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    Heavy rain causes flooding, landslides and 8 deaths in Vietnam and Thailand
    People wade through a flooded alley caused by Typhoon Kajiki in Hanoi, Vietnam, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Huy Han)2025-08-27T04:13:23Z HANOI, Vietnam (AP) Heavy rain caused flooding and landslides Wednesday in parts of Southeast Asia, where at least eight deaths were reported in the aftermath of a tropical storm. Flooding occurred in several northern and central provinces of Vietnam, seven people died, one was missing and 34 were injured, state media reported.Nearly 20 centimeters (8 inches) of rain fell overnight in parts of northeast Vietnam and flood warnings remained for some riverside areas.In Thailand, one person died and another was missing from a landslide Wednesday in part of the northern city of Chiang Mai.Thailands Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said many homes were affected and a few people were injured from flash flooding and landslides in northern provinces.Thailands Meteorological Department warned of heavy rain in northern and northeastern regions Wednesday. Residents in foothills and low-lying areas near waterways were warned about possible flash floods and landslides. The rain was part of the aftermath of Tropical Storm Kajiki, which made landfall Monday afternoon in central Vietnam, where thousands of people were evacuated from high-risk areas.Kajiki earlier brought winds and rain to Chinas southern Hainan Island.Scientists published a 2024 study warning seas warmed by climate change will result in Southeast Asias cyclones forming closer to land, strengthening faster and lasting longer, raising risks for cities.
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    Mercury's Thomas breaks own triple-double record
    Alyssa Thomas had 12 points, 16 rebounds and 15 assists for her WNBA single-season record seventh triple-double in the Mercury's win Tuesday night.
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    Macron Defends Call for Palestinian Statehood in Letter to Netanyahu
    President Emmanuel Macron of France also pushed back against accusations by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he had not done enough to protect French Jews from antisemitic attacks.
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    Transfer rumors, news: Real Madrid, Atltico eye Man United's Mainoo
    Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid have joined the race for Manchester United midfielder Kobbie Mainoo. Transfer Talk has the latest news, gossip and rumors.
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    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelces love story, from friendship bracelets to engagement rings
    Donna Kelce stands with her son Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift after the AFC Championship NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills, Jan. 26, 2025, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis, File)2025-08-26T20:58:50Z NEW YORK (AP) It started with a friendship bracelet. It ended with an engagement ring. Taylor Swift, the pop superstar, and Travis Kelce, the football champion, are engaged.The fiances, both 35, announced the news in a joint post on Instagram on Tuesday. It is the latest chapter in the couples love story, one that has spanned two years, two Super Bowls, an album announcement and the highest-grossing tour of all time.Here is a look at some of the major events in their relationship.A friendship bracelet, undeliveredIt started, fittingly, with a friendship bracelet.It was way back in July 2023 that Kelce attended Swifts Eras concert at Arrowhead Stadium, where the Chiefs play.After, on his New Heights podcast with brother Jason Kelce, he professed to being disappointed well, his word was butthurt that he couldnt meet Swift and present her with a bracelet with his phone number on it. She doesnt meet anybody, or at least she didnt want to meet me, so I took it personal, he quipped. The podcast asked on Instagram: Anyone know how to get a bracelet to @taylorswift13? asking for a friend. Drivin the getaway carBut by that September, Kelce was hinting his efforts had achieved some success. He declined to elaborate amid speculation, telling an interviewer: It is what it is. Clearly, though, something was happening. Soon, Kelce revealed hed invited Swift to a game at Arrowhead. I threw the ball in her court, he said on another talk show.Swift took Kelce up on his offer, appearing for all the world to see at the Chiefs-Bears game, cheering next to his mom, Donna Kelce. The two left the stadium in Kelces purple Chevelle getaway car forgive the pun, but Kelce himself used it. Pretty ballsy, Kelce said a few days later of Swifts appearance, adding how much he loved seeing her cheer next to his mother. It was the launch of a long series of appearances by Swift at Chiefs games. There was some online angst over whether Swift was distracting from football while the NFL itself capitalized on her fandom. A day after the flashy Los Angeles premiere of her Taylor Swift: Eras Tour movie, she was back at Arrowhead. Karma is the guy on the ChiefsAnd now it was time for Kelce to be the adoring fan. In November 2023, after a hiatus of two months, Swift brought her tour to Argentina, where she changed the lyrics of Karma to salute her beau. Karma is the guy on the Chiefs, coming straight home to me, she sang. Scott Swift, next to a beaming Kelce, applauded his daughters new flame. When Time magazine announced its person of the year, few were surprised. In the Time interview, Swift spoke about her relationship.This all started when Travis very adorably put me on blast on his podcast, which I thought was metal as hell, Swift said, adding that theyd already been a couple before that first Chiefs game cameo. Soon after, things were heating up on the football field meaning the Chiefs were heading to the Super Bowl. At the AFC championship game, the couple made it clear they were fine with whatever attention was coming their way. In the middle of the field in Baltimore, after the Chiefs beat the Ravens, Swift and Kelce kissed. I love you, Kelce said. So much its not funny. A race across nine time zonesThere was one game left. Fans wondered: How would Swift make it from her Tokyo shows to the Super Bowl in Las Vegas? This week is truly the best kind of chaos, Swift posted on Instagram. Chaos indeed. In one week of February 2024, Swift attended the Grammys in Los Angeles, jetted to Tokyo for four concerts, then jumped back onto her private plane to make the Super Bowl with time to spare. To get there, she crossed nine time zones and the international dateline. Shes rewriting the history books herself, Kelce said a day after the Grammys, where Swift had won album of the year for a record fourth time. I told her Ill have to hold up my end of the bargain and come home with hardware, too.And he did. The two kissed on the field again after the Chiefs beat the San Francisco 49ers, Swift in her 87 necklace. On the road againWithin days, Swift was on the road again, with Kelce joining her in Australia for some koala-cuddling at the zoo. In Paris, Swift introduced a section from The Tortured Poets Department, her new album. Fans wondered if Kelce had made his way into some of its lyrics like You knew what you wanted and, boy, you got her, from So High School. But the highlight came in June, during a celebrity-packed set of concerts in London. There, Kelce made his Eras stage debut, donning a tuxedo and top hat and carrying Swift in his arms during a choreographed bit before I Can Do It With a Broken Heart. Im still cracking up/swooning, Swift wrote later on Instagram. Happiness and fun and magicAs for Kelce, he spoke with pride about the relationship, noting on the Bussin with the Boys podcast that he had no desire to hide anything. Thats my girl, he said. Thats my lady. Im proud of that. Swift echoed that emotion when she accepted an MTV Video Music Award last September, shouting out my boyfriend Travis in her speech. Everything this man touches turns to happiness and fun and magic, she said. I am just a jamoke supporting his girlfriendThroughout the summer and fall of 2024, Kelce attended a number of Swifts remaining tour dates and mentioned her on New Heights, officially referring to her as his girlfriend in a July episode. She is every bit of what everyone makes her out to be. Shes so awesome. Some of these people you meet, and youre just like, I dont know what Im doing here, he said. You are unbelievable, your talent is unbelievable, how you present yourself is unbelievable and I am just a jamoke supporting his girlfriend.Swift, too, was regularly photographed attending Kelces games including the 2025 Super Bowl.Lights, camera, action, footballA month post-Super Bowl, the couple made their red-carpet debut at the Tight End University in June, an annual three-day training summit founded by Kelce, George Kittle and Greg Olsen. They were then spotted at Brooklyn Bowl in Nashville, where Swift hopped on stage to perform Shake it Off with country singer Kane Brown. For fans, it marked yet another moment of the couple showing very public support and admiration for one another.The Life of a ShowgirlA couple that collaborates together, stays together.Swift announced her highly anticipated 12th studio album, The Life of a Showgirl, in mid-August and included Kelce in the rollout. It began with a tease from New Heights, which later revealed Swift would appear in an episode the following day.Swift told the Kelce brothers she wanted to show them something, revealing a mint-green briefcase that featured her initials in orange. Jason Kelce asked what was in it, prompting her to pull out a vinyl record.Our jobs are very similarIn the two-hour New Heights episode featuring Swift, she went into detail about the pairs summer following the Super Bowl. She said she spent considerable time in Florida with Travis Kelce. She also said our jobs are very similar: They revolve around entertaining people for three hours in NFL stadiums.On her self-described favorite podcast, Swift credited New Heights for getting her a boyfriend. This is sort of what Ive been writing songs about wanting to happen to me since I was a teenager, she said of their romance.And Kelce credited the tour for, well, getting him a girlfriend. I see you on that stage and see how you can get an entire stadium going, and then I get you in a room and its like Ive known you forever, he said. Its the easiest conversation I ever had, and it was just so much fun that it knocked my socks off.Jock, meet writerIn late August, in a five-photo carousel shared to both Swift and Kelces official Instagram accounts, the couple announced their engagement. Your English teacher and your gym teacher are getting married, she wrote in her caption. Its unclear when and where the two got engaged. JOCELYN NOVECK Noveck is an Associated Press national writer specializing in culture and gender, and a film critic. twitter mailto MARIA SHERMAN Maria Sherman is the music reporter at The Associated Press. She is based in New York City. twitter instagram mailto
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    Denmark summons US envoy after report of Americans carrying out influence operations in Greenland
    Denmark' Foreign Minister Lars Lkke Rasmussen arrives for the NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands, June 25, 2025. (AP Photo Kin Cheung, File)2025-08-27T08:05:10Z COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) Denmarks foreign minister had the top U.S. diplomat in the country summoned for talks after the main national broadcaster reported Wednesday that at least three people with connections to President Donald Trump have been carrying out covert influence operations in Greenland.Greenland, a huge semi-autonomous Danish territory in the Arctic, is coveted by Trump. Denmark, a NATO ally of the United States, and Greenland have said the island is not for sale and condemned reports of the U.S. gathering intelligence there.Public broadcaster DR reported Wednesday that government and security sources which it didnt name, as well as unidentified sources in Greenland and the U.S., believe that at least three Americans with connections to Trump have been carrying out covert influence operations in the territory. One of those people allegedly compiled a list of U.S.-friendly Greenlanders, collected names of people opposed to Trump and got locals to point out cases that could be used to cast Denmark in a bad light in American media. Two others have tried to nurture contacts with politicians, businesspeople and locals, according to the report. An influence operation is an organized effort to shape how people in a society think in order to achieve certain political, military or other objectives. DR said its story was based on information from a total of eight sources, who believe the goal is to weaken relations with Denmark from within Greenlandic society. DR said it had been unable to clarify whether the Americans were working at their own initiative or on orders from someone else. It said it knows their names but chose not to publish them in order to protect its sources.We are aware that foreign actors continue to show an interest in Greenland and its position in the Kingdom of Denmark, Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lkke Rasmussen said in a statement emailed by his ministry. It is therefore not surprising if we experience outside attempts to influence the future of the Kingdom in the time ahead. Any attempt to interfere in the internal affairs of the Kingdom will of course be unacceptable, Lkke Rasmussen said. In that light, I have asked the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to summon the U.S. charg daffaires for a meeting at the Ministry.He added that cooperation between the governments of Denmark and Greenland is close and based on mutual trust.The Danish Security and Intelligence Service responded to a request for comment by saying it believes that particularly in the current situation, Greenland is a target for influence campaigns of various kinds that could aim to create divisions in the relationship between Denmark and Greenland.It said it assesses that this could be done by exploiting existing or fabricated disagreements, for example in connection with well-known individual cases, or by promoting or amplifying certain viewpoints in Greenland regarding the Kingdom, the United States, or other countries with a particular interest in Greenland.The service, known by its Danish acronym PET, said that in recent years it has continuously strengthened its efforts and presence in Greenland in cooperation with authorities there, and will continue to do so.
