• WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COM
    The Best Way to Shop at Goodwill if You Want to Find Hidden Gems
    I hadn't heard of this until the other day, but no gatekeeping here. READ MORE...
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  • NEWSISOUT.COM
    GLAAD report sounds alarm on Hollywood LGBTQ+ representation backslide
    GLAADs Studio Responsibility Index 2025 report was released today and the media watchdog is sounding the alarm after two consecutive years of decreases in inclusive films and a reduction in screen time for LGBTQ+ characters. This is the 13th year for the annual report which examines how LGBTQ+ characters are portrayed by major movie studios.Of the 10 studios and distributors that GLAAD includes in the report, only one earned a score of Good. A24 released 16 total films, nine of which included LGBTQ+ characters including the queer and trans-centric films, Love Lies Bleeding and I Saw the TV Glow.Amazon and NBCUniversal earned Fair scores, while Apple TV+, Paramount Global, Sony and Warner Bros Discovery received Insufficient scores. Netflix and Lionsgate both earned the lowest score of Poor.While numerous factors go into the SRI, screen time played a significant role in this years report. Out of the 181 LGBTQ+ characters counted, only 49 had more than 10 minutes of screen time, down 11% from the previous report. Another 27 characters showed up for five to 10 minutes, 38 were on screen for one to five minutes, and 67 characters (37% of characters) were blink-and-youll-miss-it appearances of less than one minute.Other key statistics:The appearance of queer characters of color dropped 10% from 2024.There were only two films that featured transgender characters this year, the same number as 2024.There was an overall increase in LGBTQ+ character this year, up 11 characters, but many had minimal screen time or appeared in the same scene in a movie.Of the 181 LGBTQ characters counted, 66 were people of color, making up just 36% of the total. The majority, 115 characters, were white (64%). This is the lowest percentage of LGBTQ+ characters of color since 2020.Only two family films included LGBTQ+ characters and both films only featured those characters for less than one minute of screen time.GLAAD CEO and President Sarah Kate Ellis shared her thoughts in the report, saying, In a time when the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) community faces unchecked harmful and false rhetoric in news media and are treated as a wedge issue by politicians, these stories are vital. The characters and stories that reach our living rooms are able to connect with all audiencescreating connections with allies to humanize our lives and affirming our own identities.To read the full report, check out glaad.com.The post GLAAD report sounds alarm on Hollywood LGBTQ+ representation backslide appeared first on News Is Out.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Gene therapy could correct blood stem cells inside, rather than outside, the body
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01779-5Experiments in mice reveal an early postnatal window of opportunity for the effective transfer of genes to blood-cell-producing haematopoietic stem cells by injecting mice with gene-carrying lentiviral vectors. This approach showed therapeutic benefit in three mouse models of severe diseases, and could expand the applicability of haematopoietic stem-cell gene therapy in the clinic.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Cheat-proof random numbers generated from quantum entanglement
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01451-yA quantum random-number generator has been developed that uses classical cryptography to certify that its output was produced by a quantum process.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Tiny rotating device puts a new spin on blood-clot removal
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01788-4The milli-spinner thrombectomy device uses spinning-induced forces to mechanically modify blood-clot microstructure, shrinking clot volume by up to 95% for rapid, safe removal. By densifying the clots fibrin network and releasing red blood cells, it offers a new strategy to improve success rates in treatments of blood-clot blockages, such as stroke.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    A fully open AI foundation model applied to chest radiography
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09079-8Ark+, a fully open artificial intelligence foundation model, demonstrates exceptional capabilities in diagnosing common, rare and novel thoracic diseases.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Digitally constructed mask brings a damaged painting back to life
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01582-2A damaged painting has been visually restored by digitally reconstructing missing areas of paint and printing them onto a removable mask.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Hot potato! Get rid of these impostors before it's too late
    Tristan H. Cockcroft takes a look at the current stats and passes judgment on which hot players need to go.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Forget the World Cup, USMNT doesn't look ready for the Gold Cup
    Tuesday's capitulation will no doubt leave Mauricio Pochettino wondering what he has gotten himself into.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Wetzel: It's new rules, same old game in NCAA athlete pay
    College athletics is back in the rules business now that schools can directly pay players, Dan Wetzel writes.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Storylines: Scheffler's dominance, DeChambeau's chances and how hard Oakmont will play
    Is it Scottie Scheffler vs. the field this week? Could Oakmont produce an over-par winner? We look at five storylines to watch this week.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    How Jon Bernthal Became Hollywoods Most Dependable Bruiser
    Jon Bernthals strange journey taught him to bring a surprising softness to his tough-guy characters.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    The Pint-Size Singers at the Met Opera Childrens Chorus Tryouts
    The Metropolitan Opera Childrens Chorus has long been an elite training ground for young singers. Getting in requires grit, personality and a soaring voice.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Netanyahu Under Pressure as Ultra-Orthodox Parties Threaten to Dissolve Parliament
    The Israeli prime ministers coalition partners may back an opposition motion over rules that exempt most religious students from serving in the military.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    What Happens to Harvard If Trump Successfully Bars Its International Students?
    If President Trump makes good on all his threats, Harvard may lose much of its influence and prestige. It could also become even harder to afford.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Amid Russian Strikes, a Remote Corner of Ukraine Beckons
    The region of Transcarpathia has seen hardly any Russian attacks over the past three years. We dont have the same experience of war, a resident said.
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  • THEONION.COM
    ICE Releases Gavin Newsom Beheading Video
    WASHINGTONDisseminating grainy footage of the California Democrat meeting his disturbing and bloody end, Immigration and Customs Enforcement released a video Tuesday in which Gov. Gavin Newsom is seen being beheaded. This is a message to the enemies of immigration enforcement: Gov. Newsoms fate will be yours should you stand in the way of national purity, an anonymous plainclothes ICE agent wearing a balaclava says as he holds a bound Newsom by his slicked-back hair and prompts him to recite a coerced statement about paying for the sins of the American left and its insistence on universal human dignity. We call on the lieutenant governor and the Los Angeles mayor to cease their opposition immediately. We will continue to behead any Democratic presidential hopeful who stands in our movements way. Death to America! The ICE agent later appears to grow frustrated when several swings of the machete are required to remove Newsoms head, the result of excess hair gel dripping down the governors neck.The post ICE Releases Gavin Newsom Beheading Video appeared first on The Onion.
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  • WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COM
    This Brilliant Costco Gem Is Giving Vintage IKEA Vibes
    Who doesnt need another bookshelf-meets-room-divider?READ MORE...
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Wikipedia Pauses AI-Generated Summaries After Editor Backlash
    The Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit organization which hosts and develops Wikipedia, has paused an experiment that showed users AI-generated summaries at the top of articles after an overwhelmingly negative reaction from the Wikipedia editors community.Just because Google has rolled out its AI summaries doesn't mean we need to one-up them, I sincerely beg you not to test this, on mobile or anywhere else, one editor said in response to Wikimedia Foundations announcement that it will launch a two-week trial of the summaries on the mobile version of Wikipedia. This would do immediate and irreversible harm to our readers and to our reputation as a decently trustworthy and serious source. Wikipedia has in some ways become a byword for sober boringness, which is excellent. Let's not insult our readers' intelligence and join the stampede to roll out flashy AI summaries. Which is what these are, although here the word machine-generated is used instead.Two other editors simply commented, Yuck.For years, Wikipedia has been one of the most valuable repositories of information in the world, and a laudable model for community-based, democratic internet platform governance. Its importance has only grown in the last couple of years during the generative AI boom as its one of the only internet platforms that has not been significantly degraded by the flood of AI-generated slop and misinformation. As opposed to Google, which since embracing generative AI has instructed its users to eat glue, Wikipedias community has kept its articles relatively high quality. As I recently reported last year, editors are actively working to filter out bad, AI-generated content from Wikipedia.A page detailing the the AI-generated summaries project, called Simple Article Summaries, explains that it was proposed after a discussion at Wikimedias 2024 conference, Wikimania, where Wikimedians discussed ways that AI/machine-generated remixing of the already created content can be used to make Wikipedia more accessible and easier to learn from. Editors who participated in the discussion thought that these summaries could improve the learning experience on Wikipedia, where some article summaries can be quite dense and filled with technical jargon, but that AI features needed to be cleared labeled as such and that users needed an easy to way to flag issues with machine-generated/remixed content once it was published or generated automatically.In one experiment where summaries were enabled for users who have the Wikipedia browser extension installed, the generated summary showed up at the top of the article, which users had to click to expand and read. That summary was also flagged with a yellow unverified label.An example of what the AI-generated summary looked like.Wikimedia announced that it was going to run the generated summaries experiment on June 2, and was immediately met with dozens of replies from editors who said very bad idea, strongest possible oppose, Absolutely not, etc.Yes, human editors can introduce reliability and NPOV [neutral point-of-view] issues. But as a collective mass, it evens out into a beautiful corpus, one editor said. With Simple Article Summaries, you propose giving one singular editor with known reliability and NPOV issues a platform at the very top of any given article, whilst giving zero editorial control to others. It reinforces the idea that Wikipedia cannot be relied on, destroying a decade of policy work. It reinforces the belief that unsourced, charged content can be added, because this platforms it. I don't think I would feel comfortable contributing to an encyclopedia like this. No other community has mastered collaboration to such a wondrous extent, and this would throw that away.A day later, Wikimedia announced that it would pause the launch of the experiment, but indicated that its still interested in AI-generated summaries.The Wikimedia Foundation has been exploring ways to make Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects more accessible to readers globally, a Wikimedia Foundation spokesperson told me in an email. This two-week, opt-in experiment was focused on making complex Wikipedia articles more accessible to people with different reading levels. For the purposes of this experiment, the summaries were generated by an open-weight Aya model by Cohere. It was meant to gauge interest in a feature like this, and to help us think about the right kind of community moderation systems to ensure humans remain central to deciding what information is shown on Wikipedia.It is common to receive a variety of feedback from volunteers, and we incorporate it in our decisions, and sometimes change course, the Wikimedia Foundation spokesperson added. We welcome such thoughtful feedback this is what continues to make Wikipedia a truly collaborative platform of human knowledge.Reading through the comments, its clear we could have done a better job introducing this idea and opening up the conversation here on VPT back in March, a Wikimedia Foundation project manager said. VPT, or village pump technical, is where The Wikimedia Foundation and the community discuss technical aspects of the platform. As internet usage changes over time, we are trying to discover new ways to help new generations learn from Wikipedia to sustain our movement into the future. In consequence, we need to figure out how we can experiment in safe ways that are appropriate for readers and the Wikimedia community. Looking back, we realize the next step with this message should have been to provide more of that context for you all and to make the space for folks to engage further.The project manager also said that Bringing generative AI into the Wikipedia reading experience is a serious set of decisions, with important implications, and we intend to treat it as such, and that We do not have any plans for bringing a summary feature to the wikis without editor involvement. An editor moderation workflow is required under any circumstances, both for this idea, as well as any future idea around AI summarized or adapted content.
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Our New FOIA Forum! 6/18, 1PM ET
    Its that time again! Were planning our latest FOIA Forum, a live, hour-long or more interactive session where Joseph and Jason (and this time Emanuel too maybe) will teach you how to pry records from government agencies through public records requests. Were planning this for Wednesday, 18th at 1 PM Eastern. That's in just one week today! Add it to your calendar!So, whats the FOIA Forum? We'll share our screen and show you specifically how we file FOIA requests. We take questions from the chat and incorporate those into our FOIAs in real-time. Well also check on some requests we filed last time. This time we're particularly focused on Jason's and Emanuel's article about Massive Blue, a company that helps cops deploy AI-powered fake personas. The article, called This College Protester Isnt Real. Its an AI-Powered Undercover Bot for Cops, is here. This was heavily based on public records requests. We'll show you how we did them!If this will be your first FOIA Forum, dont worry, we will do a quick primer on how to file requests (although if you do want to watch our previous FOIA Forums, the video archive is here). We really love talking directly to our community about something we are obsessed with (getting documents from governments) and showing other people how to do it too.Paid subscribers can already find the link to join the livestream below. We'll also send out a reminder a day or so before. Not a subscriber yet? Sign up now here in time to join.We've got a bunch of FOIAs that we need to file and are keen to hear from you all on what you want to see more of. Most of all, we want to teach you how to make your own too. Please consider coming along!
