health, discovery, innovation and research collaboration.
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    Trump Officials Celebrated With Cake After Slashing Aid. Then People Died of Cholera.
    On the one-month anniversary of President Donald Trumps inauguration earlier this year, a group of his appointed aides gathered to celebrate.For four weeks, they had been working overtime to dismantle the U.S. Agency for International Development, freezing thousands of programs, including ones that provided food, water and medicine around the world. Theyd culled USAIDs staff and abandoned its former headquarters in the stately Ronald Reagan Building, shunting the remnants of the agency to what was once an overflow space in a glass-walled commercial office above Nordstrom Rack and a bank.There, the crew of newly minted political figures told the office manager to create a moat of 90 empty desks around them so no one could hear them talk. They ignored questions and advice from career staff with decades of experience in the field.Despite the steps to insulate themselves, dire warnings poured in from diplomats and government experts around the world. The cuts would cost countless lives, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the other Trump officials were told repeatedly. The team of aides pressed on, galvanized by two men who did little to hide their disdain for the agency: first Peter Marocco, a blunt-spoken Marine veteran, and then 28-year-old Jeremy Lewin, who, despite having no government or aid experience, often personally decided which programs should be axed.By the third week in February, they were on track to wipe out 90% of USAIDs work. Created in 1961 to foster global stability and help advance American interests, USAID was the largest humanitarian donor in the world. In just a months time, the small band of appointees had set in motion its destruction.In a corner conference room, it was time to party. They traded congratulatory speeches and cut into a sheet cake.Days later, on a remote patch of land in South Sudan, a 38-year-old man named Tor Top gathered with his neighbors outside the local health clinic. Surrounded by floodwaters, their hamlet of thatch and mud homes had been battling a massive outbreak of cholera, a deadly disease spread by poor sanitation. Around the country, it had infected 36,000 people in three months, killing more than 600, many of them babies. Tops family lived in the epicenter.The clinic, one of 12 in the area run by the Christian, Maryland-based humanitarian organization World Relief and funded by USAID, provided a key weapon in the fight: IV bags to stave off dehydration and death. The bags cost just 62 cents each, and in three months, the clinics had helped save more than 500 people.Now, Top, who lived with his wife, children and mother in a one-room house less than 50 feet from the clinic, listened as World Relief staff shared grim news: The Trump administration had stopped USAIDs funding to World Relief. Their clinic, their lifeline, was closing.Tops usual gentle demeanor broke down. Why would the U.S. just cut off their medical care in the middle of a deadly outbreak?By now the broad story of USAIDs ruin has been widely told: The decree handed down by Trump; Elon Musk, who led the new Department of Government Efficiency; and Russell Vought, who holds the purse strings for the administration as the head of the Office of Management and Budget, to scuttle the agency and undo decades of humanitarian work in the name of austerity. Publicly, the administration tried to temper international backlash by promising to keep or restore critical lifesaving programs.But that promise was not kept. Instead, a cast of Trumps lesser-known political appointees and DOGE operatives cut programs in ways that guaranteed widespread harm and death in some of the worlds most desperate situations, according to an examination by ProPublica based on previously unreported episodes inside the government as well on-the-ground reporting in South Sudan. In some cases, they abandoned vital operations by clicking through a spreadsheet or ignoring requests in their inboxes.The abrupt moves left aid workers and communities with no time to find other sources of funding, food or medicine. Borrowing from a phrase used to describe the U.S. overwhelming military campaign during the Iraq War, political appointee Tim Meisburger told senior USAID staff that the strategy was shock and awe. (Meisburger declined to comment.)Tibor Nagy, a veteran diplomat who was Trumps acting undersecretary of state for management until April, has long been a critic of the vast networks of nonprofit organizations funded by American taxpayers. But he told ProPublica the administration never cared to differentiate between the fluff and vital humanitarian programs. It was the most harebrained operation Id seen in my 38 years with the U.S. government, Nagy said, referring to the methods used this year. Who knows how much damage was done.In public statements and congressional testimony, Rubio has repeatedly insisted that no one died because of cuts to U.S. foreign aid and that his staff had reinstated lifesaving operations. But ProPublica found that those claims were a charade: Lifesaving programs remained on the books, but the flow of money didnt restart for months, if at all. Lewin blocked funding requests for programs like tuberculosis treatment in Tajikistan and emergency earthquake response in Myanmar, records show.This meant that dozens of supposedly active operations were dormant throughout