Philadelphia city workers strike after contract talks failNew Foto - Philadelphia city workers strike after contract talks fail

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Nearly 10,000 city workers in Philadelphia who collect trash, answer 911 calls, maintain city pools and perform other jobs went on strike Tuesday after contract negotiations broke down. District Council 33 President Greg Boulware said the city hadn't agreed to a high enough wage increase,WPVI-TVreported. Mayor Cherelle Parkersaid the city would suspend residential trash collection, close some city pools and shorten recreation center hours, but vowed to keep the city running. Police and firefighters are not on strike. Parker, a pro-labor Democrat, promised that Fourth of July celebrations in thenation's birthplacewould go on as usual. "Keep your holiday plans. Don't leave the city," she said at a Monday afternoon news conference that followed hours of last-minute negotiations. City officials urged residents to be patient and not hang up should they need to call either 911 or the city's non-emergency helpline. They said they would open drop-off sites for residential trash. Parker said she had offered raises that amount to 13% over her four-year term and added a fifth step to the pay scale to align with other unionized workers. District Council 33 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees is the largest of four unions representing city workers. "We believe it's a fair offer and still fiscally responsible for the people of this city," said Parker, who took office last year. Union leaders, in their initialcontract proposal, asked for 8% annual raises each year of the three-year contract, along with cost-of-living hikes and bonuses of up to $5,000 for those who worked through the pandemic. The union also asked the city to pay the full cost of employee health care, or $1,700 per person per month. "District Council 33's members contribute as much blood, sweat and tears as does anyone else," they said in a demand letter. "We all make the city work. Our contract must reflect that reality." In November, thecity transit systemaverted a strike when the parties agreed to a one-year contract with 5% raises.

Philadelphia city workers strike after contract talks fail

Philadelphia city workers strike after contract talks fail PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Nearly 10,000 city workers in Philadelphia who collect trash,...
Thailand's king approves new Cabinet for coalition government shaken by leaked phone callNew Foto - Thailand's king approves new Cabinet for coalition government shaken by leaked phone call

BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand's king approved the appointments of new Cabinet members Tuesday in the coalition government shaken by a major party's departure over the prime minister'sleaked phone callwith Cambodia's former leader. The reshuffle came during speculation over whether the Constitutional Court will take a petition accusing Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra of a serious breach of ethics over the leaked call. The court could suspend her from office pending the investigation. Paetongtarn said she would accept and follow the process although she didn't want to see her work interrupted. "If you ask me whether I'm worried, I am," she told reporters Monday. The endorsement of her new Cabinet by King Maha Vajiralongkorn was published in the government gazette. The reshuffle replaced former Deputy Prime Minister Anutin Charvirakul, leader of the Bhumjaithai Party, which had held several Cabinet positions but left the coalition over the leaked call. Anutin was replaced by Phumtham Wechayachai, who had been defense minister for the past year and also will lead the Interior Ministry. The Defense Ministry post was left blank, with the deputy minister becoming the acting minister instead. Paetongtarn took the position of culture minister. She said she wanted to promote Thai culture on a global scale. Before she became prime minister, Paetongtarn had promoted Thailand's "soft power," highlighting its food, culture and sports. The Constitutional Court last yearremoved her predecessorover a breach of ethics. Thailand's courts, especially the Constitutional Court, are viewed as a bulwark of the royalist establishment, which has used them and nominally independent agencies such as the Election Commission to cripple or sink political opponents. Paetongtarn also faces investigations over an alleged breach of ethics by the Office of the National Anti-Corruption Commission, whose decision could also lead to her removal. Outrage over the call mostly revolved around Paetongtarn's comments toward an outspoken regional army commander and her perceived attempts to appease Cambodian Senate President Hun Sen to easetensions at the border. Thousands of conservative, nationalist-leaning protestersrallied in central Bangkokon Saturday to demand Paetongtarn's resignation.

Thailand's king approves new Cabinet for coalition government shaken by leaked phone call

Thailand's king approves new Cabinet for coalition government shaken by leaked phone call BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand's king approved th...
6 killed in a crash of a small plane in Ohio, officials sayNew Foto - 6 killed in a crash of a small plane in Ohio, officials say

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) — Four adults from one family heading out on vacation were killed along with their pilot and co-pilot when a small plane crashed minutes after taking off from an Ohio airport, officials said. The twin-engine Cessna 441 turboprop crashed near Youngstown-Warren Regional Airport on Sunday morning, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. There were no survivors, Western Reserve Port Authority Executive Director Anthony Trevena said at a news conference. The agency owns the airport. Agency records show the plane was registered to Meander Air LLC of Warren, Ohio. Trumbull County Coroner Lawrence D'Amico on Monday identified the victims as the pilot, Joseph Maxin, 63; co-pilot Timothy Blake, 55; and passengers Veronica Weller, 68; her husband, James Weller, 67; their son, John Weller, 36, and his wife, Maria Weller, 34. Blake and the passengers were all Hubbard residents, while Maxin lived in Canfield. D'Amico said the family — which owns steel manufacturing plants in the Youngstown-Warren area — was heading for a vacation in Montana. Maxin was the port authority's director of compliance and also a former assistant prosecutor for the Mahoning County Prosecutor's Office. A statement issued by the authority called Maxin "a selfless public servant and pilot (who) dedicated his life to serving the Mahoning Valley." The plane crashed in heavy woods, making access to the site difficult, Howland Township Fire Chief Raymond Pace said. "This is an extremely tragic situation, but it could have been worse," Pace said, noting that there were three houses near where the plane crashed. Publicly available flight tracking data showed that the plane's destination was Bozeman, Montana, said Michael Hillman, president of aviation company JETS FBO Network. "These were the best of the best in terms of the folks here at the field, as well as the pilots. I can't say enough about them," Hillman said at the news conference. "I'd give anything to rewind the day and take them to breakfast instead." The FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board are investigating but have not speculated on a possible cause. They have asked residents to contact them if they have surveillance video showing the crash or other information that may be relevant to the investigation.

6 killed in a crash of a small plane in Ohio, officials say

6 killed in a crash of a small plane in Ohio, officials say YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) — Four adults from one family heading out on vacation were...
Mexican authorities discover 20 bodies, some decapitated, on Sinaloa highwayNew Foto - Mexican authorities discover 20 bodies, some decapitated, on Sinaloa highway

Prosecutors in northern Mexico's Sinaloa state are investigating the discovery of 20 male bodies with gunshot wounds – including five that were decapitated – on a bridge over a federal highway. Local media reported that a message was also found hanging over the bridge in Culiacán. The prosecutor's office told CNN it had no comment on the message but would investigate. Sinaloa Secretary General Feliciano Castro Meléndez called the case a "regrettable situation" and said it was "part of the violence and insecurity that Sinaloa is experiencing." Since 2024, Culiacán has been the epicenter of armed clashes between rival factions of the Sinaloa cartel. Two of the most prominent factions are La Mayiza, which is loyal to the cartel's alleged co-founder Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, and Los Chapitos, which is loyal to the sons of former drug kingpin Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán. The violence in Sinaloa escalated after Zambada and one of El Chapo's sons, Joaquín Guzmán López, werearrestedlast year by US authorities in El Paso, Texas. An official familiar with the operation told CNN at the time that Guzmán López had organized his arrest along with that of Zambada by luring him on a flight to examine a piece of land he thought was in Mexico. Instead, the plane landed in El Paso, Texas, where federal agents arrested them both. Former Mexican Secretary of Security Rosa Icela Rodriguez said Guzmán López had reachedan agreementwith one of his brothers, Ovidio Guzmán López, who is in US custody, "So that they would go to the United States to surrender." However, an attorney for Ovidio told CNN that Rodriguez's claim was "a complete and utter fabrication." An attorney for El Mayo said he "neither surrendered nor negotiated any terms with the US government" and described the flight to the US as a violent kidnapping. Ovidio had been extradited to the US in September 2023 to face drug trafficking charges over his alleged role in the Sinaloa cartel. Days after his extradition, he pleaded not guilty to the charges in a US court. But in May, he reached an agreement to change his plea, according to a court document reviewed by CNN. Later that month, several members of his familyentered the USas part of an apparent "negotiation or plea deal opportunity provided by the (US) Department of Justice itself," Mexico's Security Secretary Omar García Harfuch said. Two other sons of El Chapo, Ivan Archivaldo and Jesus Alfredo Guzmán Salazar, are still at large. The US has accused them of leading large-scale drug trafficking operations for the cartel and has issued $10 million bounties for information leading to each of their arrests. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Mexican authorities discover 20 bodies, some decapitated, on Sinaloa highway