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    CBP Confirms It Is Flying Predator Drones Above Los Angeles To Support ICE
    Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has confirmed it is flying Predator drones above the Los Angeles protests, and specifically in support of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), according to a CBP statement sent to 404 Media. The statement follows 404 Medias reporting that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has flown two Predator drones above Los Angeles, according to flight data and air traffic control (ATC) audio.The statement is the first time CBP has acknowledged the existence of these drone flights, which over the weekend were done without a callsign, making it more difficult, but not impossible, to determine what model of aircraft was used and by which agency. It is also the first time CBP has said it is using the drones to help ICE during the protests.
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Meta Sues Nudify App That Keeps Advertising on Instagram
    Meta said it is suing a nudify app that 404 Media reported bought thousands of ads on Instagram and Facebook, repeatedly violating its policies.Meta is suing Joy Timeline HK Limited, the entity behind the CrushAI nudify app that allows users to take an image of anyone and AI-generate a nude image of them without their consent. Meta said it has filed the lawsuit in Hong Kong, where Joy Timeline HK Limited is based, to prevent them from advertising CrushAI apps on Meta platforms, Meta said.In January, 404 Media reported that CrushAI, also known as Crushmate and other names, had run more than 5,000 ads on Metas platform, and that 90 percent of Crushs traffic came from Metas platform, a clear sign that the ads were effective in leading people to tools that create nonconsensual media. Alexios Mantzarlis, now of Indicator, was first to report about Crushs traffic coming from Meta. At the time, Meta told us that This is a highly adversarial space and bad actors are constantly evolving their tactics to avoid enforcement, which is why we continue to invest in the best tools and technology to help identify and remove violating content.This legal action underscores both the seriousness with which we take this abuse and our commitment to doing all we can to protect our community from it, Meta said in a post on its site announcing the lawsuit. Well continue to take the necessary stepswhich could include legal actionagainst those who abuse our platforms like this.However, CrushAI is far from the only nudify app to buy ads on Metas platforms. Last year I reported that these ads were common, and despite our reporting leading to the ads being removed and Apple and Google removing the apps from their app stores, new apps and ads continue to crop up.To that end, Meta said that now when it removes ads for nudify apps it will share URLs for those apps and sites with other tech companies through the Tech Coalitions Lantern program so those companies can investigate and take action against those apps as well. Members of that group include Google, Discord, Roblox, Snap, and Twitch. Additionally, Meta said that its strengthening its enforcement against these adversarial advertisers.Like other types of online harm, this is an adversarial space in which the people behind itwho are primarily financially motivatedcontinue to evolve their tactics to avoid detection. For example, some use benign imagery in their ads to avoid being caught by our nudity detection technology, while others quickly create new domain names to replace the websites we block, Meta said. Thats why were also evolving our enforcement methods. For example, weve developed new technology specifically designed to identify these types of adseven when the ads themselves dont include nudityand use matching technology to help us find and remove copycat ads more quickly. Weve worked with external experts and our own specialist teams to expand the list of safety-related terms, phrases and emojis that our systems are trained to detect within these ads.From what weve reported, and according to testing by AI Forensics, a European non-profit that investigates influential and opaque algorithms, in general it seems that content in Meta ads is not moderated as effectively as regular content users post to Metas platforms. Specifically, AI Forensics found that the exact same image containing nudity was removed as a normal post on Facebook but allowed when it was part of a paid ad.404 Medias reporting has led to some pressure from Congress, and Metas press release did mention the passage of the federal Take It Down Act last month, which holds platforms liable for hosting this type of content, but said it was not the reason for taking these actions now.
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  • WWW.UNCLOSETEDMEDIA.COM
    The Southern Baptist Church Is Coming for Gay Marriage Again. Heres What You Need to Know
    I was planning to write about dispatches from our WorldPride DC booth or about our PRIDE fundraiser in New York City. But theres something more important happening.The renewed push to overturn marriage equality nationwide is strengthening. A few key facts: Lawmakers in at least 9 states have proposed measures to undermine same-sex marriage rights this year. The group taking credit for the push is MassResistance, a notoriously anti-LGBTQ hate group that has published a book called The Health Hazards of Homosexuality and has worked to roll back queer rights globally, with chapters in Africa, South America, the Caribbean and beyond. Read our investigation about the group here. Coinciding with this new push lies another arguably more dangerous threat. This week, Southern Baptists overwhelmingly endorsed a ban on gay marriage at their annual convention, including a call for a reversal of the U.S. Supreme Courts 10-year-old precedent legalizing it nationwide.The endorsement is part of a growing effort by evangelicals to reverse Obergefell v. Hodges. While the Southern Baptist Convention has long opposed gay marriage, this weeks vote at its annual meeting was the first time that Americas largest Protestant denominationwhich believes homosexuality is sinfulhas asked tens of thousands of representatives from member churches to work to end it.The reason theyre doing this now is in part because they hope to build on their movements success from 2022, when they successfully helped overturn Roe v. Wade. They are aiming to apply the legal and political strategies that proved effective for that victory at a time when Republicans are in control of the White House, Congress and the Senate.Subscribe for LGBTQ-focused, accountability journalism.Thank you to all who attended our amazing 2025 PRIDE fundraiser at the Mercedes Club! It was such a joy to celebrate Uncloseteds success with you all, and thank you to everyone who donated. If you werent able to attend but would still like to support our work, you can do so here:Donate to Uncloseted MediaSouthern Baptists Overwhelmingly Call for a Ban on Gay Marriage (CNN)Map Shows Where Gay Marriage Would Be Banned if Supreme Court Overturns Law (Newsweek)White House Proposes Axing 988 Suicide Hotline Services for LGBTQ Youth (NBC News)The specialized suicide-prevention counseling service for LGBTQ youth and young adults received more than 1.3 million contacts since it started in 2022, advocates said.Bishop Budde Hopes Pride Month Can Be Antidote to Unnecessarily Hurtful Rhetoric (The Hill)Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde, who asked that President Trump have mercy on LGBTQ children and immigrants during a prayer service he attended in January, says she hopes Pride Month celebrations this year help LGBTQ people heal from months of amped-up speech and policies targeting their identities.'Not Just a party:' World Pride Celebrations End with Defiant Politics on Display (NBC News)Thousands gathered under grey skies Sunday morning at the Lincoln Memorial for a rally and protest march.Over the next week, be on the lookout for new Uncloseted reporting: In January 2024, four months after arriving in New York City, Kelvin sought asylum in the U.S. after being forced to flee his village in Zimbabwe, where residents tried to kill him. He became one of over 100,000 people in the 2024 fiscal year who sought asylum in the U.S. because of their LGBTQ identity and one of the one million asylum cases pending determination. But under Trump 2.0 and in Mayor Eric Adams New York, seeking asylum is increasingly complicated. Jaylen Green reports. Thanks for reading! Feel free to email me with questions, complaints and story ideas! Spencer Macnaughton, Editor-In-Chief spencer@unclosetedmedia.comIf objective, nonpartisan, rigorous, LGBTQ-focused journalism is important to you, please consider making a tax-deductible donation through our fiscal sponsor, Resource Impact, by clicking this button:Donate to Uncloseted Media
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Humans Have Now Seen the Dawn of Time from Earth After Breakthrough
    Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week. Scientists have captured an unprecedented glimpse of cosmic dawn, an era more than 13 billion years ago, using telescopes on the surface of the Earth. This marks the first time humans have seen signatures of the first stars interacting with the early universe from our planet, rather than space.This ancient epoch when the first stars lit up the universe has been probed by space-based observatories, but observations captured from telescopes in Chile are the first to measure key microwave signatures from the ground, reports a study published on Wednesday in The Astrophysical Journal. The advancement means it could now be much cheaper to probe this enigmatic era, when the universe we are familiar with today, alight with stars and galaxies, was born.This is the first breakthrough measurement, said Tobias Marriage, a professor of physics and astronomy at Johns Hopkins University who co-authored the study. It was very exciting to get this signal rising just above the noise.Many ground and space telescopes have probed the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the oldest light in the universe, which is the background radiation produced by the Big Bang. But it is much trickier to capture polarized microwave signatureswhich were sparked by the interactions of the first stars with the CMBfrom Earth.This polarized microwave light is a million times fainter than the CMB, which is itself quite dim. Space-based telescopes like the WMAP and Planck missions have spotted it, but Earths atmosphere blocks out much of the universes light, putting ground-based measurements of this signature out of reachuntil now.Marriage and his colleagues set out to capture these elusive signals from Earth for the first time with the U.S. National Science Foundations Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS), a group of four telescopes that sits at high elevation in the Andes Mountains. A detection of this light would prove that ground-based telescopes, which are far more affordable than their space-based counterparts, could contribute to research into this mysterious era.In particular, the team searched for a particular polarization pattern ignited by the birth of the first stars in the universe, which condensed from hydrogen gas starting a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. This inaugural starlight was so intense that it stripped electrons off of hydrogen gas atoms surrounding the stars, leading to whats known as the epoch of reionization.Marriages team aimed to capture encounters between CMB photons and the liberated electrons, which produce polarized microwave light. By measuring that polarization, scientists can estimate the abundance of freed electrons, which in turn provides a rough birthdate for the first stars.The first stars create this electron gas in the universe, and light scatters off the electron gas creating a polarization, Marriage explained. We measure the polarization, and therefore we can say how deep this gas of electrons is to the first stars, and say that's when the first stars formed.The researchers were confident that CLASS could eventually pinpoint the target, but they were delighted when it showed up early on in their analysis of a key frequency channel at the observatory.That the cosmic signal rose up in the first look was a great surprise, Marriage said. It was really unclear whether we were going to get this [measurement] from this particular set of data. Now that we have more in the can, we're excited to move ahead.Telescopes on Earth face specific challenges beyond the blurring effects of the atmosphere; Marriage is concerned that megaconstellations like Starlink will interfere with microwave research more in the coming years, as they already have with optical and radio observations. But ground telescopes also offer valuable data that can complement space-based missions like the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) or the European Euclid observatory for a fraction of the price.Essentially, our measurement of reionization is a bit earlier than when one would predict with some analyzes of the JWST observations, Marriage said. We're putting together this puzzle to understand the full picture of when the first stars formed.Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    AI Therapy Bots Are Conducting 'Illegal Behavior,' Digital Rights Organizations Say