most of the year. Rubios advisers let other critical programs, which typically run on one-year grants, expire without renewing them.Few places were hit harder than South Sudan, the youngest and poorest country in the world, as well as one of the most dependent on American aid.After Trumps inauguration, career USAID and State Department staff spent months warning top officials that the funding cuts would exacerbate a historic cholera epidemic ripping through the country. They needed less than $20 million to fund lifesaving health programs, including cholera response efforts, for three months at the beginning of the year an eighth of what Trump recently approved to buy private jets for one cabinet secretary and just 3% of USAIDs budget in South Sudan last year. But Rubio, Marocco and Lewin failed to heed their own agencies assessments, according to internal records and interviews.As a result, people in South Sudan died.By denying and delaying those funds for months, Trumps appointees incapacitated the fragile nations emergency response systems at the very moment when doctors and aid workers were scrambling to contain choleras spread. We had to start rationing lifesaving interventions, said Lanre Williams-Ayedun, the senior vice president of international programs for World Relief. To have something like this happen in a place like this, where there arent mechanisms for backup, just means people are going to die.Villages and towns that had been reining in the outbreak suddenly lost essential services. Cholera came roaring back. The trend was going down, said a former U.S. official. When we stopped the funding, it just surged.This summer, ProPublica journalists hiked and boated across Rubkona County, the epicenter of South Sudans outbreak and home to the countrys largest refugee camp, to interview families that the U.S. cut off from help. We collected medical files, diaries, meeting notes and photographs documenting choleras devastation after essential services stopped.Chris Alcantara/ProPublicaProPublica also interviewed more than 100 government and aid officials and reviewed enormous caches of previously unreported memos, correspondence and other documents from inside the Trump administration. Many were granted anonymity due to fears of reprisal.In response to a detailed list of questions, a senior State Department official said fast, drastic changes to foreign aid were necessary to reform a calcified system. The world, especially U.S. interests, will be better for it in the long run, the official said, despite some disruptions in the short term.The official also said that Rubio was the final decision-maker for all aid programs. They also contended that they had a limited budget to work with, which required some tradeoffs on what programs to continue, saying OMB has ultimate control over new humanitarian funds.The official maintained that nobody died as a result of the funding cuts. Thats a disgusting framing, the official said. There are people who are dying in horrible situations all around the world, all of the time.Who is responsible for the suffering of the people of South Sudan? the official added. The South Sudanese [government leaders] who take their oil revenues and buy private jets and fancy watches and dont see to their own people? Or the United States? Are we responsible for every poor person all around the world?Officially, the death count in South Sudan is nearly 1,600, making it the worst cholera epidemic in the countrys history. But that toll is a dramatic undercount. ProPublica found newly dug, unmarked graves alongside roads and in backyards. In one town, community leaders showed reporters an informal cemetery with at least three dozen people who they said did not make it to medical facilities in time.Tor Tops mother, Nyarietna, was one of the uncounted. In March, the clinic doors had been padlocked for two weeks when she developed vomiting and diarrhea. Top bundled her into a rented canoe and began paddling toward the nearest hospital, eight hours away. Less than halfway into the journey, long after they had stopped reassuring one another that she would be OK, Nyarietna died.Top turned the canoe around and made his way back home, where he buried his mom in their backyard. Now he alone tends the small garden where she grew corn and okra for their family. If there was medicine here, he said later, maybe her life would have been saved.Nyarietnas gardening tool was left behind when she fell ill.Aid to South SudanFor years, Sudans Arab-led central government waged a campaign of brutal violence against its Christian minority in the south. Their persecution became a cause celebre of the American Evangelical movement, which convinced President George W. Bushs administration to help broker a peace agreement that led to independence 15 years ago. Since then, the U.S. has given the fledgling nation nearly $10 billion in aid, according to federal data. That money subsidized virtually every corner of the health care system, among other institutions.Still, South Sudan remains undeveloped. Political instability, corruption and dysfunction are rampant. The transitional government hasnt paid public employees salaries for most of the last two years. U.S. officials had long been on alert to South Sudanese aid workers siphoning resources. Deadly political violence left over from the civil war and threatening a new one besets much of the country.Well before Trump took office this year, the international community had broadly agreed that it was necessary to end the nations