Mexican authorities discover 20 bodies, some decapitated, on Sinaloa highway Prosecutors in northern Mexico's Sinaloa state are investig...
Iran foreign minister doubtful talks with U.S. will resume quicklyNew Foto - Iran foreign minister doubtful talks with U.S. will resume quickly

President Trump recently indicateddiplomatic talks with Iran could restartas soon as this week, although the White House noted no talks were officially scheduled. AfterU.S. airstrikes on some of Iran's nuclear facilities, followed days later by aceasefireto end what Mr. Trump called the12-day war between Iran and Israel, Iran's foreign minister seemed less certain about a speedy return to diplomacy. "I don't think negotiations will restart as quickly as that," Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CBS News through a translator. "In order for us to decide to reengage, we will have to first ensure that America will not revert back to targeting us in a military attack during the negotiations," Araghchi said in his first interview with an American media outlet inside Iran since the bombings. "And I think with all these considerations, we still need more time." However, Araghchi also insisted, "The doors of diplomacy will never slam shut." Mr. Trump said during a televised address following the American strikes on June 21 that Iran's Fordo nuclear enrichment site and the Isfahan and Natanz nuclear facilities had been "completely and totally obliterated." Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said during a news conference, "Initial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction." Rafael Mariano Grossi, the head of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog agencytold CBS Newsthe U.S. strikes caused "severe damage, but it's not total damage." Grossi said Iran could likely start enriching uranium again within a few months. "One cannot obliterate the technology and science for enrichment through bombings," Araghchi said. "If there is this will on our part, and the will exists in order to once again make progress in this industry, we will be able to expeditiously repair the damages and make up for the lost time." When asked if Iran intends to continue enriching uranium, Araghchi said the country's "peaceful nuclear program has turned into a matter of national pride and glory. We have also gone through 12 days of imposed war, therefore, people will not easily back down from enrichment." After 12 days of missile exchanges between Iran and Israel, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khameneideclared victory, writing on social media, "I offer my congratulations on the victory over the fallacious Zionist regime," andclaimingIsrael's government was "practically knocked out and crushed under the blows of the Islamic Republic." Mr. Trumpresponded on social media, calling Khamenei's declaration a lie, saying Iran had been "decimated" and claiming he prevented both the U.S. and Israeli militaries from assassinating the supreme leader. Mr. Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are set to meet at the White House next Monday. Mr. Trump has also indicated he could order strikes on Iran again should it resume enriching uranium beyond a certain level. Araghchi questioned the legality of such action and said Iran was prepared for more attacks. "We showed and proved during this 12-day imposed war that we have the ability to defend ourselves, and we will continue to do so should any aggression be launched against us," he said. Saving money vs. saving lives The true cost of the Senate spending bill New Tennessee laws make it illegal to shelter undocumented immigrants

Iran foreign minister doubtful talks with U.S. will resume quickly

Iran foreign minister doubtful talks with U.S. will resume quickly President Trump recently indicateddiplomatic talks with Iran could restar...
USDA grant cuts leave food groups, farmers scramblingNew Foto - USDA grant cuts leave food groups, farmers scrambling

Four days a week, Maile Auterson and one of her employees drive hundreds of miles across Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas to deliver fresh produce to food deserts. Auterson's nonprofit, Springfield Community Gardens, helps underservedschools, food pantries and senior centers. One center in Ava, Missouri, is the only place for many where they can get a hot meal. Springfield Community Gardens isone of many organizationsthat relied on grants from the United States Department of Agriculture to distribute produce to schools and low-income communities through two pandemic-era federal programs. They provided about $1 billion in funding to schools andfood banksto buy food directly from local farms, ranchers and producers.But in March, the USDA abruptlycanceled the programs, calling the decision a "return to long-term, fiscally responsible initiatives." Now, Auterson says, "some of the most vulnerable people" are without adequate access to food, including children and senior citizens. "We are not past the effects of the pandemic," Auterson added. The impact of the recent cuts are also trickling down — aid groups used USDA grants to buy food from small farms like the one owned by Liz Graznak. "It was devastating. I don't know those families, but I know those families are desperate for the food that they were getting," Graznak said. Graznak said the grant programs were "huge" for her farm. She rented an extra 16 acres to harvest more onions, garlic and peppers to keep up with demand. "A quarter of my annual sales were going to those programs, and when they said that that money is gone, I thought, 'Oh my god, well now what do I do?'" Graznak said. Nationwide, more than 8,000 small farmers were supported by the programs. Advocates warn the cuts could ripple through food deserts, rural communities and urban areas where access to healthy food is miles away. With food insecurity in Missouri above the national average at 15%, according to Feeding America, local farmers help bridge the gap. Auterson says they will still be able to feed people, but "not nearly as many." Saving money vs. saving lives The true cost of the Senate spending bill New Tennessee laws make it illegal to shelter undocumented immigrants

USDA grant cuts leave food groups, farmers scrambling

USDA grant cuts leave food groups, farmers scrambling Four days a week, Maile Auterson and one of her employees drive hundreds of miles acro...
Judge again delays Abrego Garcia's release from Tennessee jail over deportation concernsNew Foto - Judge again delays Abrego Garcia's release from Tennessee jail over deportation concerns

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) —Kilmar Abrego Garciawill stay in jail for now over concerns from his lawyers that he could be deported if he's released to await his trial on human smuggling charges, a federal judge in Tennessee ruled Monday. Abrego Garcia's attorneyshad asked the judgeto delay his release because of what they described as "contradictory statements" by PresidentDonald Trump's administration over what would happen to the Salvadoran national. The lawyers wrote in a brief to the court Friday that "we cannot put any faith in any representation made on this issue" by the Justice Department, adding that the "irony of this request is not lost on anyone." Justice Department spokesman Chad Gilmartin told The Associated Press on Thursday that the departmentintends to try Abrego Garcia on the smuggling chargesbefore it moves to deport him, stating that Abrego Garcia "has been charged with horrific crimes." Hours earlier, Justice Department attorney Jonathan Guynn told a federal judge in Maryland that the U.S. government plans to deportAbrego Garciato a "third country" that isn't El Salvador. Guynn said there was no timeline for the deportation plans. Abrego Garcia's attorneys on Friday cited Guynn's comments as a reason to fear he would be deported "immediately." Abrego Garcia, a construction worker who had been living in Maryland, became a flashpoint over Trump's hardlineimmigrationpolicies when he was mistakenly deported to his native El Salvador in March. Facing mounting pressure and a Supreme Court order, Trump's Republican administration returned him this month to face the smuggling charges, which his attorneys have called "preposterous." Abrego Garcia's attorneys have accused the Trump administration of bringing Abrego Garcia back "to convict him in the court of public opinion" with the intention of deporting him before he has a chance to defend himself at trial. "In a just world, he would not seek to prolong his detention further," his attorneys wrote Friday. U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes in Nashville ruled June 22 that federal prosecutors failed to show that Abrego Garcia was a flight risk or a danger to the community. During a court hearing June 25, Holmes set specific conditions for Abrego Garcia's release that included him living with his brother, a U.S. citizen, in Maryland. But she held off on releasing him over concerns that prosecutors can't prevent ICE from deporting him. Acting U.S. Attorney Rob McGuire told the judge he lacks jurisdiction over U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, stating he has no way to prevent Abrego Garcia's deportation. Abrego Garcia's attorneys have asked the judge to delay his release until a July 16 court hearing, which will consider a request by prosecutors to revoke Abrego Garcia's release order while he awaits trial. Abrego Garciapleaded not guiltyon June 13 to smuggling charges. The Department of Homeland Security, which includes ICE, did not respond directly to a question from The Associated Press on Friday regarding its plans for Abrego Garcia. A DHS spokesperson, Tricia McLaughlin, said in a statement that "he will never go free on American soil." When the Trump administration deported Abrego Garcia in March, it violated a U.S. immigration judge's order in 2019 that barred his expulsion to his native country. The immigration judge had found that Abrego Garcia faced a credible threat from gangs that had terrorized him and his family. The human smuggling charges pending against Abrego Garcia stem from a 2022 traffic stop for speeding in Tennessee, during which Abrego Garcia was driving a vehicle with nine passengers without luggage. ___ Finley reported from Norfolk, Virginia.