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    Trump foes like Fed Governor Lisa Cook find themselves targeted by top housing regulator
    Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency Bill Pulte, speaks to reporters at the White House, July 24, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson, File)2025-08-26T21:18:58Z WASHINGTON (AP) When Bill Pulte was nominated as the countrys top housing regulator, he told senators that his number one mission will be to strengthen and safeguard the housing finance system.But since he started the job, hes distinguished himself by targeting President Donald Trump s political enemies. Hes using property records to make accusations of mortgage fraud and encourage criminal investigations, wielding an obscure position to serve as a presidential enforcer. This week, Trump used allegations publicized by Pulte in an attempt to fire Lisa Cook, a member of the Federal Reserve board, as he tries to exert more control over the traditionally independent central bank. Pulte claims that Cook designated two homes as her primary residence to get more favorable mortgage rates. Cook plans to fight her removal, laying the groundwork for a legal battle that could reshape a cornerstone institution in the American economy. Trump said Tuesday that Cook seems to have had an infraction, and you cant have an infraction, adding that he has some very good people in mind to replace her. Pulte has cheered on the presidents campaign with a Trumpian flourish. Fraud will not be tolerated in President Trumps housing market, he wrote on social media. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Pulte targets Democrats but not RepublicansPulte, 37, is a housing industry scion whose official job is director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. He oversees mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were placed in conservatorship during the Great Recession almost two decades ago.Like other political appointees, he routinely lavishes praise on his boss. President Trump is the greatest, he posted over the weekend.Pulte has made additional allegations of mortgage fraud against Sen. Adam Schiff, one of Trumps top antagonists on Capitol Hill, and New York Attorney General Letitia James, who filed lawsuits against Trump. Those cases are being pursued by Ed Martin, a Justice Department official. In a world where housing is too expensive, we do not need to subsidize housing for fraudsters by letting them get better rates than they deserve, Pulte wrote on social media.Pulte has ignored a similar case involving Ken Paxton, the Texas attorney general who is friendly with Trump and is running for Senate in his states Republican primary. Paxton took out mortgages on three properties that were all identified as his primary residence. He also has mortgages on two other properties that explicitly prohibit him from renting the properties out, but both have been repeatedly listed for rent, according to real estate listings and posts on short-term rental sites.Asked about Pultes investigations and Trumps role in them, the White House said that anyone who violates the law should be held accountable.President Trumps only retribution is success and historic achievements for the American people, said Davis Ingle, White House spokesman.Its unclear whether Pulte is using government resources to develop the allegations he has made. Mortgage documents are generally public records, but they are typically maintained at the county level across most of the U.S., making them difficult to comprehensively review. However, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are both government-sponsored entities, purchase large tranches of mortgages from lenders, which could centralize much of that information, real estate and legal experts say.FHFA did not respond to a detailed list of questions from the AP, including whether Pulte or his aides used government resources to conduct his research. Its not just mortgagesPultes broadsides go beyond mortgages. Hes been backing Trumps criticism of Jerome Powell, chair of the Federal Reserve, over expensive renovations at the central banks headquarters. Trump is pressuring Powell to cut interest rates in hopes of lowering borrowing costs, and his allies have highlighted cost overruns to suggest that Powell is untrustworthy or should be removed from his position.This guy is supposed to be the money manager for the worlds biggest economy, and it doesnt even look like he can run a construction site, Pulte said while wearing a neon safety vest outside the building. So something doesnt smell right here.Since returning to the White House, Trump has reached deep into the government to advance his agenda. Hes overhauled the federal workforce with the Office of Personnel Management, pushed ideological changes at the Smithsonian network of museums and fired the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics when he didnt like a recent report on job numbers. With Pulte in charge, the Federal Housing Finance Agency is becoming another instrument of Trumps mission to exert control and retaliate against enemies. Its a contrast to the Internal Revenue Service, where Trump has unsuccessfully discussed ways to use tax policies as a pressure point. For example, during battles over higher education, Trump threatened to take away Harvards long-standing tax-exempt status by saying, Its what they deserve. However, there are more restrictions there, dating back to the Watergate scandal under President Richard Nixon.Its been hard for the administration to use the inroads it wants to use to pursue its enemies, said Vanessa Williamson, a senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.She said, The law is very clear about taxpayer privacy and the criminal penalties at play are not small.Before going on the attack, Pulte played nice onlinePulte is heir to a home-building fortune amassed by his grandfather, also named William Pulte, who founded a construction company in Detroit in the 1950s that grew into the publicly traded national housing giant now known as the Pulte Group.He spent four years on the companys board, and hes the owner of heating and air conditioning businesses across the U.S. He had never served in government before being nominated by Trump to lead the Federal Housing Finance Agency.While many children spent their weekends at sporting events, I spent mine on homebuilding jobsites with my father and grandfather, Pulte said in written testimony for his nomination hearing. From the ground up, I learned every aspect of housing whether it was cleaning job sites, assisting in construction, or helping sell homes.He once tried to make a name for himself with good deeds, describing himself as the Inventor of Twitter Philanthropy and offering money to needy people online. He was working in private equity at the time, and he told the Detroit Free Press that he funded his donations with some very good liquidity events to power his donations.Even six years ago, he appeared focused on getting attention from Trump. If @realDonaldTrump retweets this, my team and I will give Two Beautiful Cars to Two Beautiful Veterans on Twitter.Trump replied, Thank you, Bill, say hello to our GREAT VETERANS! Pulte, whose most recent financial disclosure shows a net worth of at least $180 million, was also ramping up his political donations.Over the past six years, he and his wife have donated over $1 million to the political efforts of Trump and his allies, including a $500,000 contribution to a super PAC affiliated with Trump that was the subject of a campaign finance complaint made with the Federal Election Commission.The Pultes $500,000 contribution was made through a company they control named ML Organization LLC, records show. While such contributions are typically allowed from corporations, the same is not always true for some limited liability companies that have a limited business footprint and could be set up to obscure the donor.The FEC ultimately exonerated the Pultes, but found in April that the Trump super PAC, Make America Great Again, Again! Inc., did not properly disclose that the Pultes were the source of the donation, said Saurav Ghosh, the Campaign Legal Centers director of federal campaign finance reform.Ghosh said the donation raises serious questions about Pultes appointment to lead FHFA.Why is Bill Pulte even in a government position? he said. Maybe hes qualified, maybe he isnt. But he did pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into a pro-Trump super PAC. And I think its clear there are these types of rewards for big donors across the Trump administration. CHRIS MEGERIAN Megerian covers the White House for The Associated Press. He previously wrote about the Russia investigation, climate change, law enforcement and politics in California and New Jersey. twitter mailto BRIAN SLODYSKO Slodysko is an investigative reporter for the Associated Press based in Washington, D.C. mailto FATIMA HUSSEIN Hussein reports on the U.S. Treasury Department for The Associated Press. She covers tax policy, sanctions and any issue that relates to money. twitter mailto
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    Ukrainian drone attacks on oil refineries have some Russian regions running on empty