dependence on foreign aid, and U.S. officials were working on strategies to force its leaders to take responsibility for its citizens.Some of the most vulnerable among them live in Rubkona County, an oil and cattle hub larger than Rhode Island near Sudans border. There, a refugee camp formed in 2014 during the nations civil war when thousands of people fled behind a United Nations peacekeeping mission to escape a massacre in the nearby town of Bentiu. As South Sudans political turmoil continued to spiral, tens of thousands more fled to the camp. In 2020, Rubkona was hit by a series of catastrophic floods that submerged the majority of the county. Generations of people are now essentially trapped there with nowhere else to go.Since South Sudan was hit by catastrophic floods in 2020, the Bentiu refugee camp has been an island, made habitable only through a complex drainage and dike system largely funded by the U.S. Dara Johnston/UNICEFThe Man-Made Island of Trapped RefugeesAfter the U.N. lost its U.S. funding to maintain dikes, canals and latrines, the Bentiu refugee camp turned into an open sewer that helped spread cholera. More than 110,000 displaced people live in dark, single-room homes made of corrugated metal and tarps on a square mile of land surrounded by floodwaters.Chris Alcantara/ProPublicaScores of people, including the elderly, share a single latrine, a walled-off, overflowing hole in the ground alongside drainage ditches.Rainy months last half the year, softening the camp into a slurry of mud thats nearly impossible to traverse.People survive by fishing in the polluted floodwaters.Even before the funding cuts, Bentiu was known by residents and humanitarian workers as one of the most punishing and dilapidated refugee camps in the world.Previously, USAID gave the U.N.s International Organization for Migration $36 million for work in South Sudan, which included keeping the Bentiu camp habitable and making critical repairs to the dikes that surround the camp and hold back the rising floodwaters. The group maintained the drainage system and paid people to pick up garbage and clean the latrines essentially performing sanitation services for 110,000 people.Despite those efforts, cholera began spreading late last year as new refugees poured in from neighboring Sudan. Rubkona County quickly became the outbreaks epicenter. In a matter of days, hundreds of infections turned to thousands and the death toll mounted. U.S.-funded organizations raced to set up treatment units in the camp and surrounding communities.The situation was dire, and people had few viable options to leave Bentiu, U.S. Ambassador Michael Adler reported back to Washington after USAID staff visited the camp to assess the outbreak in early December. The U.S.-funded cholera clinics and other programs were necessary given the explosivity of the illness spread, he wrote.It was the kind of routine crisis response that USAID was renowned for handling. The last cholera outbreak in Rubkona, in 2022, lasted seven months, and government statistics say that just one person died while about 420 were sickened. An aggressive sanitation campaign, largely funded by the U.S., was crucial to containing the disease.Overwhelmed clinics struggled to keep up with patients during the height of Rubkonas cholera outbreak. Obtained by ProPublicaNow faced with a new outbreak, the embassys staff rushed to get the aid organizations in Rubkona more money, according to the organizations and former officials. By early January, humanitarians were preparing to expand operations. World Relief planned to expand its mobile clinics, Williams-Ayedun said. USAID told Solidarits International, which repaired water pipes, provided sanitation services and distributed soap, to aggressively spend the money it had to combat cholera, with the understanding that the agency would immediately review a proposal for more funds, according to two former officials. An additional $30 million for the U.N.s migration office which planned to use the money to continue maintaining the refugee camps was already committed.Then Trump took office, signing an executive order on day one to freeze all foreign aid pending a review of whether it aligned with the administrations stated values.Just Throw Them in the PotDays later, Rubio issued sweeping stop-work orders to aid programs worldwide. Musk declared that his DOGE team had fed USAID into the woodchipper. After a swift backlash from aid organizations, foreign governments and U.S. ambassadors overseas, Rubio announced that lifesaving operations would continue during his review. Marocco told lawmakers as much during briefings.It wasnt true. Behind the scenes, Marocco and his lieutenants repeatedly obstructed USAIDs Africa, humanitarian aid and global health bureaus from restarting programs critical for responding to disease outbreaks, according to interviews and memos obtained by ProPublica. The money aid organizations in South Sudan were expecting by February didnt come. Meanwhile, the appointees suspended nearly all of USAIDs staff, and those remaining said their bosses blocked payments even for approved programs.Marocco was meant to be the destroyer, and then someone else would come in to rebuild, one former official said a senior political appointee had told her. I guess the one thing happened, but not the other. (Marocco did not respond to multiple requests for comment.)The cuts were so frenetic that, for a brief time, the U.S. government stopped paying for the fuel that ran the electricity for the American embassy in