Judge again delays Abrego Garcia’s release from Tennessee jail over deportation concerns

Judge again delays Abrego Garcia's release from Tennessee jail over deportation concerns NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) —Kilmar Abrego Garciawill...
FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker schemeNew Foto - FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker scheme

US law enforcement has arrested a New Jersey man and searched stashes of laptops in 16 states in a sweeping crackdown on North Korean efforts to use remote tech workers to covertly fund their weapons programs, the Justice Department said Monday. The scheme saw North Korean tech workers – with the help of people in the US, China and elsewhere – get hired at more than 100 US companies, prosecutors said. In one case, the North Koreans stole "export-controlled US military technology"; in another, they stole the equivalent of $740,000 from a Georgia-based tech firm, according to the Justice Department. It's the latest in a series of national security cases that, FBI officials say, represents just a snapshot of North Korea's efforts to use tens of thousands of overseas workers to raise revenue for its sanctions-saddled regime. Americans are emerging as key players in the alleged activity. Just last year, prosecutorschargedan Arizona woman in a scheme that compromised the identities of 60 Americans and affected 300 US companies, including a major national TV network, a "premier" Silicon Valley tech company, and an "iconic" American car maker. A few months later, the FBIarrested a Tennessee manwho allegedly helped North Korean workers pose as a US citizen as part of an effort to get the North Koreans jobs at US and British tech firms. In one of the cases announced Monday, prosecutors allege that several individuals inside the US, including one man from New Jersey, ran so-called laptop farms by logging into more than 100 organizations' company-issued laptops so that foreign IT workers could trick those companies into believing the workers were living in the US. The foreign IT workers then obtained sensitive information from those companies' servers, the department said. One of those companies is an unnamed California-based defense contractor that specializes in developing AI-powered equipment and technologies. Six Chinese nationals and two Taiwanese nationals are also charged in the scheme and remain at large, according to the Justice Department. In the second case, prosecutors allege that four North Korean nationals conspired to steal more than $900,000 in virtual currency from one company based in the US and another in Serbia. The North Koreans then laundered that money through foreign accounts, the department alleged. Those four people also remain at large. For years, North Korean workers have used fraudulent identities and sometimes passed interview screenings to infiltrate American companies big and small. A previous CNNinvestigationfound that the founder of a California-based cryptocurrency startup had unwittingly paid tens of thousands of dollars to a North Korean engineer. The entrepreneur was unaware of the situation until the FBI notified him, he said. The schemes have touched other parts of American culture. North Korean illustrators and graphic designers appear to have helped produce work for US animation studios unbeknownst to those companies, independent researcherstoldCNN last year. The researchers discovered a trove of cartoon sketches on an open computer server on the North Korean portion of the internet. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker scheme

FBI arrests one man, searches laptops in 16 states in crackdown on North Korean tech-worker scheme US law enforcement has arrested a New Jer...
Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de AraguaNew Foto - Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua

Immigrationand administration lawyers on Monday battled over whether PresidentDonald Trumpcan use an 18th century wartime act against a Venezuelan gang in a case that is likely to ultimately be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. The attorneys sparred before a three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, the latest step in a tangled legal battle over Trump's March invocation of theAlien Enemies Act of 1798against theTren de Araguagang. The law has only previously been used during World Wars I and II and the War of 1812. ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt told the three-judge panel that Trump's use of it is inappropriate. "This has only been invoked three times in major, major wars, and now it's being invoked in connection with a gang," Gelernt said. Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign, arguing for the administration, said that courts cannot second-guess a president's determination that the U.S. faces a threat from abroad and requires extraordinary measures to protect itself. He noted that the only time the high court weighed in on the act was in a case that dates from after fighting in Europe ended in World War II, when the court said it could not second-guess then-President Harry Truman's assertion that suspected Nazis should still be held under the act because the war was still continuing. "The president is due the utmost deference" in matters of foreign affairs and security, Ensign said. Trump's invocation has already been twice before the nation's highest court on more technical issues. First,the court foundthat those accused of being TdA members deserved a "reasonable" amount of time to challenge that designation in court, but that their deportations could only be challenged in the locations they were held. That eliminated a national bar against deportations under the act issued by a federal judge in Washington, who later foundthe administration possibly committed contemptwhen itdisregarded his ordersand continued to fly some held under the AEA to a prison in El Salvador. Then, after the ACLU and its allies began filing suits all around the country and winning rulings barring deportations under the measure, the high court stepped in a second time. In April it issuedan unusual post-midnight rulingstopping the administration from deporting people from a slice of north Texas where there was yet no active ruling against removal. Asmultiple lower court judgesfound the AEA couldn't be used against a gang, the high court directed the 5th Circuit to consider the issue and how much time those held should have to challenge their designation. The government, which initially provided minimal notice, now says the standard should be seven days to file an appeal. The ACLU argued for 30 days, the amount of time given to suspected Nazis held during World War II. The panel that heard Monday's arguments was comprised of one judge appointed by Trump, one by former President George W. Bush and one by Biden. Whatever it rules can be appealed to either the entire 5th circuit — one of the most conservative federal appeals courts in the country — or directly to the high court. Trump has argued that TdA is acting at the behest of Venezuela's government. The Act allows its use to combat either an "invasion" or a "predatory incursion." But the ACLU argues that the connection between the gang and the Venezuelan government is tangential at best, and that an assessment by 17 different intelligence agencies found little coordination between TdA and the government in Caracas. Gelernt contended that, by the standards laid out by the administration, the AEA could have been used against the mafia or any other criminal organization with tangential ties to other countries that has operated in the United States over the past 200 years.

Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua

Judges consider whether Trump can use wartime act against Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua Immigrationand administration lawyers on Monday bat...
About 60,000 units of multivitamins recalled for risks to children. See impacted items.New Foto - About 60,000 units of multivitamins recalled for risks to children. See impacted items.

iHerbissued arecallon June 26 for about 60,000 units of California Gold Nutrition Iron Supplements due to a potential risk of child poisoning. Therecall, posted by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, states that iHerb recalled daily prenatal and women's multivitamins for not containing child-resistant packaging, which is required for products that contain iron under thePoison Prevention Packaging Act. No deaths have been associated with the recall, an iHerb spokesperson told USA TODAY on June 30. Here's what to know about the recalled products, which were sold by online retailers. Can't access the chart above in your browser? Visitpublic.flourish.studio/visualisation/24010518/. The California Gold Nutrition Daily Prenatal Multivitamin bottles are white with a white lid and gold border label. The bottles contain 60 fish gelatin soft gel dietary supplements, the recall states. The California Gold Nutrition Women's Multivitamin and Women's 50+ Multivitamin have dark purple packaging with a gold border label. Both products contain 60 capsules in blister foils, according to the recall. The recalled products were sold online by Amazon, Walmart, Target and other websites from January 2019 through April 2025 for between $8-18, the recall states. Consumers who have purchased the recalled products should immediately secure them out of sight and reach of children. Then contact iHerb at ProductRecall@iherb.com or 888-430-4770 for a refund and information on how to safely discard the product. The recall number is25-354. To receive a refund, email ProductRecall@iherb.com with the subject line "Iron Supplement Refund" and provide the following information: Name Product name(s) and quanity Evidence of destruction: Initial and date each product package and include a photo with your initials and the date visible Optional: Provide the order number associated with the purchases, which can be found by logging into a customer's account and viewing "Order History" iHerb is also contacting all known purchasers directly, the recall states. Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her atgcross@usatoday.com. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Vitamin recall: About 60K women's and prenatal multivitamins recalled

About 60,000 units of multivitamins recalled for risks to children. See impacted items.