    A gas station worker refuels a car in Moscow, Russia, on Aug. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Pavel Bednyakov)2025-08-27T05:42:04Z Gas stations have run dry in some regions of Russia after Ukrainian drones struck refineries and other oil infrastructure in recent weeks, with motorists waiting in long lines and officials resorting to rationing or cutting off sales altogether.Wholesale prices on the St. Petersburg International Mercantile Exchange for A-95 gas the highest octane spiked to record highs last week, soaring to about 50% higher than in January, as demand soared from farmers seeking to bring in the harvest and Russians hitting the roads for their last big vacation of the summer.Russian media outlets reported fuel shortages are hitting consumers in several regions in the Far East and on the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed from Ukraine by Moscow in 2014.Media outlets in the Primorye region, which borders North Korea, reported long lines and prices of about 78 rubles per liter (approximately $3.58 per gallon) at gas stations in the area, where the average monthly wage is about $1,200. Journalists at local news outlet Primpress found other drivers trying to sell gas online for as much as 220 rubles per liter (about $10.12 per gallon).In the Kurilsky district of the Kuril Islands north of Japan, shortages of lower octane A-92 gas forced officials to halt public sales outright Monday. In Crimea, a popular resort area, some companies sold fuel only to holders of coupons or special cards. Normal price increases are aggravated this yearRussia is no stranger to gasoline price increases at the end of summer. But this years shortages have been aggravated by Ukraines attacks on oil refineries in the 3 1/2-year-old war. Larger, more concentrated attacks are causing more damage and hampering production, all timed to coincide with peak demand.Ukraine has targeted energy infrastructure before, but the recent strikes have been more successful, with more drones targeting a more concentrated group of facilities.The Ukrainians are attacking an arc of refineries, starting from Ryazan, which is south of Moscow, all the way to Volgograd. That region is where people are driving through on their way to (resorts on) the Black Sea. Thats the region where most of the harvest operations are going on. And thats also a rather densely populated region, Sergey Vakulenko, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, told The Associated Press. Between Aug. 2 and Aug. 24, Ukraine attacked oil infrastructure at least 12 times, according to media reports. Of those attacks, at least 10 were targeting sites in the Ryazan-Volgograd arc in southwestern Russia. These attacks have damaged many oil refineries but have not destroyed them outright, Vakulenko said, adding that most of the facilities are extremely resilient against fires.But they can slow refinery activity, as shown by a fall in the intake of crude oil to be turned into diesel, gasoline or other products by roughly 200,000 to 250,000 barrels per day, said Gary Peach, oil markets analyst at Energy Intelligence.Thats just enough to make their gasoline industry feel some pain, especially during the high consumption months in the summer, he told AP. Gasoline production fell 8.6% in the first 19 days of August, compared with a year earlier, and diesel production was down 10.3%. Other war-related issues have caused even more consumer pain. Ukrainian drone strikes repeatedly have disrupted Russian transportation networks, particularly air traffic, causing more people to travel by car and increasing demand for gas, Vakulenko said.Inflation also has made it less profitable for suppliers who normally buy gasoline early in the year for sale in the higher-priced summer months, and many entrepreneurs simply decided not to bother this year, he said. Individually, none of these problems caused lasting or widespread disruption in Russia. But together, they have transformed an expected annual price fluctuation into a problem for the government.To try to ease the shortage, Russia on July 28 paused gasoline exports, with the Energy Ministry hoping to continue restrictions into September. Oil company managers have been summoned to government meetings twice this month to discuss the shortages, Russian media reported. Moscow is largely spared from shortages While officials appear to be concerned, the gasoline shortfall isnt system critical, Peach said.So far, the shortage remains confined to certain areas the Far East and Crimea because these regions usually are supplied by fewer refineries and present greater transportation demands.Moscow has been spared the latest gasoline price spike because it is well-supplied from major refineries in Yaroslavl and Nizhny Novgorod, cities a few hours drive away. The capital also has a refinery in the city itself.Yet Russia is not at immediate risk of grinding to a halt even in more vulnerable regions, experts say. Although private drivers may feel some pain at the gas pump, most buses and trucks run on diesel, for which Russia has a surplus. The military, which largely uses diesel fuel, also is insulated from any shocks. Vakulenko wrote in a recent commentary that annual diesel production is more than double than what is needed.That doesnt mean the situation still couldnt deteriorate. Refineries that make gasoline for Russias domestic market also make diesel and other products for export a vital source of income amid heavy Western sanctions.Industry observers say Ukraines drones target key refinery equipment, including the distillation column that separates incoming crude oil into other products, including gasoline, diesel, fuel for ships and asphalt. If damaged, it must be repaired or replaced for the refinery to function. Repairs could be difficult if foreign parts are needed.The gasoline crisis is expected to ease by late September as demand subsides and the annual summer maintenance for many refineries is finished.Still, the crisis highlights a vulnerability on the home front that has the potential to be exploited further as drone warfare evolves.___David McHugh in Frankfurt, Germany, and Joanna Kozlowska in London contributed to this report. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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    Some FEMA staff are put on leave after signing dissent letter
    The Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters is photographed in Washington, May 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)2025-08-27T02:27:49Z Some employees of the Federal Emergency Management Agency who signed a public letter of dissent earlier this week were put on administrative leave Tuesday evening, according to documents reviewed by The Associated Press.More than 180 current and former FEMA employees signed the letter sent to the FEMA Review Council and Congress on Monday critiquing recent cuts to agency staff and programs, and warning that FEMAs capacity to respond to a major disaster was dangerously diminished.Thirty-five signed their names while 141 signed anonymously for fear of retribution. The Associated Press has confirmed that at least two of the signatories received notices Tuesday evening informing them they would be placed on leave indefinitely, with pay and that they must still check in every morning confirming their availability. It was unclear what the status was for other signatories. The notice said the decision is not a disciplinary action and is not intended to be punitive. FEMA did not respond immediately to questions about how many staff received the notice and whether it was related to the opposition letter. The Washington Post first reported that some FEMA employees were being put on leave.The dissent letter contained six statements of opposition to current policies at FEMA, including an expenditure approval policy by which Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem must approve contracts exceeding $100,000, which the signatories said reduces FEMAs ability to perform its mission. It also critiqued the DHS decision to reassign some FEMA employees to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the failure to appoint a qualified FEMA administrator as stipulated by law, and cuts to mitigation programs, preparedness training and FEMA workforce.In an email Monday, FEMA spokesperson Daniel Llargues said that the Trump administration has made accountability and reform a priority so that taxpayer dollars actually reach the people and communities they are meant to help. It is not surprising that some of the same bureaucrats who presided over decades of inefficiency are now objecting to reform, Llargues said. Change is always hard.Employees at other agencies including the National Institutes of Health and Environmental Protection Agency have issued similar statements. About 140 EPA staff members at the were placed on administrative leave for signing an opposition letter. GABRIELA AOUN ANGUEIRA Gabriela covers philanthropys role in disaster resilience and recovery. She is based in San Diego, California. instagram mailto
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    The Rise of the Democratic National Security Mom
    The party is counting on a new type of leader to counteract Trump.
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    This Is Why New Orleans Never Recovered From Katrina
    New Orleans after Katrina is a cautionary tale for every place in America that will one day face its own disaster.