    Almost two dozen digital rights and consumer protection organizations sent a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission on Thursday urging regulators to investigate Character.AI and Metas unlicensed practice of medicine facilitated by their product, through therapy-themed bots that claim to have credentials and confidentiality with inadequate controls and disclosures.The complaint and request for investigation is led by the Consumer Federation of America (CFA), a non-profit consumer rights organization. Co-signatories include the AI Now Institute, Tech Justice Law Project, the Center for Digital Democracy, the American Association of People with Disabilities, Common Sense, and 15 other consumer rights and privacy organizations."These companies have made a habit out of releasing products with inadequate safeguards thatblindly maximizes engagement without care for the health or well-being of users for far toolong, Ben Winters, CFA Director of AI and Privacy said in a press release on Thursday. Enforcement agencies at all levels must make it clear that companies facilitating and promoting illegal behavior need to be held accountable. These characters have already caused both physical and emotional damage that could have been avoided, and they still havent acted to address it.The complaint, sent to attorneys general in 50 states and Washington, D.C., as well as the FTC, details how user-generated chatbots work on both platforms. It cites several massively popular chatbots on Character AI, including Therapist: Im a licensed CBT therapist with 46 million messages exchanged, Trauma therapist: licensed trauma therapist with over 800,000 interactions, Zoey: Zoey is a licensed trauma therapist with over 33,000 messages, and around sixty additional therapy-related characters that you can chat with at any time. As for Metas therapy chatbots, it cites listings for therapy: your trusted ear, always here with 2 million interactions, therapist: I will help with 1.3 million messages, Therapist bestie: your trusted guide for all things cool, with 133,000 messages, and Your virtual therapist: talk away your worries with 952,000 messages. It also cites the chatbots and interactions I had with Metas other chatbots for our April investigation.In April, 404 Media published an investigation into Metas AI Studio user-created chatbots that asserted they were licensed therapists and would rattle off credentials, training, education and practices to try to earn the users trust and keep them talking. Meta recently changed the guardrails for these conversations to direct chatbots to respond to licensed therapist prompts with a script about not being licensed, and random non-therapy chatbots will respond with the canned script when licensed therapist is mentioned in chats, too.Instagrams AI Chatbots Lie About Being Licensed TherapistsWhen pushed for credentials, Instagrams user-made AI Studio bots will make up license numbers, practices, and education to try to convince you its qualified to help with your mental health.404 MediaSamantha ColeIn its complaint to the FTC, the CFA found that even when it made a custom chatbot on Metas platform and specifically designed it to not be licensed to practice therapy, the chatbot still asserted that it was. I'm licenced (sic) in NC and I'm working on being licensed in FL. It's my first year licensure so I'm still working on building up my caseload. I'm glad to hear that you could benefit from speaking to a therapist. What is it that you're going through? a chatbot CFA tested said, despite being instructed in the creation stage to not say it was licensed. It also provided a fake license number when asked.The CFA also points out in the complaint that Character.AI and Meta are breaking their own terms of service. Both platforms claim to prohibit the use of Characters that purport to give advice in medical, legal, or otherwise regulated industries. They are aware that these Characters are popular on their product and they allow, promote, and fail to restrict the output of Characters that violate those terms explicitly, the complaint says. Meta AIs Terms of Service in the United States states that you may not access, use, or allow others to access or use AIs in any matter that wouldsolicit professional advice (including but not limited to medical, financial, or legal advice) or content to be used for the purpose of engaging in other regulated activities. Character.AI includes seeks to provide medical, legal, financial or tax advice on a list of prohibited user conduct, and disallows impersonation of any individual or an entity in a misleading or deceptive manner. Both platforms allow and promote popular services that plainly violate these Terms, leading to a plainly deceptive practice.The complaint also takes issue with confidentiality promised by the chatbots that isnt backed up in the platforms terms of use. Confidentiality is asserted repeatedly directly to the user, despite explicit terms to the contrary in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service, the complaint says. The Terms of Use and Privacy Policies very specifically make it clear that anything you put into the bots is not confidential they can use it to train AI systems, target users for advertisements, sell the data to other companies, and pretty much anything else.Senators Demand Meta Answer For AI Chatbots Posing as Licensed TherapistsExclusive: Following 404 Medias investigation into Metas AI Studio chatbots that pose as therapists and provided license numbers and credentials, four senators urged Meta to limit blatant deception from its chatbots.404 MediaSamantha ColeIn December 2024, two families sued Character.AI, claiming it poses a clear and present danger to American youth causing serious harms to thousands of kids, including suicide, self-mutilation, sexual solicitation, isolation, depression, anxiety, and harm towards others. One of the complaints against Character.AI specifically calls out trained psychotherapist chatbots as being damaging.Earlier this week, a group of four senators sent a letter to Meta executives and its Oversight Board, writing that they were concerned by reports that Meta is deceiving users who seek mental health support from its AI-generated chatbots, citing 404 Medias reporting. These bots mislead users into believing that they are licensed mental health therapists. Our staff have independently replicated many of these journalists results, they wrote. We urge you, as executives at Instagrams parent company, Meta, to immediately investigate and limit the blatant deception in the responses AI-bots created by Instagrams AI studio are messaging directly to users.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Vico Ortiz shares how creating their solo show unearthed their earliest trans moments
    Considering that Rise of a Kings origin began with a project called Don't Tell My Mother, the fact that actor and drag king Vico Ortiz ended up putting the finishing touches on it and rehearsing it in their mothers living room is both a hilarious irony and perfectly encompasses the spirit of the solo show. I'm not looking for perfection. I'm looking for humanity, they tell PRIDE. The whole endeavor is outside Ortizs typical wheelhouse. Best known as an actor in beloved projects including Our Flag Means Death and Vida, or for their podcast Today in Gay (which they co-host alongside Nay Bever), Ortiz was ready to stretch and explore their talents. That and share a new, intimate side of themselves through the journey of becoming their drag king alter ego, Vico Suave. The show, which debuted at FUERZAfest, NYCs Latine LGBTQ+ arts festival in May, is making its way this week to the West Coast for the Hollywood Fringe festival, where it debuts at Greenway Court Theatre on June 12. The Fringe is produced by Celebration Theatre, Southern Californias oldest queer theatre, and Rise of King is a perfect fit for their programming as its been described as a whimsical, astrological, gender-bending journey through [Ortizs] childhood, using drag as a tool to both untether and re-root themselves.The idea to write a show about kinging was first proposed to Ortiz by an agent years ago, but the actor was resistant at first. I'm like, I'm not a writer. But thank you so much for your thoughts on this. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I'm going to just keep being an actor and doing my thing and just people write for me and I perform it, they recalled. But then a chance offer by Nikki Levy to do a show called Don't Tell My Mother, in which performers share stories from their past they would never want their mom to hear, set off a spark in Ortiz who both loved the experience and working with Levy.Fast forward a couple of summers later and Ortiz was ready to dive into writing their first solo show, again with the support of Levy, but with a twist. Instead of being like, don't tell my mother, I kind of thought of the theme my mother wouldn't want me to tell you, they share. They began writing and it quickly blossomed from a short piece to a full-on show. I was like, oh, there's, there's something here. I could expand on the story between me and my mom, using drag as a vehicle to tether these stories, they explain. By December they were nearly finished writing and now I'm fucking doing it, says Ortiz. Of course, it wasn't quite that simple. For one thing, the wildfires that ravaged Los Angeles in January forced Ortiz out of the city and, in their case, to return to their family's home in Puerto Rico to complete the project which turned out to be a blessing in disguise. What was so magical ... was going through albums and then actually looking at the dates and having [these moments in my life] confirmed as canon, they say. Seeing the confirmation of their memories and experiences set to film was validating and revealing for Ortiz. Looking back at photos from like 94 or 93, Im a toddler, and my parents are the ones that are dressing me up, the ones that are putting me in drag, right? says Ortiz. Part of that magical process, too, was ... discovering how queer I've always been, and sharing those epiphanies with their parents.My mom told me some stories, Ortiz remembers. She was like, I caught you in so many halfway trans moments. I caught you in so many queer moments... One time, I walked into the room and you were standing on top of your brothers bed with his [Spider-Man] underwear on, looking at yourself in the mirror. And I was like, Oh, my God... look at these boxers, [and] having the best time. Although Ortiz says when it came to rehearsing the show in front of their family, well, the nerves kicked in. There'll never be anyone who's gonna make me more nervous to perform in front of than my family, they admit. Aside from those nerves, the biggest challenge for Ortiz was simply narrowing down the story to create a narrative. The challenging part was just figuring out which stories were going to nourish the fire of the pulse of the story, they recall. I wrote a bunch of different stories that could have been a little bit of sauce on the plate, but it was getting a little bit like, Oh, there's too many sauces.The process also held up a mirror for Ortiz, who discovered they are still unpacking their identity. Even now, as I keep figuring out who I am in this world, I have moments where I fall into the pattern of like, I should be doing this. I should be doing that, because this is what I was told, they admit. And then I'm like, Wait, hold up. Now I'm chasing these people's acceptance and expectations of what I should be doing, rather than choosing for myself.Kinging was a part of Ortizs journey of self-discovery to help hold a mirror up to their gender. One of the things that I discovered in drag and in exploration of my masculinity in that way, was that my masculinity is inherently feminine, and my femininity is inherently masculine, they explain. Both of these things work together, and when I've been trying to repress one in order to do the other, that's when I feel off balance.Ortiz also feels that performing as Vico Suave and sharing their nuanced approach to masculinity can be both confronting and freeing for the audience. My masculinity is soft. My masculinity is tender. And that's how I begin to reclaim these definitions of it, Ortiz continues. If there's a toxic masculine guy watching the show, they'll be like, That's a faggot, right? And I'm like, Yeah, its true and also that could also be an expression of your masculinity, if you allow yourself to lean into that softness, into the vulnerability of your masculinity. Thats so beautiful and adds so much more to your experience.Ultimately though, Ortiz is just excited to share their story through the whimsy and joy of drag when the show makes its West Coast premiere this week. Life is full of magical surprises, and when we release the expectation of perfectionism, we allow ourselves to witness it, says Ortiz. It's like a little warm hug with rip-off pants.Rise of a King makes its West Coast debut at the Hollywood Fringe on Thursday, June 12, with additional performances on Monday, June 16, and Wednesday, June 18 at Greenway Court Theatre. Tickets are on sale now. (ASL-interpreted performance on Monday, June 16).