About 60,000 units of multivitamins recalled for risks to children. See impacted items. iHerbissued arecallon June 26 for about 60,000 units...
ICE detains more non-criminals, new data analysis showsNew Foto - ICE detains more non-criminals, new data analysis shows

Detentions of immigrants without criminal histories have risen sharply since May amid a broader push to expand immigration enforcement, according to a CBS News analysis of data from the Department of Homeland Security. White House adviser Stephen Miller announced a push for a new, higher target of 3,000 arrests daily in late May. From the first week of May to the first week of June, new ICE detentions of people facing only civil immigration charges, such as entering the country without authorization, rose by over 250%. President Trump has repeatedly said his administration is focusing deportation efforts on criminals. Until recently, federal agents working to enforce his orders have detained more immigrants with criminal convictions or pending criminal charges than those without them each week, the data shows. But even among those with criminal convictions — about 40% of detainees since Jan. 20 — the majority were not for violent offenses. Overall, roughly 8% of all detainees had been convicted of violent crimes, CBS News found. "What we're doing is we're really going after the criminal aliens, of which we have plenty to work with," Mr. Trump said at an event promotinghis legislative packageon Thursday. At a White House news conference with the president Friday, Attorney General Pam Bondi was asked about enforcement and said, "The violent criminals in our country are the priority now." However, top White House officials, including "border czar" Tom Homan, have also said anyone who entered the country illegally could face removal. Homantold CBS Newsin May that while ICE would prioritize public safety and national security threats, "If you're in the country illegally, you're not off the table," adding, "It's a violation of law to enter this country illegally." More than 97,000 people have been detained over Mr. Trump's first five months in office, CBS News' analysis found, while ICE arrests, which do not always result in detentions,topped 100,000earlier this month. Arecord 59,000 peoplewere currently being held in ICE detention as of June 23 — nearly half of them with no criminal record, CBS News reported last week. The data CBS News analyzed for this report comes from ICE and was released to theDeportation Data Project, a group of academics and lawyers who collect and publish immigration data. The group sued to obtain the data after filing a Freedom of Information Act request. ICE did not respond to a request for comment. Since the first week of June, the number detained with only civil immigration charges was double that of individuals with criminal convictions. This represents an abrupt reversal from the first four months of Mr. Trump's second term, when the number of immigration detainees with a criminal record outnumbered those detained on civil immigration charges. The new target of 3,000 daily arrests announced by Miller is a sharp increase from the the 660 daily arrests made on average during Mr. Trump's first 100 days in office. Out of the more than 97,700 people ICE has detained since Mr. Trump took office, more than 39,500, or about 40%, had criminal convictions. Of those, nearly 23,000 were removed as of mid-June. Among those with criminal convictions, about 8,200 — 8.4% — had convictions for violent crimes, including 478 convicted of homicide and about 6,800 convicted of assault or sexual assault. Violent offenses, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, include crimes that are "threatening, attempting, or actually using physical force against a person." Additionally, about 5,000 had drug-related convictions. Traffic-related offenses made up the largest category of crimes among those with prior convictions, with driving under the influence of alcohol the single most common violation. In aninterviewwith CBS News's Major Garrett in May, Homan blamed "sanctuary city" policies for leading to more arrests of those without criminal convictions. "When sanctuary cities force us into the neighborhood to find that bad guy, many times that person is with others that are illegally in the country but may not be a criminal target," he said. "Well, they're going to go too." Homan hascalledthese "collateral arrests." People without criminal convictions are also easier targets for removal, said Ariel Ruiz Soto, a senior policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank. That's because they tend to be easier to find and more concentrated in one place, he added. "It requires significantly more resources to go after one person who may be armed and dangerous as opposed to going outside a Home Depot and trying to gather a larger number of people," he told CBS News. ACBS News pollcompleted in early June indicates that mass deportation of non-criminals is unpopular among Americans. The poll found that Americans who believe Mr. Trump's deportation efforts are focused on dangerous criminals support those efforts. But among those who do not think criminals were the focus, support dropped dramatically. Heightened ICE activity has sparkedprotestsacross the country in recent weeks, especially in Los Angeles, where Mr. Trump called in the National Guard in response. California's Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsomaccusedthe administration of "indiscriminately targeting hardworking immigrant families, regardless of their roots or risk." Some Republican elected officials have also expressed concern. Six GOP members of Congress wrote aletterto ICE acting director Todd Lyons requesting that ICE reveal how many convicted criminals have been deported since January. "Every minute that we spend pursuing an individual with a clean record is a minute less that we dedicate to apprehending terrorists or cartel operatives," they wrote. Ruiz Soto, of the Migration Policy Institute, told CBS News that based on Homan's statements on immigration enforcement, he isn't surprised that detentions are predominantly non-criminals. "There's been a disconnect from the beginning about the rhetoric from President Trump that seems to emphasize a focus on violent and the 'worst of the worst' criminals compared to what his cabinet and DHS has been saying from Day One," he said. "When you look at the numbers it's very clear that has not been the case since the beginning." Saving money vs. saving lives Woman who refused Trump pardon for Jan. 6 riot speaks out Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont on Trump budget bill, Zohran Mamdani

ICE detains more non-criminals, new data analysis shows

ICE detains more non-criminals, new data analysis shows Detentions of immigrants without criminal histories have risen sharply since May ami...
Jewish woman, 82, dies from injuries suffered in Boulder terror attackNew Foto - Jewish woman, 82, dies from injuries suffered in Boulder terror attack

A Colorado woman has died from injuries suffered in thefiery antisemetic terror attack in Boulder. Karen Diamond, 82, died June 25 and was privately buried with her family in attendance, according to authorities and members of her synagogue, Boulder's Bonai Shalom. Authorities say Diamond was among a group of protesters raising awareness for Israeli hostages held in Gaza. Prosecutors announced after her death that they wereadding state-level first-degree murder chargesagainst the suspect.The crime has shaken the city's Jewish community amid astring of antisemitic attacks nationally. "There are no words to express the pain of this horrific loss of our beloved member and friend," Rabbi Marc Solowaywrote in announcing Diamond's death, which was made public June 30.  "We will need to support each other as we process this loss." In a statement, Boulder District Attorney Michael Dougherty called Diamond's death "horrific." "Part of what makes Colorado special is that people come together in response to a tragedy; I know that the communitywill continue to unitein supporting the Diamond family and all the victims of this attack," he said. In addition to the new charges of first-degree-murder, prosecutors announced June 30 that they have added 66 state-level counts against Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, who also faces federal hate crime charges. Soliman, a father of five who was an Uber driver, remains jailed. Federal officials said Soliman was living in the United States after overstaying his visa. Police said Soliman, who is Muslim, confessed to targeting the "Run for their Lives" walk on Boulder's Pearl Street pedestrian mall over what he felt was participants' support for Israel's military actions in Gaza. The weekly walk, which drew Jewish supporters, was focused on the return of hostages taken by Hamas after its militants raided Israel in October 2023. Police said he yelled "Free Palestine" during the attack. Soliman now faces state charges for 29 victims in the attack, 13 of whom suffered physical injuries, along with animal cruelty charges in connection with a dog that was hurt. Federal prosecutors did not immediately announce whether they would be adding further charges. Police said Soliman planned his attack for more than a year and arrived in Boulder after driving from his home in Colorado Springs, stopping along the way to buy gasoline, glass bottles, a weed sprayer and flowers to provide a disguise. Soloway, who leads the Bonai Shalom congregation, asked the public to respect the Diamond family's privacy "under these awful and distressing circumstances. … This event and the tragic loss of someone who has given so much of herself over the years to the Bonai community and beyond, has impacted us all and we are sad and horrified." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jewish woman dies from injuries suffered in Boulder terror attack

Jewish woman, 82, dies from injuries suffered in Boulder terror attack

Jewish woman, 82, dies from injuries suffered in Boulder terror attack A Colorado woman has died from injuries suffered in thefiery antiseme...
U.S. revokes U.K. band's visas over anti-Israel chant at GlastonburyNew Foto - U.S. revokes U.K. band's visas over anti-Israel chant at Glastonbury