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    Latest launch of SpaceXs Starship deploys 8 dummy satellites, then splashes down into Indian Ocean
    SpaceX's mega rocket Starship makes a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)2025-08-27T00:26:33Z SpaceX launched the latest test of its mega rocket Starship on Tuesday night and completed the first-ever deployment of a test payload eight dummy satellites into space. After just over an hour coasting through space, Starship splashed down as planned in the Indian Ocean. SpaceXs mega rocket Starship launches during a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) SpaceXs mega rocket Starship launches during a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Starship blasted off from Starbase, SpaceXs launch site in south Texas, just after 6:30 p.m. It was the 10th test for the worlds biggest and most powerful rocket, which SpaceX and NASA hope to use to get astronauts back on the moon. SpaceXs mega rocket Starship makes a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) SpaceXs mega rocket Starship makes a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More NASA has ordered two Starships to land astronauts on the moon later this decade, and SpaceX CEO Elon Musks ultimate goal is Mars. No crew members were aboard the demo launch. SpaceXs mega rocket Starship makes a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) SpaceXs mega rocket Starship makes a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The test also included the successful return of the crafts Super Heavy Booster, which splashed down in the Atlantic after testing a landing-burn engine sequence. A jogger passes as SpaceXs mega rocket Starship is prepared for a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) A jogger passes as SpaceXs mega rocket Starship is prepared for a test flight from Starbase, Texas, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The Starship itself continued to orbit the Earth passing from daylight in Texas through night and back into daytime again ahead of the planned splashdown. Before the craft hit the waves, its engines fired, flipping its position so it entered the water upright with the nose cone pointed upward. The successful demo came after a year of mishaps. Back-to-back tests in January and March ended just minutes after liftoff, raining wreckage into the ocean. The most recent test in May the ninth try ended when the spacecraft tumbled out of control and broke apart. Stay up to date with the latest U.S. news by signing up to our WhatsApp channel. SpaceX later redesigned the Super Heavy booster with larger and stronger fins for greater stability, according to a company post on the social platform X this month. The first Starship exploded minutes into its inaugural test flight in 2023. SpaceXs first batch of Starlink satellites were launched in 2019 from a Falcon rocket that lifted off from Cape Canaveral.___The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. CHRISTINA LARSON Larson is a science writer on The Associated Press Global Health & Science team. She has reported on the environment from five continents. mailto
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Flash floods leave 32 dead in Indian-controlled Kashmir as over 150,000 are displaced in Pakistan
    A rescue worker helps a family board in a boat to evacuate them from a flooded area in Dhoop Sarhi village in Kasur district, Pakistan, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025, due to the rising water level in Sutlej River, following neighboring India releasing water from overflowing dams. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary)2025-08-27T08:12:55Z NEW DELHI (AP) Intense rains have lashed parts of Pakistan and India and triggered flash floods in Indian-controlled Kashmirs Jammu region, leaving at least 32 people dead and many missing following a landslide on a Hindu pilgrimage route, news agency Press Trust of India reported Wednesday.The time frame of the flooding deaths was not immediately clear. Authorities in Pakistans eastern Punjab province on Wednesday called for army assistance in rescue and relief efforts after torrential rains caused major rivers to swell, inundating villages and displacing more than 150,000 people, officials said. People stand next to a stuck car in the aftermath of flash floods at the banks of Tawi river in Jammu, India, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Channi Anand) People stand next to a stuck car in the aftermath of flash floods at the banks of Tawi river in Jammu, India, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Channi Anand) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Rescuers evacuated more than 20,000 people overnight from the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistans second-largest city, which also faced the risk of flood. Those evacuated from areas near Lahore were living along the bed of the Ravi river, said Irfan Ali Kathia, director-general of the Punjab Disaster Management Authority.Mass evacuations began earlier this week in six districts of Punjab after heavier-than-normal monsoon rains and the release of water from overflowing dams in neighboring India trigged flash floods in low-lying border regions, Kathia said. Stay up to date with similar stories by signing up to our WhatsApp channel. Forecasters predicted rain will continue across the region this week. Heavy downpours and flash floods in the Himalayan region have killed nearly 100 people in August. A rescue worker evacuates villagers from a flooded area in Dhoop Sarhi village in Kasur district, Pakistan, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025, due to the rising water level in Sutlej River, following neighboring India releasing water from overflowing dams. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary) A rescue worker evacuates villagers from a flooded area in Dhoop Sarhi village in Kasur district, Pakistan, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025, due to the rising water level in Sutlej River, following neighboring India releasing water from overflowing dams. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday praised authorities for the timely evacuations to avoid losses and said relief supplies and tents are being provided to flood-effected people, according to a government statement. Kathia warned floodwaters in the Ravi, Chenab and Sutlej rivers were rising dangerously and many villages were inundated in Kasur, Okara, Bahawalnagar, Bahawalpur, Vehari and Sialkot districts. Rescuers have used boats to evacuate people to safer places this week, Kathia said. India alerted Pakistan about possible cross-border flooding through diplomatic channels rather than the Indus Waters Commission, which is the permanent mechanism under the 1960 World Bank brokered Indus Waters Treaty. People looks at the damaged bridge over the swelling Tawi River in Jammu, India, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Channi Anand) People looks at the damaged bridge over the swelling Tawi River in Jammu, India, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Channi Anand) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More New Delhi suspended the commissions work after the April killing of 26 tourists in Indian-controlled Kashmir, though Islamabad insists India cannot unilaterally scrap the treaty.The latest flood warning comes as rescuers with sniffer dogs search for more than 150 people who have been reported missing this month after cloudburst flooding killed over 300 residents in three villages in northwestern Buner district.Floods have killed more than 800 people in Pakistan since late June.Scientists say climate change is fueling heavier monsoon rains in South Asia, raising fears of a repeat of a 2022 weather disaster that struck a third of Pakistan and killed 1,739 people.___Ahmed reported from Islamabad and Saaliq reported from New Delhi. Associated Press writer Babar Dogar contributed to this story from Lahore, Pakistan. SHEIKH SAALIQ Saaliq covers news across India and the South Asia region for The Associated Press, often focusing on politics, democracy, conflict and religion. He is based in New Delhi. twitter mailto
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    How did life get multicellular? Five simple organisms could have the answer
    Nature, Published online: 27 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02635-2Single-celled species that often stick together in colonies have researchers rethinking the origin of animals.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Five single-celled species that dabble in multicellularity
    Nature, Published online: 27 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02707-3Animals closest cousins provide insight into how we became multicellular creatures.
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    Daily briefing: Repeated heatwaves make your biological clock run fast
    Nature, Published online: 26 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02743-zRepeated heatwaves can age you as much as smoking or drinking alcohol. Plus, a US Supreme Court has derailed researchers efforts to reinstate cancelled research grants and six quantum myths debunked.
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    Daily briefing: Primates might have evolved in the cold climate of North America
    Nature, Published online: 22 August 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02730-4The common ancestors of all modern primates might have flourished in cold winters, not the warm jungle. Plus, peer reviewers are more likely to approve articles that cite their own work and whats really behind thirst.
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    Daily briefing: Plastics pollution talks end in stalemate
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    Transfer rumors, news: Man United set 50m fee for Garnacho's Chelsea move
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    The Leader of Trumps Assault on Higher Education Has a Troubled Legal and Financial History
    by Peter Elkind, ProPublica, and Katherine Mangan, The Chronicle of Higher Education ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. When Los Angeles attorney Leo Terrell, a legal commentator, lifelong Democrat and fiery fixture on Fox News, announced on the networks Hannity show that he was voting for Donald Trump in 2020, the MAGA universe went wild. Oliver North hailed him on his Real American Heroes podcast. Fox News signed him on as a paid contributor, at a six-figure salary.Terrell, meanwhile, rebranded himself as Leo 2.0, complete with red Trump-style caps he offered for sale online. Leo 1.0 had slammed Trump for cozying up to white supremacists, blamed him for a surge in violent attacks on Jews and donated to Democrats. Leo 2.0? He attacked DEI nonsense, compared Black Lives Matter to ISIS and declared the 2020 election was stolen from President Trump and America!In January, Terrell was rewarded for his loyalty when President-elect Trump, praising him as a highly respected civil rights attorney and political analyst with an incredibly successful career, named him senior counsel to the assistant attorney general for civil rights in the Justice Department. Terrell assumed his marquee role a month later: as head of the multiagency Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism. Leo Terrell celebrated his appointment as senior counsel to the assistant attorney general of the Department of Justices Civil Rights Division in an Instagram post on Jan. 23. (Screenshot by ProPublica) As a Black, Christian former Democrat with little previous engagement with Jewish causes, Terrell, now 70, seemed an improbable pick to lead the effort to root out anti-Semitic harassment in schools and on college campuses, as the task force announcement put it. But his zealous conversion and penchant for media bombast made him a perfect bullhorn for the task forces actual mission: to strong-arm colleges into stripping away any vestige of wokeness in their hiring, admissions, classes and research.In service of that goal, the government has abandoned due process in favor of media warfare, preemptive declarations of guilt and freezes on billions in critical federal funding.Terrell has become an invaluable player in this extraordinary pressure campaign. Before most of the task forces investigations had even launched, he publicly promised massive lawsuits against Jew-hating universities, including Harvard, the University of California, Los Angeles and dozens of others.So far, the campaign has been effective. To preserve hundreds of millions of dollars in federal grants and contracts, Columbia and Brown have struck deals with the administration that cost them $220 million and $50 million, respectively, and go far beyond pledging tougher action to combat antisemitism. Columbia agreed to open academic programs and admissions decisions to outside monitoring. Brown pledged to ban transgender women from single-sex spaces and womens sports. Harvard has sued the administration to try to unfreeze $2.6 billion in federal research funds, but its also trying to negotiate a settlement. Meanwhile, colleges nationwide are eliminating any remaining vestiges of diversity, equity and inclusion programs and shuttering multicultural