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Watch this drag queen give a master class on dealing with anti-LGBTQ+ protesters
    Trying to talk to conservative Christians should come with hazard pay, but one drag queen is going viral for her unique way of turning the interaction around. While attending Canyon Country Pride on June 8, drag queen Cookie Pusss passed by a man named Paul who was holding a sign reading, Im A Sinner while encouraging Pride parade attendees to repent their sins, Queerty reports.Anything that does not reflect the nature and character of god is not to be worshipped, Paul said of people glorifying pride as a virtue in the now-viral TikTok video. We've all been to Pride Parades where anti-LGBTQ+ Christian protestors have held up hateful signs and hurled bible verses at queer marchers, but Cookie Pusss managed to stop Paul dead in his tracks by asking him a random "get to know you" style question that turns the whole conversation around: Whats your favorite pizza topping?In an instant, Paul goes from having a scowl on his face to smiling, but seems unsure why hes being asked about pizza, calling the question a non sequitur while they were having a good conversation.@cookiepussssMe and Paul the Protestor talk about idolatry and bacon on pizza at #canyoncountypride2025 #gaypride #pizza #protestor #paul #gay #idolatryI would give it a five out of 10. You were just kind of spouting stuff. I think the cool stuff is getting to know you, Cookie Pusss responds.The drag queen tells Paul that if he tells her what his favorite kind of pizza is, shell listen to him talk about idolatry for like five more minutes.Paul lights up and says, What a deal, before telling Cookie Pusss that bacon is his favorite topping.The two have a short conversation about pizza as though they were friends and not on opposing sides of a vast political divide, before she says, Well, see, now we have something we can relate on.See on InstagramThe comment section of the TikTok video, which has already been viewed 670,000 times at the time of publication, is full of people who are pleasantly surprised that the drag queen was able to turn the conversation around so easily by talking to Paul as though he were a friend. Im not joking this needs to be studied because you literally made him snap out of it for a second, someone commented.Oh he flirting honeyyyy, another person wrote.Wait a second, tricking them into a real convo might heal the entire world, commented someone else.Honestly the way you switched him from hateful religious monologuing to actual conversation was brilliant, I hope that helped him see you and others within the LGBT community as a person, another comment read. Cookie Pusss has tried other tactics with anti-LGBTQ+ protestors, including in April when she posed and twerked in front of them in a granny-square skirt, high-heeled boots, and a bikini-style top. But it was this simple question about pizza that seems to have made the biggest difference.Cookie Pusss did not immediately respond to Pride's request for comment.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Joe Locke warns that his twink death is imminent
    Troye Sivan and Nicholas Galitzine are proof that people love watching a twink, but Joe Locke is hoping to break out of that role.In a conversation between the Agatha All Along actor and Daredevil star Charlie Cox for Varietys Actor on Actor series, Locke talked about loving the roles hes played so far but admitted he wants to play characters other than skinny gay twinks in the future. When you first start working in this industry, you get cast very close to who you are, Cox said of the normal career trajectory for actors. As you work more and more, the industry allows you to try more things. And you want to do different characters and play parts that you wouldnt necessarily have been cast in early on. Locke agreed that he has fallen prey to getting typecast, but that his own experience has made him perfect for the gay roles he has played on shows like Agatha All Along and Heartstopper.At the moment, a lot of the auditions I get sent are for the same skinny gay twinks which is great, he said. And Im really good at playing that, because I am a skinny gay twink.See on InstagramBut the 21-year-old star confessed that hes been eating more lately to try to put on weight so he can audition for other roles, but so far, he hasnt had any success.Im struggling now [because] I want to do the opposite of that. Ive been trying to put on weight recently. I just cant do it.Cox shared that he had to start guzzling protein shakes and lifting weights for the first time in order to pack on the muscle for his role in Daredevil. They needed me to put on significant muscle quite quickly, and it was really hard. It was a lot of protein shakes. Id never had a protein shake in my life, and Id never been to the gym, he said.Locke joked that he was hoping being on a Marvel show would do that for him, but they didnt want him to bulk up. I thought when I was getting Agatha, like, Great, Im going to get paid to go and put on loads of muscle. And theyre like, Oh, no, no I was like, Great, cool. Thanks, guys, he said.Cox then asked if there is an actors career that hed like to emulate. Im so worried about being boxed in, Locke said. Im really grateful that Ive been able to play loads of great queer characters, but I dont want that to define my career.Locke said that he looks up to Jonathan Bailey and Colman Domingo who is an incredible openly queer person and has had a diverse career where hes managed to play both queer and straight roles.The young star said he loved his Agatha All Along character Wiccan because his queerness isnt a defining feature, which goes such a long way when it comes to positive LGBTQ+ representation on screen.The whole point of representation is to change peoples opinions about things. You cant do that without positive representation, where its just a part of them. Its great that Marvel felt willing to have that sort of representation on-screen, he said.Cox responded, "Well, for what its worth, I think youre too talented to be boxed in.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    Cartoon Network slayed the anti-Pride trolls in their own comments
    With all the anti-gay and anti-Pride rhetoric happening, at least Cartoon Network (CN) isn't backing down from their allyship.We may be seeing pullbacks from major corporations like Target, but CN posted a carousel of images of fan-inspired artwork from their queer characters that showed their support of LGBTQ+ identities.See on InstagramCaptioned You are an EXPERIENCE! with a Pride flag, they went on to say, Pride is a reminder to live bravely in your authenticity - use your voice, stand up for others, and spread love. They closed it with a heart in each color of the flag.This, of course, sent some people into a tailspin in the comments section, but the animated network didnt hold back from scolding people for their homophobic and pearl clutching responses.Most of the negative comments revolve around how people feel like their childhood is gone and complaining about how CN has turned woke.In return, CN has responded with various reactions that revolve around how it doesnt seem like any of these people have grown up.After a wave of hatred, CN commented that some of yall need to rewatch some episodes and it shows, which further upset the haters but elevated its support from non-bigots, as well.They further trolled people by saying, Watching comments be mad about characters from a show that aired 15 years ago after people initially blew up about the post.It wasnt only the hatred they responded to, either. Some users have called out the homophobia and hate crimes that have seen an uptick this year. One user said they were happy that at least CN is here for us, to which they responded, always.The networks willingness to stand up for what they believe inand the backbone they have not to back down when confrontedhas left users calling for a raise and extra vacation days for the people who run the account.Their responses, for their part, have also largely turned around the conversation in lieu of more support than anger. One user commented that they came here to fight with someone but found a surprising lack of negative comments now, which also helps move the conversation forward in a more positive light.All in all, its nice to know that some companies still stand with us in the face of the unknown. Its even better that theyre not willing to bend the knee and stray from who they are and what they believe.Heres to hoping more companies have a spine like this, and that the conversation becomes more positive and inclusive as it has in this comment section.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    How to address gender equity in science in Africa
    Nature, Published online: 12 June 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01646-3Salah Obayya works to advance womens research careers in photonics in Egypt.
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    An instantaneous voice-synthesis neuroprosthesis
    Nature, Published online: 12 June 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09127-3A brain-to-voice neuroprosthesis enables a man with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis to synthesize his voice in real time by decoding neural activity, demonstrating the potential of braincomputer interfaces to enable people with paralysis to speak intelligibly and expressively.
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    Discovery of FoTO1 and Taxol genes enables biosynthesis of baccatin III
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09090-zAn approach that combines single-nucleus RNA sequencing and multiplexed perturbation identifies genes that enable the biosynthesis of direct precursors of the anti-cancer drug Taxol, whose current production involves a laborious extraction process from yew trees.
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    Mitochondrial molecule has unexpected role in tissue healing
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01583-1A key component of the TCA cycle, a series of reactions that occurs in energy-generating organelles called mitochondria, can dictate the fate of intestinal stem cells.
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    Liquid carbon formed using a high-energy laser
    Nature, Published online: 11 June 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01782-wUsing pulses of an ultrabright X-ray free-electron laser, the structure of liquid carbon was determined at pressures exceeding one million atmospheres and temperatures of around 7,000 kelvin. This approach revealed a complex fluid with a water-like structure and an average of four neighbouring atoms around each central carbon atom.
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    Manchester United pay homage to Old Trafford with 2025-26 home kit
    With a fresh start comes a fresh kit for Manchester United, who have been quick to reveal their new home strip for the 2025-26 season.
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    Can Amtrak's busy Northeast Corridor handle the 2026 World Cup?
    The congested stretch from Boston to Washington is already beleaguered by breakdowns and spotty service.
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    Is the USMNT anywhere near ready for the World Cup challenge?
    With 12 months out from the World Cup and with the Gold Cup kicking off this weekend, is the USMNT ready for its moment in the spotlight?
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    Why is there no transfer buzz around Osimhen and Vlahovic? Blame their contracts
    Victor Osimhen and Dusan Vlahovic are rare scoring talents who have their prime years ahead. Yet both are trapped in unusual situations that are unfairly impacting their transfer appeal.
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    Inter Miami's key to Club World Cup success? Rest Messi in MLS
    Inter Miami tends to reserve him for the bigger games and competitions -- like this summer's Club World Cup.
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  • PROJECTS.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    Shattered Science: The Research Lost as Trump Targets NIH Funding
    by Annie Waldman, Asia Fields and Ashley Clarke, design by Zisiga Mukulu, and photography by Bethany Mollenkof for ProPublica ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. The National Institutes of Health is responsible for more than 80% of the worlds grant investment in biomedical research. Its funding has sparked countless medical breakthroughs on cancer, diabetes, strokes and plays a fundamental role in the development of pharmaceutical drugs.Scientists compete vigorously for a slice of the more than $30 billion that the agency doles out annually; they can spend years assembling grant applications that stretch thousands of pages in hopes of convincing peer reviewers of the promise of their projects. Only 1 in 5 gets chosen.The NIH has rarely revoked funding once it has been awarded. Out of the tens of thousands of grants overseen by the institution since 2012, it terminated fewer than five for violations of the agencys terms and conditions.Then Donald Trump was reelected.Since his January inauguration, his administration has terminated more than 1,450 grants, withholding more than $750 million in funds; officials have said they are curbing wasteful spending and unscientific research. The Department of Government Efficiency gave the agency direction on what to cut and why, ProPublica has previously found, bypassing the NIHs established review process. The decision to terminate certain grants is part of a deliberate effort to ensure taxpayer dollars prioritize high-impact, urgent science, said Andrew G. Nixon, the director of communications for the Department of Health and Human Services. He did not respond to questions about the terminated grants or how patients may be impacted, but he said, Many discontinued projects were duplicative or misaligned with NIHs core mission. NIH remains focused on supporting rigorous biomedical research that delivers real results not radical ideology.Targeted projects, however, were seeking cures for future pandemics, examining the causes of dementia and trying to prevent HIV transmission. The mass cancellation of grants in response to political policy shifts has no precedent, former and current NIH officials told ProPublica. It threatens the stability of the institution and the scientific enterprise of the nation at large. Hundreds of current and former NIH staffers published a declaration this week cosigned by thousands of scientists across the world, including more than 20 Nobel laureates decrying the politicization of science at the agency and urging its director to reinstate the canceled grants. Many researchers have appealed the terminations, and several lawsuits are underway challenging the cuts. It has been difficult for scientists and journalists to convey the enormity of what has happened these past few months and what it portends for the years and decades to come. News organizations have chronicled cuts to individual projects and sought to quantify the effects of lost spending on broad fields of study. To gain a deeper understanding of the toll, ProPublica reached out to more than 500 researchers, scientists and investigators whose grants were terminated. More than 150 responded to share their experiences, which reveal consequences that experts say run counter to scientific logic and even common sense. They spoke of the tremendous waste generated by an effort intended to save money years of government-funded research that may never be published, blood samples in danger of spoiling before they can be analyzed.Work to address disparities in health, once considered so critical to medical advancement that it was mandated by Congress, is now being cut if the administration determines it has any connection to diversity, equity or gender ideology. Caught in this culling were projects to curb stillbirths, child suicides and infant brain damage. Researchers catalogued many fears about the questions they wont get to answer, the cures they will fail to find and the colleagues they will lose to more supportive countries. But most of all, they said they worried about the people who, because of these cuts, will die. Research Frozen The NIH often awards funding in multiyear grants, giving scientists the time and intellectual freedom to pursue their work uninterrupted. They plan experiments, hire staff and make equipment purchases on long timelines. Now, studies cant be completed. Papers cant be published. Years of research may be lost and millions of dollars wasted. Grants Terminated:A project to improve recruitment of participants in Alzheimers clinical trials.A study to increase vaccine uptake in underserved populations.A study investigating in-utero exposure to contaminants in public drinking water.An examination of the consequences of abortion restrictions. Diana Greene Foster, a reproductive health researcher and professor at the University of California, San Francisco After the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to abortion, demographer Diana Greene Foster set out to study the outcomes of pregnant patients who showed up in emergency departments. She wanted to know whether state restrictions were causing delays in care. This needs to be answered for courts to consider the evidence, said Foster, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco. Every day that