Juba, including the security compound, just as violence was surging throughout South Sudan, according to former senior officials.In response to questions about the episode in Juba, the senior State Department official denied it was a mistake or that Rubios review wasnt careful. Going back and looking at things again doesnt mean that youve made a mistake, the senior official said.At one point in February, Marocco tried ordering the immediate return of foreign service officers stationed abroad. Several senior USAID officials protested, citing safety and logistical concerns for staff in war zones. During one meeting that month, Lewin responded, You dont want to get to know the lobsters. Just throw them in the pot, according to an attendee and meeting notes.Lewin joined the government via Musks DOGE and later took over for Marocco. He seldom came to the USAID office or met with his own staff experts, officials said. Publicly, he called the agency an unaccountable independent institution where secrets leak so quickly we have to hand-walk memos around like were in the 40s.In the weeks that followed, DOGE and Trump appointees forbade those who remained at USAID from communicating with aid groups and discouraged discussion internally, telling staff abroad not to approach ambassadors to advocate for programs, emails show.Senior staffers said they were prohibited from meeting with congressional delegations to share basic information, which was critical to Congress oversight capabilities. The governments health experts feared that taking any action to save lives could be a fireable offense.Still, some spoke out.The consequences on lives lost and funding squandered will grow exponentially and irreversibly in many cases, Nicholas Enrich, then an acting assistant administrator at USAID, warned in a Feb. 8 email to agency leaders, including Joel Borkert, the chief of staff, and Meisburger, who led the humanitarian affairs bureau. They did not respond to his plea, and Enrich was later put on administrative leave.Crucially, even when USAIDs new bosses did approve organizations to resume lifesaving work, they at times denied requests for the money that would allow them to do so, internal records show. Other proposals to fund existing grants or reverse terminations languished in limbo.The official responding on behalf of the State Department said Trumps OMB ultimately has more control over approving new grants and extensions, but that it was never the administrations intention to keep all of the lifesaving programs forever.When ProPublica asked about the funding delays and the State Departments explanation, OMB communications director Rachel Cauley said in an email, Thats absolutely false. And thats not even how this process works. She did not clarify what was false, and the State Department did not address when Lewin sought funds from OMB for South Sudans cholera response.In early February, embassy staff in South Sudan provided Adler, the ambassador, with a list of the most critical operations there, warning that funds had not been released and lifesaving programs would cease when their money ran out.Soccer games are one of the few pastimes in the camp.A career foreign service officer appointed to his post by the Biden administration, Adler had long been critical of the government of South Sudan for ongoing violence and deserting its own people, according to embassy cables and interviews with people familiar with his thinking.Still, early on he appeared to recognize that without U.S. intervention, the most vulnerable people in the country did not stand a chance against cholera. In a Feb. 14 memo addressed to the leadership of the State Departments Africa bureau, Adler asked the administration to release money to keep people alive.Lifesaving medicine and medical care, as well as emergency water and sanitation services, play a critical role in controlling disease outbreaks, the embassy wrote, notably a severe cholera outbreak in South Sudans border regions hosting the greatest number of refugees.Adler declined to meet with ProPublica in South Sudan and did not respond to a detailed list of questions.Death by SpreadsheetAs humanitarian groups racked up unpaid bills, they began to file lawsuits challenging the foreign aid freeze. A federal judge ordered the administration to reimburse the organizations. But on Feb. 26, the Supreme Court temporarily paused the lower courts order.In a meeting with senior agency staff the next day, Lewin, who at that time was not yet in charge of USAID programs, indicated that he interpreted the recent legal decisions as a potential license to dispense with one of the key review processes for unfreezing operations, according to two attendees and meeting notes. One of those attendees took Lewins remarks to mean that he had no intention to review contracts or implement lifesaving programs.In response, the senior State Department official told ProPublica, No one meant that or said that.The next night, a Friday, staff at the Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance, the division of USAID that dealt with emergencies and ran nearly all of the programs in South Sudan, were working late, scrambling to keep emergency programs operational. Suddenly, they noticed Borkert making changes to a key spreadsheet.To create the spreadsheet, DOGE had sidestepped career staff, pulling information from databases made for project management. It was so rudimentary that it was often impossible to tell what a program did from descriptions as vague as extension No. 4 or allocation