centers lest the government come after them. Amid the upheaval Trumps task force has helped to sow, the history, motivations and behavior of its blustery leader have gone largely unexamined. ProPublica and The Chronicle of Higher Education interviewed dozens of people whose paths have intersected with Terrells and reviewed thousands of pages of court documents and financial records related to his career and life.The portrait that emerged is dramatically at odds with Trumps description of a highly respected and incredibly successful attorney. Peers in civil rights law said they always considered Terrell a minor player. Documents reveal a distinctly mixed legal track record, marred by malpractice suits, client disputes and mishandling a criminal case so badly that a federal appeals court lambasted his work as woeful.Until his MAGA conversion, Terrell was beset by a litany of financial troubles, including nearly $400,000 in unpaid federal taxes, a personal bankruptcy filing and a trail of court judgments and liens brought by small businesses that worked for his law firm.Current and former lawyers at the Justice Department say Terrell is less engaged with assessing cases or negotiating settlements than he is with scaring universities into submission. They say hes voiced open disdain for what he calls lawyer talk, berating career staff who try to follow proper procedures for investigating civil rights complaints.Despite his appetite for media attention, Terrell has volunteered little about himself. Friends and neighbors recall him walking a dog and bicycling and his fondness for golf. In the about the author section for a self-published book, he wrote: In his spare time, Mr. Terrell likes to work. His hobbies are work and working.Terrell declined an interview request for this story and did not respond to written questions. In a brief phone conversation with a reporter, he explained, I dont do interviews with my life. Told some details of our reporting, he added, Im not going to comment on anything, and, finally, Im going to hang up respectfully.It is unclear whether Terrells previous troubles turned up in administration vetting for his current job. Officials at the Justice Department and White House did not respond to questions about Terrells role or his background.Jewish activists are divided on Terrells approach, with some lauding it for rooting out anti-Jewish sentiment that emerged on campuses during pro-Palestinian protests and others bemoaning how hes weaponized antisemitism.Kenneth Marcus, an Education Department official in the first Trump administration who has spent years agitating for stronger federal action against campus antisemitism, is a fan. What the president has gotten in Terrell, Marcus said, is someone with unique skills in delivering public messaging. Although President Donald Trump has described Terrell as a highly respected and incredibly successful attorney, peers in civil rights law said they always considered him a minor player. (Christian Monterrosa/Bloomberg via Getty Images) That messaging is camouflage, according to Amy Spitalnick, CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, a national network of Jewish groups. No one should be under any illusion that this is about keeping Jewish students or faculty safe, she said. Gutting cancer and Alzheimers research does nothing to keep them safe. Terrell speaks at a news conference along with Erma Bryant, left, founder of the Christian Women for Justice, in 1996 in Inglewood, California, where the group held a fundraiser for O.J. Simpson. Terrell was a frequent TV commentator on the Simpson trial. (Mark J. Terrill/AP Photo) Terrell grew up in Carson, in south Los Angeles County, the fourth of seven siblings. Law was his second career, following a decade as a history and economics teacher in the Los Angeles public schools. He graduated from UCLA School of Law in 1990 and opened his own civil rights firm in Beverly Hills.Almost immediately, Terrell began making a name for himself as a media personality with a decidedly progressive voice, becoming better known for his TV and radio commentary than for his courtroom achievements.Starting in 1991, after the police beating of a Black man, Rodney King, Terrell became a regular on local and national TV and radio condemning police brutality and racial injustice. Three years later, he snagged his breakthrough commentating gig: as a friend and supporter of O.J. Simpson. Terrells role as a Simpson trial analyst produced a green-room friendship with Larry Elder, a conservative Black radio host in Los Angeles, who helped Terrell land his own talk show. I thought he was smart, feisty, opinionated and entertaining, Elder recalled. I thought he would be good radio, despite my disagreement with virtually everything he stood for at the time.Terrell became a prized guest on Fox News. He spoke fast and loud, uttered every view with absolute certainty and was quick to interrupt, shout and attack, accusing one guest of tailoring his views to make a name for himself and another of trying to hustle people to make money. Pressed during one Hannity interview to say on air whether Simpson was guilty of murder, Terrell ripped off his ear piece and stormed out of the studio.Prominent Los Angeles lawyers said he was never a big player in the citys civil rights community. Carl Douglas, part of the Simpson defense team, said Leo was always a talker, not a baller. Connie Rice, former western regional counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, said Terrell was never at the table for the big cases that made impact. He loved holding press conferences.Terrell represented a Black teenager whod been expelled from a Los Angeles high school for punching a white referee during a football game after the referee allegedly had directed racial epithets at him. He took up the cause of a mentally ill, homeless Black woman whod been fatally shot by LA police after she wielded a 12-inch screwdriver at officers wanting to question whether shed stolen a shopping cart. (No criminal charges were brought against the officers, but Terrell won a $975,000 settlement for her family.) Terrell, speaking at a forum held by the Congressional Black Caucus in 1999 in downtown Los Angeles, took up the cause of a mentally ill, homeless Black woman whod been fatally shot by Los Angeles police. (Nick Ut/AP Photo) Now scornful of woke practices and bias claims, Terrell once represented himself in a race-discrimination case against a parking company after a garage attendant refused to honor his free-parking validation from a shopping mall and told him he owed $10. A supervisor let Terrell leave without paying, but he still sued, saying he was singled out for being Black and demanding damages for humiliation, mental anguish and severe emotional distress. The suit was later settled for a confidential amount. Reached three decades later, an attorney for the parking company called Terrells lawsuit absurd the worst discrimination case Ive ever seen.Terrell always had side gigs: he self-published a book on workplace rights; he offered business consultations, corporate training seminars and mediations; he had a 900 number that charged $5 for the first minute and $2 for each additional minute for legal consultations.In 2001, he ran unsuccessfully first for Congress, then two years later for Los Angeles City Council. He routinely promoted himself as an NAACP attorney, though the group said hed never been employed there.William Bloch, a veteran Los Angeles lawyer who brought two malpractice cases against Terrell, said Terrell acted as the carnival barker to attract business, then failed to do the necessary legal work. In one sex-discrimination case, according to the resulting malpractice suit brought by Bloch, Terrell accepted a settlement from the city of Beverly Hills for a pittance despite explicit instructions from his client, a female police officer, to zealously pursue her claim. Bloch persuaded an appeals court to undo the settlement. After the officer received a $100,000 award, plus money for attorney fees and costs, she dropped the case against Terrell. In the second matter, a jail employee for the city of Beverly Hills said she paid $6,000 to retain Terrell in 2009 after he boasted of huge verdicts and settlements, only to have him accept a $1,000 settlement from the city without her permission. According to her claim, Terrell conducted little or no discovery, including taking no depositions. The case was settled for a confidential amount, with no acknowledgement by Terrell of wrongdoing.In court filings, Terrell denied any negligence or responsibility for harm to his clients, insisting they had approved all of his actions and saying lawyers are not a guarantor of the results of any professional services. Hes a discredit to the legal profession, Bloch said.A low point in Terrells legal career began in October 2009, when he was retained by the parents of Emond Logan, a 48-year-old California truck driver alleged to have transported more than a ton of cocaine to western Michigan as part of a multistate drug conspiracy.Terrell rarely took on criminal cases, but hed played Little League baseball with Logan, whose family approached him after hearing his radio show. Terrell demanded a $100,000 retainer. To pay it, Logans father sold much of his stock from more than 30 years at Pacific Bell Telephone and borrowed money from his daughter.Logan faced overwhelming evidence: a leader of the drug gang had testified against him, and the arresting agents had seized five cars (including a Maserati), three Rolex watches and a $125,000 diamond ring, items well beyond his truck-driving income. His court-appointed lawyer had negotiated a plea agreement capping Logans prison time at 10 years.Still, Terrell urged Logan to blow up his bullshit deal, according to transcripts of their recorded jailhouse calls and Logans later testimony. Logan followed Terrells advice, despite prosecution warnings that such relatively generous terms would be off the table. Terrell arranged for Logans pretrial release on bond. Four months later, Logan was back in custody after a government informant taped him threatening to kill his federal prosecutor. Terrell then urged him to accept a new plea offer, with no cap, and Logan was sentenced to 35 years in prison.Terrell didnt do what he was supposed to do for the money, Eugene Logan, Emonds 93-year-old father, said in a telephone interview. He told us he could get him off. If hed taken the plea, hed be out by now.Two courts denied Emond Logans attempts to get his sentence overturned based on Terrells counsel, but they excoriated Terrells lawyering. U.S. District Judge Paul Maloney wrote in a 2017 decision that Terrell had provided abysmal advice. A year later, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decried Terrells woeful representation and said his overall conduct reflected poorly on the profession.Terrells troubled legal practice left him with a worsening tangle of financial problems. Between 2004 and 2015, the IRS filed 11 liens against him for nearly $400,000 in unpaid taxes dating back to 1997. In October 2010, Terrell filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, reporting $736,938 in liabilities, $304,650 in assets and monthly income of just $4,000. Because he stopped appearing for required meetings, his bankruptcy case was dismissed and none of his obligations were legally erased. During this period, Terrell took out six new mortgage loans against his three-bedroom West LA condominium. The property was sold at foreclosure in 2013.Lorita Seaton was one of Terrells many unpaid creditors. Shed loaned him $40,000 in 2008 after he said he needed it to help cover his costs for a pending discrimination suit against Costco. In exchange, Terrell had signed a promissory note committing to pay her $60,000 by year-end. By February 2009, court records show, Terrell had won $422,000 at trial for his client and an additional $510,818 in legal fees and costs. Yet Seaton said she never got a penny.He had the audacity to tell me theres nothing you can do about it, she said in an interview. I want to go stand on the mountain and just holler about this asshole.Between 2006 and 2014, more than a dozen small vendors for Terrells law firm went to court seeking to collect more than $170,000 in unpaid bills. A&B Reporting complained that it had prepared more than 30 deposition transcripts for Terrell, billing him more than $40,000 that remained unpaid. According to the companys 2011 lawsuit, Terrell finally sent a $5,000 check which bounced.In February 2014, as his private financial straits worsened, Terrell formally updated his law office address: from the Beverly Hills tower where hed worked for more than two decades to a suite on Santa Monica Boulevard, which was actually a mailbox at a UPS store. He has filed just a single case in federal court since that year, according to PACER, a public database of court filings and dockets.Terrells financial troubles factored into years of legal warfare among his siblings over their mothers care and modest estate. In a court filing, Terrells younger brother Zachary accused him of borrowing repeatedly from their mother to save his flailing law practice and keep his home. Terrell acknowledged accepting a $30,000 gift from his mother after hed done free legal work