London— The BBC has said it regrets not pulling down its live stream of a performance at the Glastonbury music festival over the weekend that included what the broadcaster calls "utterly unacceptable" chants againstIsrael's military. The taxpayer-funded BBC said in a statement Monday that it regrets not cutting short its live streaming signal after punk-rap duo Bob Vylan started leading a chant of "Death, death to the IDF," during their Saturday performance, referring to the Israel Defense Forces. "The BBC respects freedom of expression but stands firmly against incitement to violence," thestatementfrom the broadcaster said. "The antisemitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable and have no place on our airwaves... The [BBC broadcasting] team were dealing with a live situation but with hindsight we should have pulled the stream during the performance. We regret this did not happen." The BBC, which is CBS News' partner network in the U.K., quickly acknowledged that the language used on Saturday was "deeply offensive," but the network was criticized — including by Prime Minister Keir Starmer and members of his cabinet —— for not reacting more quickly after the chant started. Glastonbury festival's organizers also condemned the chant in a statement, saying: "Their chants very much crossed a line and we are urgently reminding everyone involved in the production of the festival that there is no place at Glastonbury for antisemitism, hate speech or incitement to violence." The reaction from the Trump administration appeared to be significantly harsher, with Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landausaying in a social media poston Monday that U.S. entry visas already issued to Bob Vylan's members had been revoked "in light of their hateful tirade at Glastonbury, including leading the crowd in death chants." The band's website shows more than a dozen scheduled tour dates in the U.S., from coast to coast, starting in late October. "Foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country," Landau said in the post. On Sunday, Bob Vylan posted a lengthy statement on theirInstagrampage, with the caption: "I said what I said." The duo, who use stage names and keep their identities anonymous, said their message was aimed at younger generations, whom they said should be shown how to fight for their own futures. "Let us display to them loudly and visibly the right thing to do when we want and need change," the band said. "Let them see us marching in the streets, campaigning on ground level, organizing online and shouting about it on any and every stage that we are offered." Local police have launched an investigation into the chants to determine whether any criminal offenses may have been committed. Glastonbury is a five-day music festival that takes place on a farm in the southwest of England. It is one of the largest music festivals anywhere in the world, drawing more than 200,000 ticketholders, and it generally takes place every other year as the organizers give the farm fields time to recover from the impact of so many revelers. The event is hosted and organized by the Eavis family, who still own the farm, and has been running for about 55 years. Bob Vylan's performance preceded that of Northern Irish rappers Kneecap, whose set the BBC did not air live due to previous instances at the group's concerts involving alleged comments supporting Hamas and Hezbollah andcalling for the death of Conservative party lawmakers. Kneecap's members have insisted that they "do not, and have never, supported Hamas or Hezbollah." They sent "heartfelt apologies" to the families of two British lawmakers who were murdered in recent years after their remarks about Conservative parliamentarians. Video shows Arizona police rescuing baby left alone for days Saving money vs. saving lives View from inside Iran after Israeli and U.S. strikes, and what could come next

U.S. revokes U.K. band's visas over anti-Israel chant at Glastonbury

U.S. revokes U.K. band's visas over anti-Israel chant at Glastonbury London— The BBC has said it regrets not pulling down its live strea...
France's Macron calls tariffs imposed by powerful countries a form of 'blackmail'New Foto - France's Macron calls tariffs imposed by powerful countries a form of 'blackmail'

(Reuters) -French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday that tariffs levied by powerful countries were often a form of "blackmail" rather than instruments to rebalance trade. His comments during a speech at the International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, Spain, came with the European Union negotiating a trade deal with the United States ahead of a July 9 deadline, though he did not specifically refer to the United States or U.S. President Donald Trump. "We need to restore freedom and equity to international trade, much more than barriers and tariffs, which are devised by the strongest, and which are often used as instruments of blackmail, not at all as instruments of rebalancing," Macron said. He also urged support - and a rethinking - of the World Trade Organization to bring it in line with goals to fight inequality and climate change. "Bringing back a trade war and tariffs at this moment in the life of the planet is an aberration, especially when I see the tariffs that are being imposed on countries that are just beginning their economic takeoff," Macron said. Trump unveiled sweeping global tariffs in April in which he said countries would face taxes on imports into the United States ranging from 10% to 50%, though he later reversed course and mostly lowered them for 90 days. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Monday rejected Macron's characterization, insisting that tariffs were an effective tool to rebuild U.S. manufacturing. She said Trump remained in discussions on trade to aid American workers. "Europe and the rest of the world might not be used to that, but President Trump is back in town and he's going to do what's right for our people and our country," she said. The United Nations trade agency had said the tariffs could have a catastrophic impact on developing countries, with some of the world's least developed, such as Lesotho, Cambodia, Laos, Madagascar and Myanmar, facing some of the highest levies. Macron, a vocal critic of Washington's tariff campaign, has also said it is an aberration to ask Europeans to spend more on defence while launching a trade war. (Reporting by Makini Brice and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Andrea Ricci)

France's Macron calls tariffs imposed by powerful countries a form of 'blackmail'

France's Macron calls tariffs imposed by powerful countries a form of 'blackmail' (Reuters) -French President Emmanuel Macron sa...
Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA saysNew Foto - Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA says

A satellite program that has historically been a key source of weather forecasting data will be discontinued by July 31, as the United States enters peak hurricane season, according to thealready resource-strappedNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The federal agency, which includes the National Weather Service, initially said last week that it was going to lose access to the satellite data by June 30. But in anupdateposted online on Monday, NOAA said the deadline to decommission the satellite system was pushed to July 31, at the request of a top official at NASA. Operated by the U.S. Department of Defense, theDefense Meteorological Satellite Programhas since the 1960s collected environmental information each day from satellites orbiting Earth, in order to provide real-time details about conditions in the atmosphere and oceans to the military. The data was made available to weather scientists for traditional forecasting purposes, after being processed by a branch of the Navy that focuses on meteorology and oceanography. Starting Aug. 1, that naval branch will no longer process or upload satellite data to the computing interface where meteorologists previously accessed it, according to NOAA. In an email that the agency reposted online, the deputy director of its Office of Satellite and Product Operations said the Navy decided to implement that change in efforts "to mitigate a significant cybersecurity risk" but would continue to distribute the data through the end of next month. A Navy spokesperson told CBS News in an email that it is "discontinuing contributions" to the satellite program "given the program no longer meets our information technology modernization requirements." NOAA spokesperson Kim Doster called it a "routine process of data rotation and replacement" in a statement to CBS News on Monday, adding that remaining data sources remaining "are fully capable of providing a complete suite of cutting-edge data and models that ensure the gold-standard weather forecasting the American people deserve." "The DMSP is a single dataset in a robust suite of hurricane forecasting and modeling tools in the NWS portfolio," said Doster, citing several other satellites that feed into the National Weather Service's forecasting models, including one launched recently that,accordingto the U.S. Space Force, "advances weather monitoring." The data cutoff from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program comes after NOAA lost a substantial chunk of its staff to layoffs and buyouts earlier this year, stemming from President Trump'sinitiative to reduce government spendingin part by shrinking the federal workforce. Hurricane season runs through Nov. 30, and NOAA forecasters said in May that they expected this one to bemore active than an average year. The season typically reaches its "peak," its most active period, around August and September. Saving money vs. saving lives Trump, DeSantis planning to visit "Alligator Alcatraz" on Tuesday Trump tells Republicans not to get "too crazy" on cuts in budget bill

Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA says

Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA says A satellite program that has historically been a key source of ...
Russia jails 'Jesus of Siberia' sect leader for 12 years for harming followersNew Foto - Russia jails 'Jesus of Siberia' sect leader for 12 years for harming followers

By Andrew Osborn (Reuters) -A Russian sect leader who claimed he was Jesus Christ reincarnated was sentenced to 12 years in a prison camp on Monday after being convicted of harming his followers' health and financial affairs. Sergei Torop, a former traffic policeman known to his followers as 'Vissarion', set up the Church of the Last Testament in a remote but picturesque part of Siberia's Krasnoyarsk region in 1991, the year the Soviet Union broke up. A bearded self-styled mystic with long hair, he claimed to have been "reborn" to convey the word of God and attracted thousands of followers, some of whom flocked to live in a settlement known as the "Abode of Dawn" or "Sun City", at a time when Russia was battling poverty and lawlessness. Torop, 64, told his followers, who regularly intoned prayers in his honour as they looked up to his large hilltop residence, not to eat meat, not to smoke, not to drink alcohol or swear, and to stop using money. But the Investigative Committee, Russia's equivalent of the U.S. FBI, accused Torop and two aides of using psychological pressure to extract money from his followers and of causing serious harm to their mental and physical health. In a statement on Monday, a court in the Siberian city of Novosibirsk said it had convicted the three men, sentencing Torop and Vladimir Vedernikov to 12 years and Vadim Redkin to 11 years in a maximum-security prison camp. They were also ordered to pay 40 million roubles ($511,500) to compensate their victims for "moral damage". All three denied wrongdoing. Torop and the two aides were arrested in a security forces raid by helicopter in 2020 that involved the FSB security service, the successor agency to the Soviet KGB. According to the RIA state news agency, investigators said the men had caused "moral harm" to 16 people, serious damage to the physical health of six people, and moderate damage to another person's health. Vedernikov, one of the aides, had also been accused of committing fraud, RIA said. In a 2017 BBC documentary, filmmaker Simon Reeve interviewed Torop, who denied any wrongdoing. The film showed how school girls whose parents were his followers were being educated to be what a local teacher called "future brides for worthy men." ($1 = 78.1955 roubles) (Reporting by Andrew OsbornEditing by Mark Heinrich)