of funds, according to people who saw the spreadsheet.Rubio and his aides had already terminated hundreds of programs in preceding days. Staff were bracing for another round of cuts, but many of the line items remaining in the file were for programs that provided food, clean water or essential medicines.Veteran USAID officials watched as Borkert scrolled down the spreadsheet, turning rows red, yellow or green every few seconds, never asking a single question. Realizing the red programs were slated to be cut, they frantically started editing descriptions so that Borkert would at least know what those programs did. Within minutes, hed flagged dozens of them for termination. (Borkert declined to comment.)A senior staff member in the group raced upstairs and begged Borkert to reinstate them, according to two officials familiar with the episode. He relented on several. But the next day, Marocco and Lewin told the group theyd kept far too many programs, emails show. Lewin ordered 151 additional awards terminated, writing that he would have strong objections to these awards being turned on. Marocco followed up by email at 11:30 p.m. saying the reactivations were far too broad, indicating several more line numbers and writing sound like terminations, next to them, ultimately canceling even more programs.Peter Marocco U.S. Department of DefenseJeremy Lewin Dartmouth Rauner Special Collections LibraryJoel Borkert U.S. Department of StateTim Meisburger USAIDOn March 10, Rubio announced on X that the review was over. In response to lawsuits, Trump officials told the courts that the review was a careful examination of USAIDs operations.More than 5,000 programs had been canceled, and fewer than 1,000 remained a figure that many officials told ProPublica was arbitrary but binding. In reality, the administration still wasnt releasing money and many of the surviving programs had no funds, according to interviews with humanitarian groups and government officials, as well as memos and spreadsheets documenting those decisions.When asked about the current status of the 1,000, the senior State Department official criticized USAIDs former vetting procedures and said the administration is in the process of creating new programs.Soon after the review ended, the cholera response in South Sudan came crashing down.Nyataba Gai, center, a nurse at Bentiu State Hospital, cares for Wicliak Tutdel, who arrived on the edge of death from cholera. Hospital staff revived him with two IV bags of fluids.God Is With UsRebecca Nyariaka and Koang Kai were shrouded in grief throughout the upheaval in Washington. Their only child, 4-year-old son Geer, had been one of the first victims when cholera inundated the Bentiu camp in December.The couple met in secondary school at a refugee camp in Kenya and got married after theyd both returned to their homeland in 2013. After violence broke out, they fled to Bentiu, finding occasional jobs working with health clinics.Now, in early March, they prodded one another to stay hopeful: 28-year-old Nyariaka was once again pregnant.In the refugee camp, the couple could see the signs of the funding cuts everywhere. Uncollected garbage barricaded the drainage ditches that encased their neighborhood. Human waste spilled out of the overflowing communal latrines near Nyariakas house and into the fetid water filling the culverts. Toilets crawling with rats, maggots and flies became so noxious that neighbors began defecating on the surrounding dirt roads. The stench was overwhelming. Those who washed the latrines have gone, Kai said. And we are left here all alone.Latrines across the Bentiu camp are in a dilapidated state, filled with garbage and crawling with rats, maggots and flies.The U.N.s new sanitation contract had been committed before Trump took office, but it hadnt received any money since last year. On March 12, USAID staff in the region sent Washington field notes about the conditions in the camp, where health services faced closure or severe cutbacks because of the funding shortfall. Officials at the organization pleaded behind the scenes as well. They repeatedly called and met with embassy leaders to request help, to no avail. What we have now is survival of the fittest, one U.N. official told ProPublica.When Nyariaka gave birth to a healthy baby boy, cholera was rampant throughout the camp. Neighbors were dying around them, and Kai was worried for his wife and new baby. When cholera enters your home, you know the chances of survival are very low. Very few people survive it, he said later.Nyariaka named the baby Kuothethin, God is with us. In her first days back from the hospital, her body still healing, the new mom used the bathroom frequently, teetering back and forth to the overflowing latrines close to her house. She soon developed violent vomiting and diarrhea, the hallmark symptoms of cholera.Kai, tall and muscular, picked her up in his arms and raced to the camp hospital, but it was too late. Nyariaka died just after they arrived.Koang Kais wife, Rebecca, died from cholera she contracted in the camp.She had been nowhere except her house and the latrines since coming home from the hospital, Kai said. Hes certain the toilets are to blame for her death. Depressed and unable to care for their newborn, he sent the baby across the floodwaters to live with his mother-in-law on another side of the state.Kai and Nyariaka had been best friends for years before they started dating, their lives intertwined for nearly two decades. Her whole way of life was good. She loved our children and