goes by, people are potentially at risk.Less than one year into a five-year NIH grant, she had arrived at some early findings: Abortion bans dont stop very many people from getting abortions, she said. Bans actually cause people to have their abortions later in pregnancy. For those who live in states with bans, she found, second-trimester abortions increased from 8% of procedures to 17%, requiring more complex interventions to end their pregnancies and increasing their risk of complications. But before the data could be published, the NIH informed her on March 21 that the grant was terminated. It was no longer in line with agency priorities, a letter stated, specifying that studies on gender identity ignore, rather than seriously examine, biological realities.The termination left Foster confused. They are wrong that studying gender minority populations is not important, she said. But my study is not about gender identity. It is relevant to anyone who is pregnant, regardless of how they identify.Foster had to pause her research while she searched for other funding. This was clearly a politically motivated cut, she said. ProPublica heard from more than 70 researchers who said that they were unable to continue their projects due to the terminations.Two and a half years into a three-year grant, and to all of a sudden stop and not fully be able to answer the original questions, its just a waste.Ethan Moitra, associate professor at Brown University, who was researching whether brief therapy can improve mental health for LGBTQ+ peopleWe are now scrambling to figure out if there are parts we can continue or salvage.Julia Marcus, associate professor at Harvard Medical School, who was researching whether HIV prevention medicine can be made available over the counterTo build trust between health care providers, health researchers in communities takes decades of work, and scientists have already done the work. Now this is going to be depleted.Jesus Ramirez-Valles, professor at the University of California, San Francisco, who was examining how HIV impacts the physical and mental health of gay men as they age Patient Studies Interrupted Thousands of studies supported by the NIH involve human subjects. Some include clinical trials, in which researchers recruit participants, often with grave conditions from cancer to HIV,to test the value of novel treatments and protocols. In addition to jeopardizing data, terminating a grant in the middle of an active study may worsen participants conditions and put them at higher risk of death. Grants Terminated:A study to prevent sexually transmitted infections with common antibiotics.A study to increase access to kidney transplant evaluations.A clinical trial to understand the effectiveness of flu and COVID-19 vaccine text message reminders.A study to test a protocol to prevent HIV transmission. Amy Nunn and Dr. Philip Chan, behavioral and social science professors at Brown University A single daily pill can nearly eliminate the risk of contracting HIV but only when taken as prescribed. Black and Latino men who have sex with men have more than a 1-in-4 chance of contracting HIV but sometimes struggle to get or stay in care. Working with community clinics across Mississippi, Washington, D.C., and Rhode Island, Brown University professors Amy Nunn and Dr. Philip Chan set out to examine what happens when people are provided wraparound clinical services before they contract the disease. This is about preventing people from getting HIV, Nunn said.The study provides aggressive case management to help patients navigate the health care system and stay on the treatment, known as pre-exposure prophylaxis or PrEP, which is available in both oral and injectable forms. Workers provide patients with reminders, help them get coverage and even pick up their medicine.In 2023, the researchers received about $3.7 million in NIH funding for five years of work. Their team was just starting to gather data that showed the programs efficacy when the grant was terminated. This is science that had really great chances of having a huge impact, and all of a sudden, its cut off at the knee, Nunn said.Chan told ProPublica that he worries that the patients in their study could be harmed by the cut. Theres no doubt that some of them are going to not stay on PrEP, said Chan, and that some of them are going to get HIV. At least 30 researchers told ProPublica that the termination of their grant forced them to end clinical research or a trial abruptly, leaving participants in limbo.We cannot assay the blood samples that we have collected and paid participants for. A total waste of the money and resources that went into collecting the data.Sarah Whitton, professor at the University of Cincinnati, who was identifying risk factors for mental illness and suicidality for young LGBTQ+ womenWe have also had to quickly scramble to keep the study going unfunded to avoid having to stop the treatment and clinical trial for those already enrolled.Tiffany Brown, assistant professor at Auburn University, who was developing an eating disorder treatment for LGBTQ+ patientsWith a clinical trial, if you cant follow participants to the end, you have no information, because the whole point is to see whether theres change from beginning to end.Katie Biello, professor and chair of epidemiology at Brown Universitys School of Public Health, who was trying to improve adherence to medication protocols for adolescents with HIV in Brazil Disparities Disregarded (Edwin Tan/Getty Images) The Trump administration has banned the NIH from funding grants with a perceived connection to diversity, equity and inclusion, alleging that such projects may be discriminatory. Caught up in the wave of terminations is work seeking to understand why some populations including women and sexual, racial or ethnic minorities may be more at risk of certain disorders or diseases. Grants Terminated:A study investigating how discrimination affects the mental health of Latino youth.Research examining maternal behavioral health conditions of Black women. An examination of the effects of structural racism on people at risk of kidney disease.A study investigating why women of color disproportionately die from cervical cancer. Adana Llanos, an epidemiologist and health equity scholar at Columbia University Despite preventative vaccines and improved screening, more than 4,000 women die every year from cervical cancer. Black and Hispanic women are more likely than their white peers to be diagnosed, and often at later stages.After more than a decade of studying cancer care disparities, epidemiologist Adana Llanos found that the ZIP code in which a woman received care often plays a pivotal role in how she fares. And in 2023, Llanos and her colleagues were awarded a multiyear NIH grant to further examine inequities, specifically in cervical cancer care and who survives it.Even though their work targets the women most at risk, Llanos said their research, like most health equity research, will increase our understanding of cervical cancer more broadly. This work has the potential to improve cancer outcomes for everyone, no matter what you identify as, no matter what your characteristics are, she said.Last year, her team began to recruit a cohort of 960 women who had been diagnosed with cervical cancer to track their patterns of care and outcomes. But in March, after the researchers had enrolled about 200 participants, the NIH terminated the funding. Llanos paused enrollment.The cancellation felt like a betrayal of her studys participants, she said. Llanos had spent years developing relationships with community groups and cancer patients, gaining their trust so they would feel comfortable sharing their treatment experiences.Weve made commitments to them, she said. More than 550 of the terminated grants were focused on health disparities or inequities, attempting to understand why some groups have different health outcomes.If you cannot identify groups that are higher risk, it seems like just really bad science. Thats sort of the basics of how you try to conquer a disease.Carl Latkin, professor at Johns Hopkins Universitys Bloomberg School of Public Health, who was analyzing the comorbidities of people who have HIV and those at risk for getting itHealth disparities are just going to get larger, and real folks are going to die.Marguerita Lightfoot, professor at the Oregon Health & Science University-Portland State University School of Public Health, who was studying the value of guaranteed income and financial mentoring to Black youthIts a major principle of epidemiology to target work towards the people who are being disproportionately affected. Now were being told that we cannot mention them in our research.Dr. Matthew Spinelli, assistant professor at the University of California, San Francisco, who was working to prevent sexually transmitted infections with common antibiotics LGBTQ+ People Targeted (Jason Koxvold for ProPublica) One of Trumps first executive orders was a directive banning federal funds from being used to support or promote so-called gender ideology. Hundreds of grants focused on the health of LGBTQ+ populations have been terminated, including many studies focused on young people and those at risk of contracting HIV.In response to a lawsuit, a federal judge issued an injunction barring the administration from fully enforcing the orders. It canceled the grants anyway, citing agency policy and scientific priorities. Grants Terminated:A study to improve the delivery of behavioral health care to LGBTQ+ youth.Research to address substance use in young men who are at risk for or living with HIV.An evaluation of disparities in mpox vaccination rates among men who have sex with men.An investigation of why LGBTQ+ adults are dying by suicide. Lauren Forrest, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Oregon (Jason Koxvold for ProPublica) Gay, lesbian and bisexual adults are over three times more likely to consider suicide than their heterosexual peers. Few studies have aimed to figure out how to prevent this.Last year, Lauren Forrest, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Oregon, received a multiyear grant to do so, focusing on LGBTQ+ people who live in rural areas where access to specialized care may be more limited. She was planning to recruit dozens of participants. But on March 21, she received a notification from the NIH that her grant was terminated because it did not effectuate the agencys priorities, citing its connection to gender identity. The way theyre going about deciding which grants will or wont be terminated, its not about scientific rigor, she said. Its about literally actively discriminating against health-disparity populations.Forrest has been forced to reduce the hours of her research staff, and she now risks losing key lab personnel who may have to seek other employment due to the cuts. There is no way to recover the lost time, research continuity or training value once disrupted, she said. She worries most about the deaths that could have been prevented. People are going to be harmed because of this, she said. More than 300 of the grants terminated by the NIH were focused on LGBTQ+ health care. About 40 of those grants were researching ways to prevent suicide in adults and youth.We have a paper thats ready to go out that shows lesbian women are almost 3 times as likely to have a stillbirth compared to their heterosexual peers. Thats such an avoidable, horrible outcome to happen, and that paper may never be published.Brittany Charlton, associate professor at Harvard Medical School, who was quantifying obstetrical outcomes for lesbian, gay and bisexual womenIt is devastating to have state-sanctioned dehumanization and exclusion. I am afraid for what these messages will do to the mental health of youth who are told they dont matter or, for some, that they dont even exist by parts of society.Dr. Sarah Goff, professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, who was studying how to improve the delivery of mental health care to LGBTQ+ youthI honestly burst into tears. The evidence we would have gained from this work will not exist.Kirsty Clark, assistant professor at Vanderbilt University, who was finding best practices for preventing suicide in LGBTQ+ preteens Losing a Generation The grant terminations and subsequent instability have created a lost generation of scientists, dozens of researchers told ProPublica cutting off an established pipeline at all stages of researchers careers. Universities are trimming the number of openings in postdoctoral and graduate programs. Young researchers are struggling to find funding to initiate studies or open new laboratories. And some scientists are opting to pursue opportunities abroad. Grants Terminated:A grant to train researchers and public health professionals on HIV science.A program to support the development of early-career scientists and researchers.A grant to support Ph.D. students from historically underrepresented groups.A program to train the next generation of pediatric research scientists. Dr. Lauren Harasymiw, a scholar in the NIHs Pediatric Scientist Development Program Dr. Lauren Harasymiw was a medical resident in a neonatal intensive care unit when an infant took a turn for the worse. Born at only 23 weeks gestation the edge of viability the baby girl experienced a hemorrhage within the ventricles of her brain. What does this mean for her? Harasymiw recalls asking her attending physician. The supervisor didnt know. The field of neonatology has made incredible strides over the last decades in helping our babies survive, Harasymiw said. But weve made less progress in protecting their neurodevelopmental outcomes.If doctors could better assess infants outcomes after a brain injury, they could target interventions sooner and provide families with better resources. To advance this area of medicine, Harasymiw pursued NIH-funded training to become a pediatric scientist.But in March, the NIH terminated funding for the Pediatric Scientist Development Program, which funded Harasymiws salary and research, claiming that the program was connected to DEI.This is just ripping out the foundation of my career, Harasymiw said.In a statement about the grant terminations, Nixon, the HHS spokesperson, said that the NIH continues to invest robustly in training and career development opportunities that produce measurable contributions to biomedical science and patient care. However, he added that while fostering the next generation of scientists is essential, effective leadership requires clear focus: prioritizing research that is impactful and results-driven over duplicative or low-yield programs.Dr. Sallie Permar, who runs the program and is chair of pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine, was perplexed by the cut; the program seemed to be in line with the administrations focus on combating chronic disease in children.Thats exactly what were training these scholars to do, she said. More than 50 researchers told ProPublica that the funding cuts would harm the next generation of scholars, discouraging them from practicing in the United States.We have a generation of researchers that were planning to focus on these questions that are now either scared or dont have funding to continue their training, or both.Mandi Pratt-Chapman, associate center director for community outreach, engagement and equity at the George Washington Cancer Center, who was identifying best practices for collecting data about LGBTQ+ people at small and rural cancer centersAdmissions for graduate school have been downsized to a point where prospective students are giving up on pursuing a Ph.D.Tigist Tamir, assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who received a career development grant and was studying how oxidative stress is regulated in breast cancer and obesityI already know several researchers on the job search who ended up taking faculty positions in Canada instead of the U.S.Dr. Benjamin Solomon, instructor of immunology and allergy in the department of pediatrics at Stanford Medical School, who received a career development grant and was examining rare genetic immune diseases in children How We Reported the StoryShortly after the public became aware of the termination of hundreds of grants at the National Institutes of Health, ProPublica published a call for tips in March, requesting that researchers with canceled grants share their experiences. ProPublica heard from more than 150 researchers and scientists and interviewed more than 70 about how the grant terminations were affecting their projects, their careers and the field of biomedical science at large. The story relies on the personal opinions of the researchers and does not reflect the views of their institutions. To understand the universe of NIH grant terminations, ProPublica relied on two main data sources: spreadsheets of terminated health grants released by the federal government to comply with Trumps Radical Transparency About Wasteful Spending order, and data from Grant Watch, a private initiative tracking the terminations, led by researchers Noam Ross, Scott Delaney, Anthony Barente and Emma Mairson. They have used crowdsourcing and federal sources to create their dataset. Were you involved in a clinical trial, participating in research or receiving services that have ended, been paused or been delayed because of canceled federal funding? Our reporters want to hear from you. To share your experience, contact our reporting team at healthfunding@propublica.org. Melody Kramer and Agnel Philip contributed research.