Russia jails 'Jesus of Siberia' sect leader for 12 years for harming followers

Russia jails 'Jesus of Siberia' sect leader for 12 years for harming followers By Andrew Osborn (Reuters) -A Russian sect leader wh...
Missouri cereal plant worker dies after getting trapped inside ovenNew Foto - Missouri cereal plant worker dies after getting trapped inside oven

A worker at a Missouri cereal plant died Thursday after getting trapped in an industrial oven that was shut off, police said. Police in Perryville, Missouri, about 80 miles southeast of St. Louis, were called to a Gilster-Mary Lee cereal plant around 3 p.m., "for a male stuck in an industrial oven that was shut down," according toa news release. Once officers and other responders were able to get to the man, he was dead, police said. Police and the Perry County coroner's office identified the man as Nicolas Lopez Gomez, a 38-year-old Guatemalan national. He was working under the alias of Edward Avila, police said. It was not yet clear how the worker got trapped. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has been contacted about the incident and will conduct an investigation, Coroner Meghan Ellis said in a statement. "Our offices will work with them to determine how this occurred," she said. Gilster-Mary Lee did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Last year, a 19-year-old female employee at a Walmart in Canada wasfound dead inside a walk-in ovenat the store's bakery department. The death was not suspicious,police saidfollowing an investigation. Video shows Arizona police rescuing baby left alone for days Saving money vs. saving lives View from inside Iran after Israeli and U.S. strikes, and what could come next

Missouri cereal plant worker dies after getting trapped inside oven

Missouri cereal plant worker dies after getting trapped inside oven A worker at a Missouri cereal plant died Thursday after getting trapped ...
Supreme Court orders new review of transgender cases by lower courtsNew Foto - Supreme Court orders new review of transgender cases by lower courts

WASHINGTON – TheSupreme Courton June 30 said lower courts must reconsider their decisions that government-sponsored insurance plans must pay for gender-affirming care, taking into account the justices' recent landmark rulingupholdingTennessee's ban on gender affirming care for minors. The court also directed a reconsideration of a decision allowing transgender people to challenge Oklahoma's refusal to let them change their gender designation on their birth certificate. All of the cases at least partly turn on the Constitution's guarantee that governments should treat people equally, the same legal issue the court weighed when finding Tennessee's ban did not violate that protection. More:Supreme Court upholds state ban on transgender minors using puberty blockers, hormone therapy But the court's 6-3 decision left unanswered how its ruling might apply to bans on transgender participation in school sports, bans on transgender care for adults, and other issues. The Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had ruled North Carolina's and West Virginia's refusal to cover certain health care for transgender people is discriminatory. West Virginia's Medicaid program had prohibited "transsexual surgery" because of "concerns like cost and effectiveness." North Carolina's health plan for state employees excluded treatments "leading to or in connection with sex changes or modifications." North Carolina argued that, as part of the difficult choices it has to make to keep health care coverage affordable, it can exclude certain treatments as long as there's no proof of "invidious discrimination." Dozens of state Medicaid and employee health care plans across the country have similar exclusions, according to North Carolina. The appeals court said both states' coverage exclusions discriminate on the basis of sex and gender identity and do not advance an important government interest. The divided panel also said West Virginia's prohibition violated the Medicaid Act and the Affordable Care Act. In a related case, the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Idaho's head of Medicaid can be sued for not approving sex-reassignment surgery. That decision must now be reconsidered. 'Cruelty over care':Transgender care advocates blast Supreme Court In the Oklahoma case, the Denver-based 10thU.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last yearsaidthree transgender people could challengeOklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt's banon allowing transgender people to get new birth certificates to match their gender identity. "I believe that people are created by God to be male or female. Period," Stitt, the governor, said in 2021. A federal district judge dismissed the challenge to Stitt's executive order. But the 10thCircuit Court of Appeals overturned that decision last year. A three-judge panel said the policy likely discriminates against transgender people and has no legitimate justification. The court rejected the state's argument that changing birth certificates diminishes the accuracy of birth statistics. Oklahoma retains the original birth certificates so "the same statistics are available, regardless of whether the Policy exists," the court wrote. The original birth certificates can also be used to enforce Oklahoma's ban on transgender athletes competing in women's sports, the court added. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Supreme Court tells lower courts to reconsider transgender cases

Supreme Court orders new review of transgender cases by lower courts

Supreme Court orders new review of transgender cases by lower courts WASHINGTON – TheSupreme Courton June 30 said lower courts must reconsid...
Supreme Court declines appeal from White Texan claiming racial harassment at schoolNew Foto - Supreme Court declines appeal from White Texan claiming racial harassment at school

WASHINGTON – A White Texan says he was targeted by classmates and teachers at his predominantly Hispanic school district because of his race, including being called "Whitey" by a math aide and being asked by a principal if he was listening to Dixie music. In middle school band class in 2018, two students brought up "the evils of the white race in American history," Brooks Wardensaidin his years-long lawsuit. TheSupreme Courton June 30 declined to decide if Warden can sue for racial harassment under the Civil Rights Act. More:Supreme Court sides with straight woman in 'reverse discrimination' case The Austin Independent School DistrictsaidWarden failed to show the alleged hostility was based on race, rather than his political views. "This case has devolved into a publicity stunt fueled by partisan rhetoric and political opportunism," lawyers for the school district told theSupreme Court. "Austin ISD does not condone harassment or bullying of any kind, and it regrets that Brooks had negative experiences with its students and staff members, but this is not a Title VI case." A federal judge dismissed the complaint. But the Louisiana-based 5thU.S. Circuit Court of Appeals evenly divided over the issue. One of the appeals judges who sided with Warden said the culture increasingly accepts – it not celebrates – racism against White people. "Racism is now edgy and exciting—so long as it's against whites," Circuit Judge James Ho wrote. Warden said the bullying began after he wore a MAGA hat on a middle school field trip in 2017. His lawyers said he should not have to prove that race was the main reason he was targeted instead of just one of the reasons. The school district said Warden never complained that he was mistreated because of his race while he was a student there. That allegation came nearly a year after he sued and after a local judge had dismissed his multiple amended complaints against the school, lawyers for the district said. The court, the lawyers said, should not "open the proverbial floodgates to civil liability by allowing students to sue their schools for race-based harassment every time they hear a political viewpoint about race that they do not share." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Supreme Court declines case of White Texan claiming racial harassment

Supreme Court declines appeal from White Texan claiming racial harassment at school

Supreme Court declines appeal from White Texan claiming racial harassment at school WASHINGTON – A White Texan says he was targeted by class...
Supreme Court won't hear pig farmers' challenge to California's animal-welfare lawNew Foto - Supreme Court won't hear pig farmers' challenge to California's animal-welfare law

WASHINGTON − Bacon and pork chops are not back on the menu at theSupreme Court. The high court on June 30 rejected another challenge to California's controversial animal-welfare law, two years afternarrowly upholdingthe state's requirements on the sale of pork products. Justice Brett Kavanaugh said he would have taken the case. The Iowa Pork Producers Association argued the law discriminates against out-of-state producers, a claim based on a legal standard about when state laws overly restrict interstate commerce. TheSupreme Courtin 2023 dismissed another challenge to California's law made by the National Pork Producers Council that likewise relied on that standard. But the Iowa pork farmers hoped that the fractured way the justices reached that5-4 decisionwould give them an opening. At issue was a 2018 ballot initiative, Proposition 12, that bans thesale ofpork productsin California unless the sow from which the butchered pig was born was housed in at least 24 square feet of floor space. Iowa pork producers contend California gave its own farmers an unfair lead time to meet the new rules. California said it doesn't have enough pork farmers for Iowa to claim the state engaged in protectionism. And much of the out-of-state pork industry moved quickly to comply with California's rules so it could sell its products there, lawyers for the state said in filings. In the court's 2023 opinion, the justices in the majority had different reasons for dismissing that earlier challenge. Justice Neil Gorsuch, who wrote the majority opinion, said the law treats California and out-of-state pork farmers equally. "Companies that choose to sell products in various states must normally comply with the laws of those various states," Gorsuch wrote for the majority. "While the Constitution addresses many weighty issues, the type of pork chops California merchants may sell is not on that list." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Supreme Court rejects challenge to California's animal-welfare law