for her. The estate case finally ended in late 2021, but Terrell received little because he had already borrowed against his expected inheritance. (Deborah Terrell-Trimble was the only Terrell sibling to respond to our calls and emails for comment, but she declined to answer questions about her brother or the case, saying the family was trying to heal.)Terrell eventually paid off or settled some of his debts, but theres no record of him paying the IRS or many of his other creditors, whose legal claims typically expire after 10 years in California unless theyre renewed.According to publicly filed liens, he still owed the IRS $92,000 at the beginning of 2024. Yet on the financial disclosure he filed for his Justice Department job, which covered that period, he listed his liabilities as none.Neither Terrell nor the Department of Justice responded to requests for comment about this omission. Terrell speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2021 in Orlando, Florida. (Joe Marino/UPI/Alamy Live News) Amid the financial pressures at home and at work, Terrell underwent a startling political transformation. In 2019 Fox interviews, he had called Trump a racial divider and said he sent out dog whistles like no president on this planet in our countrys history. Less than a year later, he went all in for Trump. Fox News hired him as a paid contributor soon thereafter, at an annual salary of $250,000.In interviews on Fox and other conservative outlets, Terrell offered two reasons for his ideological makeover. The first was the growing influence of the Black Lives Matter movement, which he complained had hijacked the Democratic Party, citing far-left calls to defund the police. He also objected to Joe Bidens comment during an interview with a Black radio host that if you have a problem figuring out whether youre for me or Trump, then you aint Black, calling it offensive and insulting to every African American because we dont vote as one group.Over the next four years, Terrell displayed the fervor of the converted. Biden was an idiot; Kamala Harris (whose name he repeatedly mispronounced) was only chosen as his running mate because shes a woman and because of her race. Democrats were members of the anti-Israel and pro-Hamas party. Far-right agitator Laura Loomer was a journalist, while NBCs Kristen Welker was a DEI hire. In 2023, Terrell made a pilgrimage to Trumps Mar-a-Lago resort, where he posed poolside, making a thumbs-up gesture. Shortly before starting his Justice Department gig, Terrell made sure he was leaving no culture-war stone unturned. I hate anti-Semitism! I hate attacks on Catholic Families! I hate attacks on parents expressing their First Amendment Rights at School Board Meetings! I hate Sanctuary Cities! I hate DEI! I hate Critical Race Theory! he declared on X.I love this guy, Trump gushed, introducing Leo 2.0 in February at a White House commemoration of Black History Month. He was a radical Democrat, he became a radical Republican. Terrell returned the love, telling the audience: We are in the presence of the greatest president of all time! Terrell spoke at a White House commemoration of Black History Month in February. Trump introduced him, saying, I love this guy. (Win McNamee/Getty Images) What motivated him? Larry Elder, who was on air with Terrell as he announced his conversion and coined the nickname Leo 2.0, declined to speculate: I really dont care about why Leo did his 180. Im just glad he finally did! Juan Williams, the Fox News senior political analyst, however, called the change in Terrells views performative. He said Terrell saw an opportunity to cast himself as coming out of the liberal matrix, and now Ive seen the light. He understood the value in that universe.If it is a performance, its one Terrell has continued at the Justice Department, where the effect of his pugnacious style and footloose approach to the law has alarmed career staff accustomed to following strict rules regarding regulatory due process.Thats lawyer talk! Terrell regularly thundered to Justice Department lawyers. I dont want to hear any lawyer talk!In the days after his Jan. 23 appointment, several said, Terrell emphatically rejected efforts by agency veterans to explain the legally required steps to bring civil rights complaints against universities.Leo did not want to hear our views about how to investigate, how to find a violation, how to proceed in these cases, said a Justice Department veteran who heard Terrells comments. No lawyer talk at the Justice Department! It was just incredibly bizarre. The attorney was one of 10 current and former lawyers with the agencys Civil Rights Division interviewed for this story, most of whom asked not to be named for fear of retaliation.At another meeting early in his tenure, Terrell told career Justice Department attorneys he thought they were out to thwart his agenda, according to two attendees. He immediately came in and openly told us that he did not trust any of us or believe anything we said, one recalled.The Justice Department antisemitism task force, which includes officials from the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Education and the General Services Administration, was announced on Feb. 3. It immediately announced antisemitism investigations of four medical schools regarding offensive pro-Palestinian symbols and messaging displayed by students during their 2024 commencement ceremonies. Then, over the next five weeks, the task force and Trump administration announced plans to investigate 10 universities; the immediate cancellation of hundreds of millions in federal funding for Columbia; an investigation of the entire University of California System; and potential enforcement actions against 60 colleges in 24 states.Its not clear whether Terrell had a hand in choosing the task forces targets, but he took the lead in making the governments case against them publicly.We are suing every one of these universities guilty of antisemitism, Terrell told Fox News host Mark Levin on March 9. Were going to bankrupt these universities. We are going to take away every single federal dollar. Antisemitism, shouted Terrell, waving his arms, is rampant across the country! Hate-crime charges, he vowed, would be brought against these people who hate Jews. Terrell blamed campus antisemitism on the MAGA movements usual suspects: the Democrat Party and blue cities [that] have turned their back on Jewish Americans.The academic system in this country has been hijacked by the left, he declared, has been hijacked by the Marxists!Four days later, the task force announced plans to meet with leaders of four cities rocked by campus antisemitism (New York, Los Angeles, Boston and Chicago) to determine whether federal intervention was warranted.Career civil rights officials, many of whom had served under both Democratic and Republican administrations, were horrified. The Justice Department didnt publicly announce who it was investigating or planned to sue. It didnt reach findings before it had found cause in a completed investigation that typically takes months or even years. And investigating Democratic leaders in blue cities in the name of fighting campus antisemitism was far outside the departments charge.The process is turned upside down, said Ejaz Baluch, a senior trial attorney in the Civil Rights Division who left in May and is now a lecturer at Columbia Law School. We were given a conclusion and told to find supporting evidence to justify it. Its basically civil rights enforcement as a political tool. These things dont actually solve antisemitism. Its about silencing political dissent they disagree with. Former civil rights deputy chief Jen Swedish, who worked at the Justice Department for 15 years, called the actions cover for attacking higher ed.Back in early February, a division-wide posting seeking attorneys to help staff the antisemitism task force had drawn just three volunteers. Harmeet Dhillon, Trumps appointee as assistant attorney general for civil rights (and one of his former personal lawyers), later told a Federalist Society conference that this revealed the career staffs lack of concern about antisemitism.Current and former division attorneys interviewed by ProPublica and The Chronicle said the lawyers had misgivings about the administrations tactics and were reluctant to work with Terrell, who already had a reputation for berating staffers. One said hed repeatedly yelled at her.A memorable episode came in March, when Terrell loudly berated a revered 82-year-old civil rights attorney, Franz Marshall, over the failure to quickly terminate federal oversight in a Louisiana school desegregation case, a goal of Republican state officials.Marshall, who had represented the government in hundreds of desegregation cases over five decades, tried to explain that closing the case required a motion by the school district to lift the order, which the Justice Department could support or oppose, and review by a federal judge.Who told you that you had to do it this way? Terrell interrupted. I want you to name names!This is the process, Marshall assured him. Ive been doing this for a long time.Well, maybe youve been doing it for too long! Terrell snapped. The tirade, which lasted nearly an hour, was audible to dozens of attorneys waiting outside the conference room for an upcoming meeting.Marshall (who could not be reached for comment) resigned a short time later, joining a wholesale exodus from resignations, firings and reassignments that has totaled about 70% of the Civil Rights Divisions 365 attorneys since January. The Louisiana consent decree was lifted on April 29.In late April, Terrell had convened a meeting with some of the remaining lawyers to address concerns about working with him. That crazy guy you see on TV is not here, he insisted, according to one attendee. The guy before you is a civil rights attorney. Theres an urban myth that I scream and yell. Ive never yelled in my life.Theres little evidence Terrell has been directly involved in negotiations with campuses under investigation; instead, those appear to have been increasingly steered by the White House. Terrell has voiced distrust of any bargaining, preferring to lay the hammer on them with lawsuits, as he told Justice Department lawyers in an April meeting. In mid-July, when word leaked that the Trump administration was about to announce an agreement with Columbia to restore its funding, Terrell questioned whether it was tough enough.I will not SELLOUT Jewish Americans, he posted on X. NO DEALS!Six days later, the administration announced a $221 million settlement with Columbia, setting the stage for a string of similar deals with other colleges.The extremism of Terrells messaging also doesnt bother Dov Hikind, a former New York state Democratic assemblyman representing Brooklyn and the founder of Americans Against Antisemitism. If Leo Terrell and others are speaking tough, I dont lose any sleep over that.But the administrations approach alarms other Jewish groups and erstwhile academic allies in the fight against campus antisemitism. The task force is using legitimate fears of antisemitism in ways that are both dangerous and wrong, said Amy Spitalnick, of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs. When Terrell proclaimed on Fox News that the task force would bankrupt targeted universities, they were saying the quiet part out loud, she added.Whether Terrell is good for Jews or bad for Jews, his conversion has certainly been good for him. Leo 2.0 now has 2.5 million followers on his personal X account, and his speaking fee runs between $50,000 and $100,000; his government salary is $167,603. Terrell has attained a rock star persona in the Trump administration, said Kenneth Marcus, the former Education Department official and antisemitism activist. People are very much drawn to him in a way thats disproportionate to his rank in the federal government.Theres no sign administration officials, including Terrell, will let up in their campaign against higher education. Since late July, even as negotiations with Harvard dragged on and Browns settlement was announced, the administration froze $108 million in funding from Duke Universitys medical system, citing systemic racial discrimination in hiring and admissions. It also halted more than $584 million from UCLA as punishment for tolerating a hostile environment for Jews and demanded $1 billion to restore the flow of government money. Duke has not publicly responded to the discrimination complaints. The University of Californias president, James B. Milliken, has pledged to work with the administration, but he said a $1 billion penalty would completely devastate our countrys greatest public university system.Other colleges are just trying to stay out of the administrations dragnet and Terrells sights.Hes scared schools stiff, so everyone is scrambling, said Brett Sokolow, an attorney and higher education consultant whom college and university leaders have turned to for advice.Terrells approach, he said, is way over the top and effective as hell. Doris Burke of ProPublica contributed research.
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    Denmark Summons U.S. Envoy Over Espionage Allegations
    Its the latest twist in the Greenland drama. President Trump wants the island, but Denmark refuses to hand it over.