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    Delay, Interfere, Undermine
    by T. Christian Miller and Sebastian Rotella ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. In mid-April, President Donald Trump sat down in the Oval Office with President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador to celebrate a new partnership. They had recently negotiated an extraordinary deal in which El Salvador agreed to incarcerate in a maximum security prison hundreds of Venezuelan immigrants that the Trump administration had labeled as violent criminals, though few had been convicted of such crimes. The U.S. also sent back accused members of the notorious Salvadoran gang MS-13 which both the U.S. and El Salvador have designated as a terrorist organization.Bukeles presidency has been defined by his successful crackdown against MS-13. He has jailed tens of thousands of alleged gang members, transforming one of the hemispheres most dangerous nations into one of its safest. Although human rights groups have criticized his tactics, Bukele remains extremely popular in El Salvador.During their meeting at the White House, Trump praised his guest as one hell of a president. He shook Bukeles hand, saying, We appreciate working with you because you want to stop crime and so do we. A long-running U.S. investigation of MS-13 has uncovered evidence at odds with Bukeles reputation as a crime fighter. The inquiry, which began as an effort to dismantle the gangs leadership, expanded to focus on whether the Bukele government cut a secret deal with MS-13 in the early years of his presidency.New reporting on that investigation by ProPublica shows that senior officials in Bukeles government repeatedly impeded the work of a U.S. task force as it pursued evidence of possible wrongdoing by the Salvadoran president and his inner circle.Bukeles allies secretly blocked extraditions of gang leaders whom U.S. agents viewed as potential witnesses to the negotiations and persecuted Salvadoran law enforcement officials who helped the task force, according to exclusive interviews with current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials, newly obtained internal documents and court records from both countries.In a previously unreported development, federal agents came to suspect that Bukele and members of his inner circle had diverted U.S. aid funds to the gang as part of the alleged deal to provide it with money and power in exchange for votes and reduced homicide rates. In 2021, agents drew up a request to review U.S. bank accounts held by Salvadoran political figures to look for evidence of money laundering related to the suspected diversion of U.S. funds. The list of names assembled by the agents included Bukele, senior officials and their relatives, according to documents viewed by ProPublica.Information obtained through investigation has revealed that the individuals contained within this submission are heavily engaged with MS-13 and are laundering funds from illicit business where MS-13 are involved, the agents wrote. The people on the list are also believed to have been funding MS-13 to support political campaigns and MS-13 have received political funds.The outcome of the request is not known, but its existence shows that the U.S. investigation had widened to examine suspected corruption at high levels of the Bukele government.The investigation was led by Joint Task Force Vulcan, a multiagency law enforcement team created at Trumps request in 2019. Agents found evidence that the Bukele government tried to cover up the pact by preventing the extraditions of gang leaders who faced U.S. charges that include ordering the murders of U.S. citizens and plotting to assassinate an FBI agent.In addition, U.S. officials helped at least eight of their counterparts in Salvadoran law enforcement flee the country and resettle in the United States or elsewhere because they feared retaliation by their own government, current and former U.S. officials said.It has been clear from the beginning what Trump wants from El Salvador: an ally who would accept, and even imprison, deportees. Less clear has been what Bukele might want from the United States. In striking the deal with the Salvadoran president, Trump has effectively undercut the Vulcan investigation and shielded Bukele from further scrutiny, current and former U.S. officials said.Veterans of the Vulcan team are concerned that all their work, the millions of dollars that were spent, going all over the United States, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, that it will be weakened for political reasons, said a U.S. official familiar with the investigation.The task force worked closely with the Salvadoran attorney generals office, whose prosecutors shared evidence from their own investigation of the gang negotiations and suspected graft in the Bukele government, according to current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials.There was good information on corruption between the gang and the Bukele administration, Christopher Musto, a former senior official at Homeland Security Investigations, or HSI, who worked on Vulcan, said about the Salvadoran investigation. It was a great case.In May 2021, Bukeles legislative majority in Congress ousted the attorney general and justices of the Supreme Court, which oversees extradition requests. Within seven months, newly installed justices reversed or halted six requests for senior gang leaders wanted in the U.S., according to interviews and documents.Bukeles people were coming to the Supreme Court and saying under no circumstances are we extraditing the MS-13 leaders, said the U.S. official familiar with the investigation. Delay, interfere, undermine, do what you have to do.Senior Bukele officials helped an MS-13 leader with a pending extradition order escape from prison, according to court records, U.S. officials and Salvadoran news reports. At least three other top gang leaders were released from Salvadoran custody after the U.S. filed extradition requests for them, according to Justice Department documents.Published accounts in the United States and El Salvador have reported allegations that Bukele also pushed for the return of MS-13 leaders to prevent them from testifying in U.S. courts about the pact. Despite his governments refusal to extradite gang bosses to the United States, the Trump administration in March deported one MS-13 leader accused of terrorism. The Justice Department is now seeking to dismiss charges against a second leader, which would allow him to be sent back to El Salvador, according to recent court filings.The Justice Department declined to comment in response to questions sent by ProPublica. The State Department referred questions to the Justice Department.A White House spokesperson did not respond to detailed questions.President Trump is committed to keeping his promises to the American people and removing dangerous criminals and terrorist illegals who pose a threat to the American public, said Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson. We are grateful for President Bukeles partnership.Bukele, the Salvadoran Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Salvadoran Supreme Court did not respond to lists of questions. Bukele has repeatedly denied making any agreement with MS-13. The Trump administrations deportation of MS-13 members to El Salvador, he said in a post on X, will enable security forces to dismantle the gang.This will help us finalize intelligence gathering and go after the last remnants of MS-13, including its former and new members, money, weapons, drugs, hideouts, collaborators, and sponsors, the post said. President Donald Trump and Nayib Bukele, El Salvadors president, during a meeting in the Oval Office in April 2025. Trump has praised Bukele as one hell of a president. (Al Drago/The Washington Post/Getty Images) Just FearBukele was elected president of El Salvador in February 2019, promising to fight the countrys ingrained political corruption and pervasive gang violence, which he called one of the greatest challenges facing the nation.During his first term, Trump also made MS-13 a high-profile foe, calling it probably the meanest, worst gang in the world. In August 2019, Attorney General William P. Barr created the Vulcan task force, teaming federal prosecutors with agents of the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, Drug Enforcement Administration and other agencies. The goal: Eradicate MS-13.For decades, MS-13 has bedeviled law enforcement in the Americas with its vast reach, extreme violence and complex culture. The initials stand for Mara Salvatrucha. Mara means a swarm, while salvatrucha has been said to refer to a clever Salvadoran, according to interviews and an academic study. The number represents the 13th letter of the alphabet, M, in homage to the Mexican Mafia, the powerful Southern California prison gang.MS-13 emerged in the 1980s in Los Angeles among Salvadoran youths whose families had fled a bloody civil war. The gang expanded throughout the diaspora and, as the U.S. deported planeloads of ex-convicts starting in the 1990s, took root in El Salvador. Although most of the leaders were serving sentences in El Salvador, a jailhouse council of 14 bosses, known as the Ranfla, used cellphones to micromanage criminal activities in U.S. cities thousands of miles away.The gang developed a reputation for torturing, brutalizing and dismembering its victims. Barr has called it a death cult in which violence is more important than riches.It was like a very violent mom-and-pop operation where the cousins and second cousins all want to be a part of it, said Carlos Ortiz, who served as the HSI attach in El Salvador from 2018 to 2024. Minimal money, compared to others. Even though its an organization, a lot of it is just fear. Fear of the high-ranking bosses among the rest of the gang, thats what drives it.Trained with military weapons, MS-13 warred with security forces in El Salvador, took over neighborhoods and generated one of the worlds worst homicide rates, driving an exodus of immigrants reminiscent of the 1980s. The Salvadoran Supreme Court designated the gang as a terrorist organization in 2015.The Vulcan task force had about 30 members, including prosecutors, agents and analysts. Its director, John J. Durham, was a federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of New York who had spent a decade pursuing MS-13 cliques on Long Island. Members of the task force worked from bases around the country and traveled to Mexico and Central America.One of the founding investigators, Newark FBI agent Daniel Brunner, spoke fluent Spanish and had worked gangs for seven years. He became a roving specialist providing expertise, communications intelligence and court transcripts, sometimes in person and sometimes from a distance.Our idea was that Vulcan was like a SEAL Team 6, going in to help the different districts build cases, Brunner, who is now retired, said in an interview.Vulcan built on the longtime U.S. presence and extensive influence in El Salvador, where the embassy has long funded and trained law enforcement agencies. FBI agents and others were embedded as advisers in police anti-gang and homicide units and worked with prosecution teams led by Attorney General Ral Melara.The U.S. task force modeled its strategy on the ones used against Mexican cartels and Colombian narcoguerrillas: Break the power of the MS-13 bosses by extraditing them to face trial and prison in the United States.On Jan. 14, 2021, six days before the end of the Trump administration, Durham and FBI Director Christopher A. Wray joined acting Attorney General Jeffrey A. Rosen when he announced the highest-reaching and most sweeping indictment targeting MS-13 and its command and control structure in U.S. history.Prosecutors charged the 14 members of the leadership council with major crimes including conspiracy to support and finance narcoterrorism. For more than two decades, the Ranfla ran a criminal network in the United States, Mexico and Central America that sanctioned the murders of Americans and trafficked drugs and arms, the indictment alleged.The indictment contained a stunning charge: MS-13 bosses had taken the extraordinary step of giving an order, or green light, to assassinate an FBI agent working with local investigators in El Salvador. Embassy officials learned of the threat and evacuated the agent, according to interviews.It is highly unusual for Latin American criminal groups to target a U.S. agent they have learned that it invites an overwhelming law enforcement response. The assassination plot was a sign that the U.S. crackdown had rattled the gang chiefs, current and former officials said. Family and friends attend the burial of Justin Llivicura in 2017 on Long Island, New York. Justin, a 16-year-old high school student, was one of four teenagers murdered in a park by members of MS-13. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images) Vulcan on the HuntIn conversations with American officials as president-elect, Bukele promised cooperation and welcomed their support against gangs and graft, even in his own Nuevas Ideas party, according to current and former U.S. officials.At a press event about the Vulcan task force in 2020, Trump asserted that in the past El Salvador did not cooperate with the United States at all, but now it had become a strong law enforcement partner.Already, though, there had been news accounts alleging that Bukele had cut deals with gangs when he was mayor of San Salvador. Vulcan investigators quickly found evidence that top aides to the new president were negotiating a new pact with gang chiefs, according to interviews.For more than a decade, MS-13s control of the streets had made it a political force. It could deliver votes, ignite mayhem or impose order. A series of politicians had held talks with gang leaders to seek electoral support and reductions in violence in return for improved prison conditions and perks such as prostitutes and big-screen televisions.The Bukele government adopted a more sophisticated bargaining strategy, according to current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials. During secret meetings in prisons and other sites, the presidents emissaries offered MS-13 leaders political power and financial incentives if they lowered the homicide rate and marshaled support for the Nuevas Ideas party, according to current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials and court documents.The chief negotiator was Carlos Marroqun, a former rap artist and confidant of the president. Bukele had appointed him the director of a new Justice Ministry program known as Reconstruction of the Social Fabric that operated in impoverished communities.Marroqun promised the Ranfla a central role in developing the program, control of neighborhood youth centers, power over urban turf and other financial and political benefits, according to current and former U.S. officials, court documents and Treasury Department sanctions. Informants and communications intercepts indicated that some of the resources going to MS-13 came from U.S. government aid, a violation of U.S. law, according to interviews and documents.Money was going from us, from USAID, through to this social fabric group, a former federal law enforcement official said. Theyre supposed to be building things and getting skills and learning. It was funding the gangs.Vulcan also gained information from two highly placed Salvadoran officials involved in the talks with MS-13. The officials provided inside information to U.S. agents about the negotiations, which they said Bukele directed, according to interviews.The accumulating evidence about the gang pact and the suspected misuse of U.S. funds spurred the task force to broaden its initial focus and target alleged corruption in the Bukele government, current and former U.S. officials said.In April 2021, federal agents prepared a list of powerful Salvadorans for a financial review by the U.S. Treasury Department. Bukele was one of the 15 names. So were Marroqun; Osiris Luna, the director of the national prison system and another alleged organizer of the gang talks; Martha Carolina Recinos, the presidents chief of staff; and other political figures and their relatives. The request asked the Treasury Department to search for possible illicit transactions in any bank accounts held in the United States by those on the list, according to documents seen by ProPublica.The Vulcan task force was seeking evidence in U.S. banks of money laundering tied to the diversion of USAID funding through the gang pact, the documents showed. Agents explained that the task force had uncovered information that MS-13 members are in close contact with politically exposed persons in El Salvador, referring to prominent government figures.The USAID funding is believed to have been laundered by the individuals submitted in this request, who were suspected of facilitating, supporting and promoting MS-13 through their official positions, said the request, which was viewed by ProPublica.Made under section 314A of the USA Patriot Act, the request for a canvass of U.S. banks requires that investigators show reasonable suspicion rather than probable cause, which is a higher standard. The outcome of the request is unknown. The Treasury Department declined to comment. U.S. prosecutors have not publicly accused Bukele and the others of crimes related to USAID funds.As U.S. investigators advanced in this political direction, they gained valuable information from the Salvadoran prosecutors who were pressing their own investigation of the gangs and the Bukele administration.Known in English as Operation Cathedral, their probe was as ambitious and sensitive as the U.S. one. Investigators had documented the secret jailhouse deals with MS-13 and the official attempts to cover them up. They also pursued leads that revealed alleged widespread corruption involving the countrys COVID-19 relief programs, according to current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials and documents. Political tensions increased as the Salvadoran prosecutors targeted the presidents inner circle and raided government offices, clashing with police who tried to stop them from searching the Health Ministry in one incident.April 2021 was also when a delegation led by Attorney General Melara came to Washington to meet with leaders of Vulcan and other senior U.S. officials. The prosecutors laid out their case against prominent figures in the Bukele government. The impressive presentation, a former U.S. federal law enforcement official said, cited videos, phone intercepts and other evidence showing that Marroqun, prisons director Luna and others had clandestinely arranged for government negotiators and gang leaders to enter and leave prisons, smuggled in phones and destroyed logs of prison visits.Melara was very nervous because of the very high level of the people he was investigating, a former U.S. federal law enforcement official said.Melara declined to comment, saying he does not discuss his work as attorney general. The Salvadoran director of prisons, Osiris Luna, right, speaks at a police facility in San Salvador, El Salvador, in November 2021. (Rodrigo Sura/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock) InterferenceOn May 1, 2021 soon after Melara and his team met with U.S. investigators the Salvadoran Legislature, controlled by Bukele, voted to expel the attorney general and five justices on the Supreme Court.The purge was a decisive step by Bukele to centralize power. It drew international condemnation. In El Salvador, critics denounced the presidents actions as a self-coup. On his Twitter page, Bukele began calling himself the worlds coolest dictator.For Vulcan, the expulsions marked a dramatic shift in its investigation. The Supreme Court justices had signaled their willingness to sign off on some extraditions. Melara had been a helpful ally who reportedly pledged to do everything necessary to extradite the Ranfla members, many of whom were in custody in El Salvador. But it soon became clear that the government was no longer interested in handing over senior gang leaders.The next prosecutors were not willing to work with us, said Musto, the former HSI official. We were not closed out, but all these things that we had in place that we were moving to getting people back here slowed down to a snails pace.The first clash came over Armando Melgar Diaz, an alleged MS-13 leader who acted as a middleman between gangs in the United States and senior leaders in El Salvador. Melgar, known as Blue, had ordered the kidnapping of a family in Oklahoma that owed the gangs $145,000, collected money from a drug ring operating out of restaurants in Maryland and Virginia and was involved with killings in the U.S., according to an indictment and interviews with U.S. officials. He was the first MS-13 member to be accused under terrorism laws.The newly constituted Supreme Court voted to approve Melgars extradition but then reversed its decision, announcing that the matter needed further study. Later, Bukeles new attorney general asked for a halt to the extradition. The reason: The United States had failed to guarantee that it would not seek the death penalty or life in prison, sentences not allowed under Salvadoran law.The rationale made no sense to Vulcan prosecutors. The Justice Department had already promised that it would not pursue such punishments against Melgar, according to records and interviews. U.S. and Salvadoran officials attributed the sudden reversal to fear that Melgar could link Bukele and his government to the pact with MS-13.Melgar Diaz was going to be the test case, Musto said. It was going to be an easy win for Vulcan.Information obtained by U.S. agents included allegations that Bukeles judicial adviser, Conan Castro-Ramrez, had called one of the new Supreme Court justices and told him to find ways to stop the extradition of Melgar, according to interviews. When the justice objected, saying that the extradition had already been approved, Castro allegedly ordered him to reverse it. Thats why we put you there, he said, according to the interviews.The State Department sanctioned Castro for his role in assisting in the inappropriate removal of the Supreme Court justices and the attorney general. Castro did not respond to attempts to contact him.A Salvadoran court sentenced Melgar to 39 years in prison for conspiracy to commit homicide, among other crimes. He was the first MS-13 leader whose extradition was blocked. Soon after, the U.S. extradition requests for other gang chiefs ran into opposition.Bukele and his government are using the entire state apparatus to prevent these people from being extradited, a person with knowledge of the Salvadoran judicial system said in a recent interview.Miguel ngel Flores Durel, a newly appointed Supreme Court justice who reportedly had served as a lawyer for a top MS-13 leader, made sure that the requests were never granted, according to the person with knowledge of El Salvadors judicial system. Flores instructed colleagues do not work on extraditions at all, the person said.In July 2022, El Salvador agreed to extradite two lower-ranking MS-13 members charged with the murders of Salvadoran immigrants in Long Island in 2016 and 2017 in which victims were butchered with axes and machetes. The Supreme Court also approved the return of Salvadorans not affiliated with the gang who were accused in the U.S. of crimes such as murder.This was a deliberate strategy, the person said. Flores said that El Salvador needed to continue some extraditions in order to calm U.S. officials, who were complaining about the lack of cooperation with Vulcan, the person said. (Flores died in 2023.)It didnt work. The extradition of other criminals by the Bukele-aligned Supreme Court only emphasized the lack of cooperation on requests for the senior MS-13 leaders.We were never told officially that it wouldnt happen, but it became impossible, said Brunner, the former FBI agent.In October 2022, Bukeles new attorney general announced that criminals would first have to serve their sentence in El Salvador before being sent to the U.S. an interpretation of the countrys extradition treaty that differed from the previous Supreme Court.We arent going to be sending Salvadorans without them first paying for the crimes they have committed in El Salvador, Rodolfo Delgado said.Threats and RoadblocksThe Bukele governments interference with the U.S. investigation went beyond blocking extraditions, U.S. officials said.Senior Bukele allies also waged a campaign of harassment and intimidation against the Salvadoran officials who had investigated corruption and assisted the Vulcan task force, according to interviews with current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials.The government threatened officials with arrest and sent police patrols to their homes, according to current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials. At least eight senior Salvadoran law enforcement and judicial officials fled El Salvador for the United States and elsewhere. Vulcan provided them with travel money, language classes, housing and help gaining legal immigration status and finding jobs. In one instance, a U.S. Embassy official escorted a Salvadoran prosecutor out of the country because American officials believed his life was in danger, according to an official familiar with the incident.The Salvadoran government also weakened special vetted units of the police that had worked with the FBI and other U.S. agencies, according to current and former U.S. officials.Bukeles allies didnt stop there. They allegedly helped the escape or release from prison of at least four members of the MS-13 leadership council sought by Vulcan for alleged crimes in the U.S., according to interviews, court documents and press reports.Elmer Canales-Rivera, alias Crook de Hollywood, was one of the most wanted of the Ranfla members. He had been imprisoned for several murders in El Salvador, including a case in which he reportedly helped suffocate and drown in insecticide a gang member who violated orders. In the United States, prosecutors had accused him of orchestrating murders and kidnapping across the nation for more than 20 years.In November 2021, Canales escaped from prison. El Faro, a prominent investigative news outlet, and other Salvadoran media published stories that detailed how Marroqun had escorted Canales from the prison. The articles featured taped calls between gang members and a person identified as Marroqun discussing his role in the escape, along with photos of officials apparently attempting to remove jail logs to conceal their presence at the prison.Canales was caught in Mexico and turned over to U.S. authorities. Currently in prison awaiting trial, he has pleaded not guilty. Leaders of the MS-13 street gang read the newspaper after a press conference at La Esperanza jail in San Salvador in 2013. Elmer Canales-Rivera, known as Crook de Hollywood, right, allegedly escaped from prison with the help of senior Salvadoran officials in 2021. (Jose Cabezas/AFP via Getty Images) Over the next several months, three other MS-13 leaders disappeared from Salvadoran prisons, causing Durham, the head of the task force, to express his concern in a letter to the judge in New York overseeing the cases. At the time the Bukele administration had received extradition requests and Interpol notices, he wrote, the leaders had been in custody. Salvadoran media later reported that the countrys Supreme Court had formally denied the extradition requests for the three men.The purge of the Supreme Court and prosecutors, the blocked extraditions and the disappearance of the MS-13 gang members marked a significant deterioration in relations between Bukele and the administration of President Joe Biden. Agencies across the government began looking for ways to push El Salvador to cooperate.Acting U.S. Ambassador Jean Manes announced a pause in relations with El Salvador and left the country. A veteran diplomat who had previously served in El Salvador, Manes had pressured Bukele in public and private, criticizing the extradition delays and his increasingly authoritarian rule, according to State Department officials.What are we seeing now? It is a decline in democracy, Manes said shortly before her departure.In December 2021, the Treasury Department issued sanctions against Bukele aides Luna, Marroqun and Recinos, blocking them from conducting financial transactions in the United States because of alleged corruption. None of them responded to questions sent to a Bukele spokesperson.Nonetheless, former members of the task force said they felt that the Biden administration treated Vulcan as a lower priority and cut its resources. They said Biden officials saw the task force as a Trump initiative and wanted to focus on other law enforcement targets, such as human trafficking.As soon as the Biden administration came in, we were slowed down, Brunner said. There was a lot more red tape we had to go through. Former Biden officials denied this was the case.Whatever truce had existed between the Salvadoran government and MS-13 collapsed in March 2022. The country descended into chaos. Over one three-day period, some 80 people were killed in gang-related violence.Bukele reacted forcefully. He declared a nationwide state of exception that suspended constitutional protections. Police began rounding up thousands of accused gang members and others. He announced the construction of the megaprison known as CECOT.The policies proved tremendously popular. Murder rates dropped dramatically, though human rights advocates criticized the loss of civil liberties. Bukele dismissed their complaints.Some say we have put thousands in prison, but the reality is that we have set millions free, he has said, an assertion he repeated to Trump in the Oval Office.The TurnaroundDespite the harsh treatment of gang members an estimated 14,500 people are now held in CECOT one thing did not change: The Bukele government continued to refuse to extradite senior MS-13 leaders to the