Supreme Court won't hear pig farmers' challenge to California's animal-welfare law

Supreme Court won't hear pig farmers' challenge to California's animal-welfare law WASHINGTON − Bacon and pork chops are not bac...
Iran raises death toll from war with Israel to more than 900New Foto - Iran raises death toll from war with Israel to more than 900

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) —Iranraised the official death toll for its war with Israel on Monday, with official media reporting 935 people were killed in the country during the12-day conflict. The state-run IRNA news agency did not give a breakdown between military and civilian casualties, but said of the 935 people, 38 were children and 132 were women. Its previous report last week said 627 people had been killed. The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists over the weekend said 1,190 people had been killed according to data collected by the agency's network of medical and local volunteers. Of those, it said 436 were civilians, 435 military and 319 have not yet been identified. The group has consistently reported higher casualties than the official reports from Iran. Israel relentlessly attacked Iran beginning June 13, targeting its nuclear sites, defense systems, high-rankingmilitary officials and atomic scientists. In retaliation, Iran fired more than 550 ballistic missiles at Israel, most of which were intercepted, but those that got through caused damage in many areas and killed 28 people.

Iran raises death toll from war with Israel to more than 900

Iran raises death toll from war with Israel to more than 900 DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) —Iranraised the official death toll for its wa...
Kremlin, asked about US sanctions bill, suggests it would impact Ukraine peace efforts if implementedNew Foto - Kremlin, asked about US sanctions bill, suggests it would impact Ukraine peace efforts if implemented

MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said on Monday that it had taken note of comments made by U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham who is sponsoring a tough new sanctions bill on Russia and that its backers should consider its impact on efforts to reach a peace deal on Ukraine. Graham said in an interview with ABC News on Sunday that President Donald Trump had told him that the sanctions bill - which would impose 500% tariffs on countries like China and India that buy Russian oil - should be brought forward for a vote. Graham called Trump's decision "a big breakthrough" which he said was part of efforts to bring Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table on Ukraine and give Trump "a tool" to bring that about. He stressed however that Trump had a waiver and could decide whether or not to sign it into law if and when it passes Congress. Asked about Graham's comments, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday that Russia was aware of the U.S. senator's stance and had taken note of his statement. "The senator's views are well known to us, they are well known to the whole world. He belongs to a group of inveterate Russophobes. If it were up to him, these sanctions would have been imposed long ago," said Peskov. "Would that have helped the (Ukraine) settlement (process)? That is a question that those who initiate such events should ask themselves." (Reporting by Dmitry AntonovWriting by Andrew OsbornEditing by Guy Faulconbridge)

Kremlin, asked about US sanctions bill, suggests it would impact Ukraine peace efforts if implemented

Kremlin, asked about US sanctions bill, suggests it would impact Ukraine peace efforts if implemented MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said on ...
Tropical Storm Flossie continues to strengthen in Pacific: See trackerNew Foto - Tropical Storm Flossie continues to strengthen in Pacific: See tracker

While Tropical Storm Barry has largely dissipated in the Atlantic Ocean, another system was still swirling in the Pacific on Monday, June 30. Tropical Storm Flossieis expected to bring areas of heavy rain to the southwestern coast of Mexico in the coming days and will likely strengthen into a hurricane, theNational Hurricane Center said. The hurricane center said Flossie, currently located about 185 miles south of Zihuatanejo, Mexico, in the Pacific Ocean, has maximum sustained winds near 45 mph with higher gusts. Hurricane center forecasters said "steady-to-rapid strengthening" is forecast during the next couple of days. Flossie is expected to produce rainfall totals of 3 to 6 inches, and isolated maximum totals of 10 inches are possible across portions of the southern Mexican states of Oaxaca, Guerrero, Michoacán, Colima and Jalisco through Wednesday, the hurricane center said. The rain could lead to areas of life-threatening flooding and mudslides. The tourist destination of Cabo San Lucas is now in the possible path of Flossie. The storm was forecast to become a hurricane overnight Monday but then peak by Wednesday and turn back into a tropical storm as it passes near the southern end of Mexico's Baja California peninsula later in the week. Swells generated by Flossie are also likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions. The hurricane center said Monday morning thatBarry has dissoved over eastern Mexicobut is still expected to produce some rain. The remnants of Barry are currently located about 100 miles northwest of Tampico, Mexico, according to the NHC. Maximum sustained winds were near 30 mph with higher gusts. Hurricane center forecasters said what's left of the storm is expected to produce additional rainfall totals of 3 to 5 inches, and isolated maximum totals of 8 inches are possible across the Mexican states of San Luis Potosi and Tamaulipas through Monday. The rainfall could produce life-threatening flooding and mudslides, the hurricane center said. Forecasters are also watching for disturbances off the Southeast coast of the U.S. starting around the Fourth of July. "A frontal boundary is expected to stall and weaken off the southeast U.S. coast late this week," the hurricane center said. "An area of low pressure could develop from the weakening front by the weekend off the southeast U.S., over Florida, or over the eastern Gulf. "Some gradual tropical or subtropical development could occur thereafter as the low moves little," the hurricane center said. Overall, rain chances are increasing along Florida's Gulf Coast through the next several days. Heavy rainfall may contribute to flash flooding at times, according to the National Weather Service regional forecast offices. This forecast track shows the most likely path of the center of the storm. It does not illustrate the full width of the storm or its impacts, and the center of the storm is likely to travel outside the cone up to 33% of the time. This forecast track shows the most likely path of the center of the storm. It does not illustrate the full width of the storm or its impacts, and the center of the storm is likely to travel outside the cone up to 33% of the time. Hurricanes are born in the tropics, above warm water. Clusters of thunderstorms can develop over the ocean when water temperatures exceed 80 degrees Fahrenheit. If conditions are right, the clusters swirl into a storm known as a tropical wave or tropical depression. A tropical depression becomes a named tropical storm once its sustained wind speeds reaches 39 miles per hour. When its winds reach 74 mph, the storm officially becomes a hurricane. Delaying potentially life-saving preparations could mean waiting until it's too late. "Get your disaster supplies while the shelves are still stocked, and get that insurance checkup early, as flood insurance requires a 30-day waiting period," NOAA recommends. Prepare now for hurricanes:Here's what you should do to stay safe before a storm arrives Develop an evacuation plan: If you are at risk from hurricanes, you need anevacuation plan. Now is the time to begin planning where you would go and how you would get there. Assemble disaster supplies: Whether you're evacuating or sheltering-in-place, you're going to need supplies not just to get through the storm but for the potentially lengthy aftermath,NOAA said. Get an insurance checkup and document your possessions: Contact your insurance company or agent now and ask for aninsurance check-upto make sure you have enough insurance to repair or even replace your home and/or belongings. Remember, home and renters insurance doesn't cover flooding, so you'll need a separate policy for it. Flood insurance is available through your company, agent, or theNational Flood Insurance Program. Act now, as flood insurance requires a 30-day waiting period. Create a family communication plan: NOAA said to take the time now to write down yourhurricane plan, and share it with your family. Determine family meeting places, and make sure to include an out-of-town location in case of evacuation. Strengthen your home: Now is the time to improve your home's ability to withstand hurricane impacts. Trim trees; install storm shutters, accordion shutters, and/or impact glass; seal outside wall openings. Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X@GabeHauarior email him at Gdhauari@gannett.com. Contributing: Dinah Voyles Pulver This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tropical Storm Flossie: See path tracker, spaghetti models

Tropical Storm Flossie continues to strengthen in Pacific: See tracker

Tropical Storm Flossie continues to strengthen in Pacific: See tracker While Tropical Storm Barry has largely dissipated in the Atlantic Oce...
Sniper's slaying of Idaho firefighters called 'a total ambush': UpdatesNew Foto - Sniper's slaying of Idaho firefighters called 'a total ambush': Updates