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    Targeted by the Emirates, an Arab Dissident Vanished Across Borders
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    Graziano: Don't be surprised if these 32 things happen, from an MVP run to rookies who could star
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    Despite a grim diagnosis, a deep connection to Cincinnati kept Dontay Corleone going
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    Source: Jaguars trading for Lions WR Patrick
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    Intel on college football's top 2025 quarterbacks
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    Trumps Pick to Help Run the FBI Has a History of Prosecuting Influential Democrats
    by Jeremy Kohler ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week. In late July, Missouri state troopers walked into St. Louis County government headquarters and seized the cellphone of one of the most prominent Democratic officials in this solidly red state. Two days later, a grand jury indicted Sam Page, the St. Louis County executive. Acting as a special prosecutor, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, a Republican, secured two felony counts of stealing by deceit and two election-law violations. For Bailey, bringing felony charges against the leader of the states biggest blue stronghold added to the resume of a MAGA warrior who had already interviewed for a key position in President Donald Trumps administration. Less than three weeks later, Trump tapped Bailey to help run the FBI. Hell serve as co-deputy director with Dan Bongino, a former Secret Service agent and conservative podcast host. Bailey said hell resign as Missouris attorney general on Sept. 8 to take the post. A spokesperson said he was not taking questions from the media. The case against Page was the latest in a string of legal strikes against Democrats by Bailey, bringing the full weight of the state on a political adversary. It wasnt about bribery or self-dealing. Page, the top elected official in a county with about 1 million residents, wasnt accused of stealing a dime for himself. Instead, the charges turned on something mundane: the printing and mailing of flyers weeks before about a measure on the ballot in April the kind of informational material local governments often send to voters and the sort of action that experts said had never led to criminal charges in Missouri. The election asked voters to give the County Council the power to fire the countys department heads and its top attorney. Page spent more than $25,000 of taxpayer money to print and mail flyers to voters outlining the measure. The flyer at issue did not overtly tell voters to vote no, but it listed groups that opposed it, including the police board and NAACP, and it quoted a state judges ruling that the ballot language was misleading and unfair. It also suggested that a yes vote would allow directors to be fired for political reasons or in emergencies and that a no vote would maintain stable leadership. Documents filed in the case against Page also showed that he did not follow a county lawyers advice to make some changes to the flyer. Bailey alleged that the flyer crossed the line from providing information, which is legal, to urging a no vote, which he said was an unlawful use of tax dollars and, in his view, grounds to seek felony charges. If convicted on the most serious count, Page could face three to 10 years in prison and $10,000 in fines. He could also face removal from office and sanctions against his medical license; hes an anesthesiologist, though he doesnt currently practice full time. Public officials must follow the law, Bailey wrote in a news release, and my Office will work to ensure that they always do.The playbook was familiar: Trump has talked about arresting California Gov. Gavin Newsom and New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani. Federal agents just raided the home of John Bolton, the former national security adviser in the first Trump administration and a prominent Trump critic. Attorney General Pam Bondi appointed Ed Martin, who had worked as an attorney in Missouri, to head the U.S. Department of Justices Weaponization Working Group and to investigate two prominent Democrats, New York Attorney General Letitia James and U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff of California, on allegations of mortgage fraud. Bailey really was auditioning for that role, or something like it, and what better way to show loyalty than to do exactly what Trump wants on the federal level, but replicated on the state level, said Paul Nolette, the director of the Les Aspin Center for Government at Marquette University. Its a template for what type of approach Bailey is going to take on the federal level. Political opponents are going to get targeted.Bailey has called himself a defender of the rule of law, portraying his high-profile lawsuits and investigations in Missouri as necessary to protect the state from what he has described as illegal or unconstitutional actions by the federal government and abandonment of the rule of law by the left. St. Louis County Executive Sam Page (Jeff Roberson/AP Images) Page became county executive in 2019 after a federal corruption case toppled his predecessor, Steve Stenger. Page had led a bipartisan bloc on the County Council against Stenger, who was sentenced to nearly four years in federal prison for a pay-to-play scheme that steered county contracts to political donors. (St. Louis County wraps around but does not include the much smaller independent city of St. Louis.) The cooperative spirit collapsed as Page set St. Louis County on the aggressive end of Missouris response to the COVID-19 pandemic, issuing early emergency orders limiting gatherings and indoor dining. That stance put him at odds with state officials who were moving to curb local power.Despite this and other political battles, Page has twice won countywide elections first in 2020 to finish Stengers term, then in 2022 to a full four-year term. He has said he will decide by the end of the year whether to run again in 2026. He is scheduled to be arraigned on Friday.I dont think I did anything wrong, he said in brief remarks to local news reporters at a ribbon-cutting for a county road project.A Page spokesperson referred questions to his lawyer, Jeff Jensen, a former U.S. attorney in Missouri during Trumps first term. Jensen did not respond to requests for comment.Many have questioned the legitimacy of the case and whether Baileys successor, Catherine Hanaway, will see it through. Hanaway, also a former U.S. attorney, as well as a former speaker of the Missouri House of Representatives, did not respond to questions.It certainly seems, based on my reading of it, a stretch, said Peter Joy, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis and an expert in legal ethics and trial practice. It would be an uphill battle for the state to make this charge stick.Ken Warren, a political scientist and pollster at Saint Louis University, said the charges were totally phony but that the more outrageous you are, the more you are going to attract the attention of Donald Trump. Lets say the same thing occurred but the county executive happened to be a Republican, Warren said. Would Bailey go after him? Of course not.Missouri has become a proving ground of sorts for Trump appointees. Martin a longtime state GOP insider with a record of stoking controversies was named the U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C. After it became apparent he couldnt win Senate confirmation, he was moved to the administrations pardon office and the Justice Departments weaponization group. John Sauer, a former Missouri solicitor general and anti-abortion activist who last year helped bankroll a campaign to defeat Missouris abortion rights ballot issue, defended Trumps claim to presidential immunity before the Supreme Court. Now, as U.S. solicitor general, he serves as the federal governments top advocate before the Supreme Court. Will Scharf, who lost a primary bid last year to unseat Bailey, pivoted straight into Trumps legal inner circle. Then theres Billy Long. The six-term ex-congressman was confirmed in June as IRS commissioner despite having once pushed to abolish the agency amid scrutiny over his ties to questionable tax-credit plans. He was recently ousted and said he will become ambassador to Iceland.That roster of loyalists is no accident. Over the past two decades, Missouri has moved from being a competitive bellwether state to a deep-red stronghold, with a political environment that rewards the kind of hard-line conservatism and culture-war ethos that Trump prizes. John Danforth, a Republican who served as Missouris attorney general from 1969 to 1976 and then as a U.S. senator until 1995, said the office has shifted dramatically from its core mission. Under him, he said, the job was to represent state agencies, handle every felony appeal, respond to legal opinion requests and manage litigation with a small staff. Asked about a move last year in which Bailey investigated a St. Louis-area school district after a student was beaten during school hours blaming its diversity policies and removal of resource officers for safety failures Danforth said, I wouldnt have done it.As the state has shifted right, many races are effectively decided in the primary. Candidates dont need to win over most voters, according to political experts and observers just the small, very political group that shows up for low-turnout, winner-take-all primaries. That favors hard-line candidates. Nowhere is that change clearer than in the attorney generals office.Bailey is a U.S. Army veteran who served two tours in Iraq as an armored cavalry officer. He started his career as an assistant Missouri attorney general, then worked as a prosecutor. He joined the governors office as deputy general counsel in 2019 and later served as general counsel to then-Gov. Mike Parson.His politicization of the attorney generals office follows a path blazed by two predecessors, Josh Hawley and Eric Schmitt, who each used relatively brief tenures as the states attorney general to launch themselves into the U.S. Senate. In Hawleys case, out-of-state political consultants were embedded in the office from his first weeks on the job, directing taxpayer-funded staff, shaping his policy rollouts and boosting his national profile ahead of his Senate run. Schmitt used the office to wage headline-grabbing legal fights, from suing China over COVID-19 to challenging pandemic restrictions, elevating his profile as he prepared his own Senate campaign. Neither Hawley nor Schmitt could be reached for comment.After Schmitt was elected to the Senate in November 2022, Parson announced that he would appoint Bailey to fill the vacancy. That set up a high-profile Republican primary last year against Scharf, a candidate with backing from the conservative establishment. Bailey won 63% of the vote and cruised to an easy general-election victory in November.Within a week, Bailey was interviewing with Trump for the job of U.S. attorney general in the new administration. With no Democrats holding statewide office and a GOP supermajority in the legislature, Bailey has turned his fire on Democratic officials in Missouris two largest cities. He pressured St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner to resign by filing a lawsuit to remove her from office that alleged willful neglect of duty and a failure to prosecute violent crimes, and he recently sought to remove St. Louis Sheriff Alfred Montgomery, accusing him of misconduct. Gardner repeatedly denied any wrongdoing before resigning; later she acknowledged misusing some public funds. Montgomery has denied wrongdoing and has refused to resign.Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas has also been a frequent target: Bailey threatened a Missouri Human Rights Act investigation into Lucas and his staff after a city-run social media account, responding to a speech by the Kansas City Chiefs football player Harrison Butker about women being homemakers, named the suburb where Butker lived. The city deleted the post and apologized. Bailey framed the post as discrimination against Christians. Last year, Lucas suggested the city could benefit from asylum-seeking immigrants joining the local workforce, then clarified that he meant immigrants who were in the U.S. legally. Bailey who had sued the Biden administration over what he called an illegal parole program for migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela accused Lucas of trying to involve Missouri businesses in a fundamentally unlawful program. He posted a letter on the social media platform X calling Lucas comments wildly irresponsible and said he was putting him on notice that it is a Class D felony to knowingly transport an illegal alien in the State of Missouri. Lucas responded in a statement then that Baileys letter was a political campaign press release with no legal effect. Its not effective lawyering, Lucas said in a recent interview. Its a whole new branch of lawyering that I, as a lawyer, didnt grow up knowing, which is: If you get a story out, who cares if you drag people through the mud?Bailey, on the other hand, has stepped up to defend Republican allies. His office intervened to defend three GOP state senators who were sued for false light and invasion of privacy after wrongly identifying a Kansas man as the shooter at a Super Bowl parade honoring Kansas Citys NFL team and falsely calling him an undocumented immigrant. Two of the senators called the lawsuits frivolous, while Bailey has argued the posts were protected by legislative immunity, as the senators were acting in their official capacity. Lawsuits against two of the officials, who are represented by the Missouri deputy solicitor general, a high-ranking lawyer in the attorney generals office, remain pending in federal court.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    UK Summers, and Houses, Are Getting Hotter
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    Federal Money Is a Lifeline for This Republican School District
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  • Theyre (Mostly) Good Dogs and Even Better Film Symbols
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    Mumbais Pigeon-Feeding Rules Arent Going Over Well
    The new rules led to clashes with the police and threats of hunger strikes by members of the Jain religious community, which believes in nonviolence against all creatures.