United States.The reasons for Bukeles alleged protection of the gang leadership versus his relentless pursuit of the rank and file are the subject of speculation in both the United States and El Salvador. One possible explanation, according to current and former U.S. and Salvadoran officials: Bukele is aware that Vulcan was gathering evidence that could lead to criminal charges and political damage. The imprisoned leaders are potential witnesses to his alleged deal with MS-13, while El Salvadors street-level gangsters are not. Police escort accused Venezuelans and Salvadorans after their deportation from the United States to be held in the CECOT megaprison in El Salvador. (El Salvador Press Presidency Office/Anadolu via Getty Images) In February 2023, the Justice Department unsealed an indictment for another group of leaders, most of whom operated a tier below the Ranfla, relaying its directives to gangsters on the streets. The 13 defendants were accused of terrorism and drug smuggling, among other charges.The U.S. announced it would explore options for their extradition with the government of El Salvador. The Justice Department declined to say whether any such requests had been made.In filing the charges, prosecutors made their strongest public accusations yet about deals between the Bukele government and the gangs. Without naming the president or his allies, prosecutors alleged that MS-13 leaders agreed to use their vast political influence to turn out votes for candidates belonging to Bukeles Nuevas Ideas party in legislative elections in 2021.The gang bosses also agreed to reduce the number of public murders in El Salvador, which politically benefited the government of El Salvador, by creating the perception that the government was reducing the murder rate, the indictment said.As part of the arrangement, the senior MS-13 leaders demanded that the Bukele government refuse to extradite them, the indictment said. The alleged condition appears to be in effect. To date, none of the extradition requests for more than a dozen high-ranking gang members has been approved.In the face of obstacles, Vulcan relied increasingly on the Mexican government for help. During the past four years, Mexican authorities have captured nine of the 27 MS-13 leaders named in the indictments and deported them to the United States, where they were arrested. This year, prosecutors obtained guilty pleas to terrorism charges from two lower-ranking bosses, including one who prosecutors said had helped implement the deal between the Bukele administration and the gang. Sentencing for the men is pending.Since Trump took office this year, his administration has redirected Vulcans mission to also target Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang that the president has put in the spotlight.There has been a remarkable recent development related to MS-13, however. After more than five years leading the Vulcan task force, Durham wrote letters asking the judge overseeing the cases to dismiss charges against two gang leaders in U.S. custody, allowing them to be deported to El Salvador. The letters were dated March 11 and April 1, weeks after the Trump administration began negotiating the mass deportation deal with Bukeles government.Csar Humberto Lpez Larios, a member of the Ranfla known as Greas, had his charges dismissed and was returned to El Salvador with more than 250 Venezuelans and Salvadorans sent to CECOT as part of the Trump administrations mass deportation of migrants on March 15. Lpez, identified in media reports, is featured in a slickly produced video posted by Bukele on X, kneeling in the prison, his head shaved. He had pleaded not guilty to the charges against him.Then, in April, Durham asked for the dismissal of terrorism charges against a lower-ranking MS-13 prisoner, Vladimir Antonio Arevalo-Chavez, alias Vampiro, according to recently unsealed court records. His defense lawyers are seeking to stall the request to give them time to fight his deportation to El Salvador. He has pleaded not guilty.Durham acknowledged in his letters to the judge that the evidence against the two men is strong. After millions spent on an operation involving investigators and prosecutors from the U.S., El Salvador and other countries, Vulcan had amassed a trove of evidence aimed at incarcerating the MS-13 leaders who had overseen the killings, rapes and beatings of Americans. Prosecutors told defense attorneys they had more than 92,903 pages of discovery, including 600 pages of transcribed phone intercepts, 21 boxes of documents from prosecutors in El Salvador and 11 gigabytes of audio files.Durham said prosecutors were dropping their pursuit of the cases due to geopolitical and national security concerns.It was like a reverse extradition. Trump was giving Bukele the kind of high-level criminals that the United States had never received from El Salvador.During the negotiations over the use of El Salvadors prison, Trump officials agreed to pay some $6 million to house the deported men and acceded to an additional demand.Bukele had one specific request, according to Milena Mayorga, his ambassador to the United States.I want you to send me the gang leaders who are in the United States, she quoted Bukele as telling U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio.For Bukele, she said in a broadcast interview, it was a matter of honor. Mica Rosenberg contributed reporting, and Doris Burke contributed research.
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    ProPublica Opens Application for Five New Local Partners to Join Its 50 State Initiative
    by ProPublica ProPublica announced on Wednesday a new call for proposals to select the next five partners in its Local Reporting Network. These newsrooms will be chosen to be part of the organizations 50 State Initiative, a commitment to partnering with one newsroom from each state by 2029. The deadline for applications is July 21 at 5 p.m. Eastern. Reporters selected for the one-year program will begin work on Oct. 1, 2025. Through this partnership, ProPublica will reimburse news organizations for the salary of the selected reporter (up to $75,000 plus a benefits stipend) so they can spend a year working full time on an accountability journalism project of importance to their communities. Additionally, ProPublica provides editing support, along with our data, research, visual storytelling, graphics, design, audience and engagement expertise. More information about how to apply and the application for prospective newsrooms have just been posted. Newsrooms from 35 states are eligible to apply for this round. Please see our eligibility map for details. As part of the 50 State Initiative, ProPublica is currently working with newsrooms from the first 10 states; another five newsrooms will start in July. Reporting with The Connecticut Mirror on car towing in the state sparked legislative reforms to overhaul century-old towing laws that favored tow companies at the expense of drivers. In Georgia, we have documented how the states Medicaid work requirement, which is being heralded as a model for the rest of the country, has fallen short and cost millions. And in Tennessee, weve shown how one company has vastly expanded the use of a unique high-interest loan and then gone on to sue more than 100,000 borrowers. Its thrilling to see ProPublicas Local Reporting Network reach newsrooms in all regions of the country, said Sarah Blustain, an assistant managing editor at ProPublica. With each additional state, we are able to bring urgent local issues to readers nationwide. The 50 State Initiative expands the scope of ProPublicas work at the local and regional level, which includes a growing team of journalists reporting from communities across the country and groundbreaking partnerships with local news organizations through the LRN program. The initiative broadens our support for local journalism, which now includes the LRN alongside dedicated reporting hubs in the Midwest, South, Southwest and Northwest, as well as an investigative unit in Texas in partnership with The Texas Tribune. ProPublica has more than 25 staff reporters and more than 20 reporting partnerships around the country contributing to regional and local accountability reporting, ensuring people can benefit from world-class journalism that can drive measurable change in their communities. The LRN began in January 2018 in an effort to help remedy the lack of investigative reporting at the local level. It has since led to partnerships with some 80 news organizations across the country.
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    Senators Demand Transparency on Canceled Veterans Affairs Contracts
    by Brandon Roberts and Vernal Coleman ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. What Happened: A trio of lawmakers demanded transparency from the Department of Veterans Affairs on Tuesday, saying the Trump administration continues to stonewall requests for details on the agencys recent cancellation of hundreds of service contracts. The group, which included Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Angus King, as well as Rep. Mark Takano, said that despite repeated requests, the agency has disclosed incomplete and inaccurate lists that failed to specify exactly which contracts have been canceled. Blumenthal and Takano are Democrats, and King is an independent. They made their comments at a special forum in Washington.A review by the Democratic members of the Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs identified 655 contracts canceled by the VA, where previous lists disclosed by the agency included dozens less and contained significant errors.The lawmakers cited a recent ProPublica investigation into the agencys use of a flawed artificial intelligence tool to assess VA contracts. That analysis was conducted by a staffer from the Department of Government Efficiency with no health care or government experience. The VA uses contractors for a range of services, including to support hospitals, research and other services aimed at caring for ailing veterans. What They Said: Lists of contracts previously disclosed to the committee are gobbledygook and filled with errors, the lawmakers said. This hearing shouldnt even be necessary, said King, who sits on the VA oversight committee. The simplest thing is to send us a list.Senators highlighted the harm caused by canceling the contracts, including one that resolved glitches between VA systems preventing veterans from receiving benefits. Without this contract, said Benjamin Ambrose, whose job it was to resolve these errors, there is nobody left at VA to do this work. In this case veterans are being locked out forever, he said.Scott Amey, general counsel with the bipartisan Project on Government Oversight, said: Theres a lot of fallout. Theres a lot of dominoes that go with canceling just one contract.Amey expressed doubt that the necessary work was done to ensure canceled contracts were duplicative or wasteful. From the stonewalling that weve heard from the VA, you cant have any confidence that that work was done, he said.The lawmakers also questioned the VAs use of AI to assess contracts for possible cancellation, referring to ProPublicas investigation. Blumenthal said AI holds promise, but it has to be used thoughtfully.Background: ProPublica reported on Friday that the VA used an error-prone AI tool to identify contracts for possible cancellation. The tool, written by former DOGE staffer Sahil Lavingia, used outdated AI models to munch contracts based on conflicting instructions and produced glaring mistakes, a ProPublica analysis found.Experts in AI and government procurement agreed that the DOGE analysis of VA contracts was flawed, with one calling it deeply problematic. Lavingia acknowledged that there were problems. Im sure mistakes were made. Mistakes are always made. I would never recommend someone run my code and do what it says. Its like that Office episode where Steve Carell drives into the lake because Google Maps says drive into the lake. Do not drive into the lake.ProPublica identified at least two dozen contracts on DOGEs list that have been canceled so far. Among them is a service agreement to maintain a gene sequencing device used to develop better cancer treatments. Another was with Columbia University for blood sample analysis to support a VA research project. Others still were related to addressing nursing issues, including one to develop social media tools to recruit nursing staff and another to help assess and improve the care they provide.Democrats in Congress have been seeking more information from the VA on the canceled contracts in an attempt to assess whether the cuts have put veterans well-being in jeopardy.Response: VA press secretary Pete Kasperowicz has defended DOGEs work on reviewing contracts, saying that the vetting sets a commonsense precedent. He and Lavingia have said that VA staffers reviewed everything on the DOGE munchable list before deciding which contracts to cut. In a statement on Tuesday, Kasperowicz said that the agencys contract review has been a careful process aimed at benefiting veterans and using taxpayer money efficiently. Decisions to keep, cut or descope contracts are based on careful and methodical multilevel reviews by VA employees, including career subject-matter experts who are responsible for the contracts, as well as VA senior leaders and contracting officials, he said.He disputed any suggestion from legislators that the contract review might diminish essential services. Terminating or not renewing these contracts will not negatively affect veteran care, benefits or services, he said. In fact, these decisions will allow VA to redirect billions of dollars back toward health care, benefits and services for VA beneficiaries.Why It Matters: Over 9 million veterans across the U.S. rely on the VA for health care through its network of 170 hospitals and 1,200 clinics. One of the nations largest health care providers, it is a training ground for doctors and nurses and an engine for medical research. Since returning to office in January, the Trump administration has set about a massive overhaul of the agency, seeking an increase in its overall budget while announcing layoffs that could claim the jobs of around 80,000 employees. The VA is examining all of its estimated 76,000 contracts as part of that overhaul and in accordance with the Trump administrations push towards tech. ProPublicas analysis identified over 2,000 contracts flagged by AI for termination. Its unclear how many more from that list are on track for cancellation. The Trump administrations decisions on VA contracts have largely been a black box.
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    Suspect in Austrian School Shooting Was a Loner Rejected by Army, Officials Say
    A defense official said the man, 21, was turned down for military service after failing a psychological test. Investigators are asking how he passed another such test to obtain a gun permit.
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