cared for them, Kai said. I am heartbroken.As the disease ripped through the camp, more services shut down, including transportation for the dead. Kais neighbor, John Gai, lost his father to cholera. Gai had to take him to the cemetery himself in a wheelbarrow, his fathers head bobbing at his knees. Nobody should have to carry a dead body among the living, Gai said.John Gai believes his father contracted cholera from the overflowing latrines outside their home in the Bentiu refugee camp.Gross NeglectOn March 28, Rubio notified Congress that he was officially shuttering most USAID operations and transferring programs that survived his review, including several in South Sudan, to the State Department.Staffers spent the next weeks repeatedly appealing to Lewin who by then had replaced Marocco as Rubios top foreign aid official for authority to perform the mundane tasks needed to keep the programs operating. In late April, the agencys humanitarian bureau submitted a blanket request to fund grants that Lewin had already approved. Lewin refused, records show, and the humanitarian bureau had to submit country-specific proposals for consideration. That process dragged on for months.In June, just before USAID was shut down for good, Lewin finally approved some of the funding the staff had advocated for. But by then it was too late. The officials had run out of time to transfer money already appropriated by Congress to remaining programs.On June 26, R. Clark Pearson, a supervisory contracting officer at USAID, sent a scathing email to USAID offices around the world in response to an email from the top procurement officer for the agency listing the hundreds of programs that were meant to be active. He said there was no one who could manage the awards, which he called gross neglect on an astonishing level.In a time of unimaginable hubris, gross incompetence and failures of leadership across the Agency, this has to be one of the most delusional emails I have seen to date, Pearson wrote. Lives depend on these awards and for the [U.S. government] to simply not manage them because of an arbitrary deadline is inexcusable.That same day, a senior humanitarian adviser informed Adler that payment extensions for several programs, with the exception of food aid, werent processed because the approval was received late.In September, the Supreme Court issued another emergency ruling that let the administration withhold nearly $4 billion that Congress earmarked for foreign aid.Later that month, OMB released some new foreign aid funds. Thats when World Relief finally began to receive funding, allowing the clinic in Tor Tops community to reopen, even though the administration claimed the program had been active for almost seven months.The U.N.s migration program has not received a new South Sudan grant. The organization will run out of money for dike maintenance in Bentiu by February, after months of some of the most severe flooding in years.Some of the heaviest floodwaters in years crashed along Bentius dikes in November. The Trump administration stopped funding the U.N.s efforts to repair and maintain them. Obtained by ProPublicaA spokesperson for the U.N.s migration program said the organization was still in discussion with the State Department and continues to engage with donors about the critical humanitarian needs in South Sudan.The UncountedDuring the first months of the cholera outbreak, a mobile health team run by the International Rescue Committee, a U.S.-based nonprofit that works in crisis zones around the world, visited Nyajime Duops remote village on the edges of Rubkona County twice weekly. The team brought soap and transported sick people to IRCs nearby clinic for care.At 27, Duops youthful face belied a life marked by war and poverty. She had arrived just a few months earlier, fleeing violence in Khartoum, Sudan, with an infant and toddler in tow, when Trump officials terminated IRCs $5.5 million grant.The IRC suspended its operations in the village in the spring. When Duops 1-year-old baby, Nyagoa, fell ill with cholera in July, on a day IRC would have visited, there was no one to help her. By the morning, Nyagoa was unconscious. She died that day, the Fourth of July.Nyajime Duop, left, and her mother, Mary Nyapuoka. Duops 1-year-old daughter died from cholera on the Fourth of July.Cholera has spread to nearly every corner of South Sudan, infected at least 100,000 people and killed 1,600, though cases began abating this fall. The true death toll is impossible to know, in part because clinics that would have cared for people and counted the dead were shuttered. The Trump administration also cut funding to the World Health Organization, which helped the South Sudanese government gather accurate data on the outbreak.In a pasture a short walk from IRCs clinic, ProPublica found at least three dozen mounds covered in sticks the makeshift graves, village leaders said, of those who died of cholera before reaching the clinic. The clinics security guard told reporters he saw one man collapse and die just yards from the front gate.There are many more cases, said Kray Ndong, then acting minister of health for the area, many more deaths.The Trump administration recently announced a new era of foreign aid, where the U.S. will prioritize trade over aid. South Sudan, with a gross domestic product one-tenth the size of Vermonts, has little to offer.The administration says they are committed to humanitarian needs, one aid official in South Sudan said. 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