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    Arsenal or Chelsea to win Premier League, Estevao better than Gyokeres? Week 2 overreactions
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    Welcome to 'Milwaukee Community College': How the Brewers built a $115 million juggernaut
    As small-market Milwaukee rolls along with MLB's best record, everyone wants to know the Brew Crew's secret formula.
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    25 under 25: Clark, then who? Ranking the best young players
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    Wilson, Winston and Dart: Inside the reimagined high-profile Giants QB room
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    Floods and Landslides Kill Dozens on Pilgrimage Route in Kashmir
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    The New State Interventions
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    Van Gogh Museum in Fight With Dutch State That Threatens Its Future
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Flock Wants to Partner With Consumer Dashcam Company That Takes Trillions of Images a Month
    Flock, the surveillance company with automatic license plate reader (ALPR) cameras in thousands of communities around the U.S., is looking to integrate with a company that makes AI-powered dashcams placed inside peoples personal cars, multiple sources told 404 Media. The move could significantly increase the amount of data available to Flock, and in turn its law enforcement customers. 404 Media previously reported local police perform immigration-related Flock lookups for ICE, and on Monday that Customs and Border Protection had direct access to Flocks systems. In essence, a partnership between Flock and a dashcam company could turn private vehicles into always-on, roaming surveillance tools.Nexar, the dashcam company, already publicly publishes a live interactive map of photos taken from its dashcams around the U.S., in what the company describes as crowdsourced vision, showing the company is willing to leverage data beyond individual customers using the cameras to protect themselves in the event of an accident.Dash cams have evolved from a device for die-hard enthusiasts or large fleets, to a mainstream product. They are cameras on wheels and are at the crux of novel vision applications using edge AI, Nexars website says. The website adds Nexar customers drive 150 million miles a month, generating trillions of images.The news comes during a period of expansion for Flock. Earlier this month the company announced it would add AI to its products to let customers use natural language to surface data while investigating crimes. Flock also planned to use hacked data in a new product called Nova to help police jump from LPR to person. Flock scrapped those plans after 404 Media revealed them and internal pressure.Do you know anything else about Flock? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.Two sources described the Flock and Nexar partnership as an integration in the early stages. 404 Media granted the sources anonymity as they werent permitted to speak to the press. Flock told 404 Media in an email that it is exploring a relationship with Nexar, and that it currently does not have a product offering with them.Nexar sells a variety of dashcams for a few hundred dollars each, according to its website. Those cameras can provide a front, cabin, and rear view, and in some cases provide clear license plate capture with Full HD video. The cameras also record the vehicles precise GPS location. Nexar markets the dashcams to casual drivers, long-distance drivers, commuters, and rideshare drivers.It's like having eyes all around your vehicleperfect for anyone who wants complete situational awareness and security, Nexars website reads.Screenshots from Nexar's publicly available map.Broadly, people buy dashcams to record their own trips in case they get into a car accident, or if they are a rideshare driver to ensure the safety of themselves and their passengers. Some form of partnership with Flock, whose business is built on recording where vehicles, and by extension people, were at a specific point in time and then provide access to that data to law enforcement, could change that customer relationship.Nexars CityStream Live product already takes images captured by its users dashcams, publishes versions of them online, and uses AI to identify objects in them. That map displays photos related to things such as road hazards, no left turn and yield signs, and traffic cones, with the respective vehicles precise location at that time.Faces and license plates are blurred in that public facing map. Customers, such as fleet managers, autonomous vehicle companies, or public agencies, can then pay Nexar for access to the data. Nexars website says that data is sourced from 700,000 vehicles.At the moment, Flocks business is based on stationary cameras that communities or law enforcement agencies purchase and have installed in their neighborhoods. It is not clear how exactly any use of Nexar data by Flock would work, both in a technical and legal sense. Some states have laws restricting the use of ALPRs, for example.Other ALPR companies have used dashcams to collect license plate data for years. Digital Recognition Network (DRN), for example, is a private company that crowdsources license plate data through cameras installed in the vehicles of repo men. A private investigator previously demonstrated that tool to me and tracked a specific vehicle with the owners consent. It showed the car parked outside their house; in another state when the driver went to visit their family, and parked in other spots around their home city. DRNs sister company is Vigilant Solutions, a law enforcement contractor that sells the same technology to the government.A Nexar executive did not respond to a request for comment sent over LinkedIn. Nexar did not respond to emails sent to its media and marketing departments either.Jason Koebler contributed reporting.
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  • WWW.404MEDIA.CO
    Podcast: The Underground Trade of Car Hacking Tech
    We start this week with Josephs investigation into people selling custom patches for the Flipper Zero, a piece of hacking tech that car thieves can now use to break into a wide range of vehicles. After the break, Jason tells us about the new meta in AI slop: making 80s nostalgia videos. In the subscribers-only section, we all talk about Citizen, and how the app is pushing AI-written crime alerts without human intervention.Listen to the weekly podcast onApple Podcasts,Spotify, orYouTube. Become a paid subscriber for access to this episode's bonus content and to power our journalism.If you become a paid subscriber, check your inbox for an email from our podcast host Transistor for a link to the subscribers-only version! You can also add that subscribers feed to your podcast app of choice and never miss an episode that way. The email should also contain the subscribers-only unlisted YouTube link for the extended video version too. It will also be in the show notes in your podcast player. Inside the Underground Trade of Flipper Zero Tech to Break into Cars80s Nostalgia AI Slop Is Boomerfying the Masses for a Past That Never ExistedCitizen Is Using AI to Generate Crime Alerts With No Human Review. Its Making a Lot of MistakesVICE News Presents: Vigilante, Inc.
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  • WWW.LGBTQNATION.COM
    Federal road safety study interrupted after vandal destroys rainbow crosswalk
    A rainbow crosswalk in Columbus, Ohio, that was part of a federal road safety study has been vandalized. The defacement comes at a time when the current presidential administration has claimed that rainbow crosswalks contribute to motor vehicle crashes, even though a recent study says such crosswalks may actually decrease roadway accidents.On August 25, a Reddit social media post and calls to 311 (a non-emergency line for city services) reported that someone had splashed black paint across a rainbow-striped crosswalk in Columbus University District, The Columbus Dispatch reported. The vandal (or vandals) spattered black in each of the crosswalks individually colored panels. Related DeSantis administration paints over crosswalk a second time after protestors restored the rainbow But unlike other rainbow crosswalks in the nation, this one wasnt installed in support of the local LGBTQ+ community. Instead, the crosswalk was part of a national study by the Federal Highway Administration to evaluate the safety of crosswalk markings that differ from federal rules, said Randy Borntrager, deputy director of the Columbus Department of Public Service.Two local intersections were painted with rainbows for the study, another intersection had a brick pattern, and two others had linear crosswalk markings in white paint. Whether the city keeps its rainbow crosswalks depends partly on the studys results, Borntrager said. Never Miss a Beat Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights. Subscribe to our Newsletter today Three other regions in the U.S. are also involved in the study: Raleigh, North Carolina; Austin, Texas; and Washington, D.C.In July, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy urged governors to remove any political messages, artwork, and markings on intersections not directly related to pedestrian or driver safety. He wrote on social media, Taxpayers expect their dollars to fund safe streets, not rainbow crosswalks.Republican officials claim the crosswalks distract drivers, but data says otherwise. TheBloomberg Philanthropies 2022 Asphalt Art Safety Studyfound that crashes involving pedestrians or cyclists drop 50% at painted intersections.It also reported a 25% decrease in conflicts between drivers and pedestrians, a 27% increase in drivers immediately yielding to pedestrians, and a 38% decrease in pedestrians crossing when the walk signal was not lit at intersections involving public art. The data also revealed that injuries resulting from crashes drop 37% in painted intersections. Subscribe to theLGBTQ Nation newsletterand be the first to know about the latest headlines shaping LGBTQ+ communities worldwide.
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    23 LGBTQ+ celebrities who found their way onto Sesame Street
    Fans of the long-running childrens educational TV show Sesame Street have often wondered whether the shows roommate couple, Bert and Ernie, are gay. But perhaps theyve overlooked the queerest thing about the show: the many LGBTQ+ celebrity guest stars.Sesame Street has demonstrated LGBTQ+ inclusion over the years: a gay man helped develop some of the shows most beloved muppets, the show introduced a married gay couple with a daughter, and also celebrated Pride month 2023 on social media. But lets take a look at the queer guest stars and their lessons about life and learning. Related Sesame Street has been celebrating Pride all month long & it is adorable Never Miss a Beat Subscribe to our newsletter to stay ahead of the latest LGBTQ+ political news and insights. Subscribe to our Newsletter today
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