A firefghter was fighting for his life Monday while authorities in Idaho were trying to determine why asniper ignited a blaze before ambushingand fatally shooting two responding firefighters. The sniper was found dead following a shootout with police, Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris said. The wounded firefighter was in stable condition late Sunday, Norris said. Norris said law enforcement received a 911 call Sunday afternoon about a brush fire and were notified a short time later that firefighters were taking gunfire. Officers locked down nearby neighborhoods and hunted for the shooter in hilly terrain covered with thick brush while smoke billowed from the growing fire. Officers exchanged gunfire with the shooter, Norris said. The discovery of the shooter's body on Canfield Mountain, a popular hiking destination outside the city of Coeur d'Alene, culminated six hours of chaos that saw around 300 local, state and federal officers flock to the area. "This was a total ambush," Norris said at a briefing late Sunday. "These firefighters did not have a chance." One of the slain firefighters worked at Kootenai County Fire and Rescue, and the other worked for the Coeur D'Alene Fire Department. The wounded firefighter also works for the Coeur D'Alene department. Sniper found dead:Firefighters slain in ambush attack on Idaho mountain The shooting was a shock to residents of Coeur d'Alene, including Linda Tiger, 80, who told theBBCshe has lived in the city for nearly three decades. "This has never happened here," Tiger said. Brian Hadley told theNew York Timeshe was training for a mountain bike race near Canfield Mountain when he learned about the fire. Hadley told the outlet he heard three gunshots as he rode back down the mountain. "It's heartbreaking," he said. Bruce Deming helped direct law enforcement to a trail near his property that leads to the area where the fire was set, theAssociated Pressreported. "I just don't want to have to wake up in the middle of the night to figure if somebody's out prowling around my place," he said. Authorities found the shooter's body and a nearby firearm using cellphone location data, Norris said. It's unclear how the suspect died, but Norris said law enforcement responding to the shooting had exchanged gunfire with him. Gov. Brad Little said he and wife, Terese, were "heartbroken." "Multiple heroic firefighters were attacked today while responding to a fire in North Idaho," Little said in a social media post. "This is a heinous, direct assault on our brave firefighters. I ask all Idahoans to pray for them and their families as we wait to learn more." The shooter's body was discovered on Canfield Mountain, a forested area that is a popular destination for hikers and mountain bikers. Canfield Mountain Natural Area is a 24-acre open space park that has trails rated intermediate in difficulty and a few advanced areas, according to thecity of Coeur d'Alene. There are more than 25 miles of trails in the area, according to a Forest Servicefact sheet. "Some trails are steep and have ruts, rocks, roots or other obstacles," the Forest Service said. "Others have loose rock or steep drop-offs along the edge." At 1:21 p.m. local time, emergency dispatchers received a phone call reporting a fire on the east side of Canfield Mountain, Norris said. The caller did not reveal his name and is not believed to be the gunman. Firefighters arrived at the scene, and at 2 p.m. firefighters broadcast that there were shots fired. Hundreds of law enforcement agents responded to the scene of the shooting. Officers exchanged gunfire with the suspect, Norris said. Investigators used cellphone location data and discovered a signal on Canfield Mountain that had not moved since 3:16 p.m. Authorities honed in on the location and discovered the man who they believe to be the suspect. Just after 7:40 p.m., the Kootenai Sheriff's Office announced that a man had been found dead and lifted the shelter in place order. The attack on the firefighters happened outside Coeur d'Alene, a northwest Idaho city about 250 miles east of Seattle and 30 miles east of Spokane, Washington.U.S. Census data estimatessay it has a population of over 57,000. It is located in Kootenai County, an area north of the Coeur d'Alene Native American Reservation. Kootenai borders Washington state and has a population of over 188,000, according to thelatest Census estimates. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Sniper who shot, killed 2 firefighters in Idaho found dead: Updates

Sniper's slaying of Idaho firefighters called 'a total ambush': Updates

Sniper's slaying of Idaho firefighters called 'a total ambush': Updates A firefghter was fighting for his life Monday while auth...
Pennsylvania judge considers if witnesses must testify in trial over Idaho students' stabbingsNew Foto - Pennsylvania judge considers if witnesses must testify in trial over Idaho students' stabbings

Several potential defense witnesses fromBryan Kohberger's home state of Pennsylvania are expected in court Monday for a hearing on whether they must testify at the former criminal justice student's trial for thestabbing deaths of four college studentsin Idaho. Kohberger's trial on four counts of murder and one count of burglary is on track to begin Aug. 11 in Boise, Idaho, after a judge declined his lawyer'srequest for a delaylast week. Prosecutors are seeking thedeath penalty. Monday's hearing in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, concerns requests by Kohberger's lawyers that a Monroe County judge order seven people to testify, although it's not clear how the potential witnesses fit into the case. One of the seven agreed to cancel her hearing, and an order was issued last week summoning her for trial. News organizations have reported that the group includes school employees, a jail guard, a boxing gym owner and an auto shop worker. Phone messages seeking comment were left for several of them last week. The 30-year-old Kohberger,who was arrestedat his parents' home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, weeks after the November 2022 killings, is accused of sneaking into a rental home in Moscow, Idaho, not far from the University of Idaho campus, and attacking Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves. The slayings shocked the rural Idaho community and neighboring Pullman, Washington, where Kohberger was agraduate student studying criminologyat Washington State University. In a court filing, his lawyers said Kohberger was on along drive by himselfaround the time the four were killed. Kohberger wassilent during his arraignment, prompting a judge to enter a not guilty plea on his behalf. Agag orderhas largely kept attorneys, investigators and others from speaking publicly about the investigation or trial. A person answering the phone last week at the office of his lawyer, Anne Taylor, said the defense team had no comment about the Monday hearing or the case. Another one of the seven potential witnesses has told lawyers she is traveling and unavailable Monday, so a hearing on whether to compel her testimony was rescheduled for July 7. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Pennsylvania judge considers if witnesses must testify in trial over Idaho students’ stabbings

Pennsylvania judge considers if witnesses must testify in trial over Idaho students' stabbings Several potential defense witnesses fromB...
Women can be drafted into the Danish military as Russian aggression and military investment growsNew Foto - Women can be drafted into the Danish military as Russian aggression and military investment grows

HOVELTE, Denmark (AP) — Peering across a dense stretch of woodland outside of Denmark's capital with camouflage paint smeared across her face, 20-year-old Katrine scans the horizon for approaching threats. After nearly four months of military training, the young soldier and the rest of her unit spent early June completing their final exercises near the Danish army's barracks in Hovelte, 25 kilometers (15 miles) north of Copenhagen. Katrine and other female soldiers, all of whom spoke to The Associated Press on June 11 on the condition that only their first names be used because of operational security, volunteered for military service earlier this year. Until now, that was the only way for women to be part of the armed forces. The Scandinavian countryis seeking to increase the number of young people in the military by extending compulsory enlistment to women for the first time. Men and women can both still volunteer, and the remaining places will be filled by a gender-neutral draft lottery. "In the situation the world is in now, it's needed," Katrine said. "I think it's only fair and right that women participate equally with men." Under new rules passed by Denmark's parliament earlier in June, Danish women who turn 18 after Tuesday will be entered into the lottery system, on equal footing with their male compatriots. The change comes againsta backdrop of Russian aggressionandgrowing military investment across NATO countries. Russia's looming threat Even from the relative safety of Denmark, Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine casts its shadow. Lessons from the Ukrainian battlefields have even filtered down into their training. "That makes it very real," Katrine said. Denmark's gender-parity reforms wereoriginally outlined in 2024as part of a major defense agreement. The program was originally expected to be implemented by early 2027, but has been brought forward to summer 2025. Col. Kenneth Strøm, head of the conscription program, told AP the move is based on "the current security situation." "They could take part in NATO collective deterrence," Strøm added. "Raising the number of conscripts, that would simply lead to more combat power." Denmark, a nation of 6 million people, has about 9,000 professional troops. The new arrangement is expected to bring up to 6,500 annual conscripts by 2033, up from 4,700 last year. Under Danish law, all physically fit men over age 18 are called up for military service. But because there are usually enough volunteers, there's a lottery system so not all young men serve. Women, by contrast, could only volunteer previously, making up roughly a quarter of 2024's cohort. "Some will probably be very disappointed being chosen to go into the military," Anne Sofie, part of Katrine's cohort of volunteers, said of the new female conscripts. "Some will probably be surprised and like it a lot more than they think they would." The duration of service is also being extended from four to 11 months. Conscripts will first spend five months in basic training, followed by six months of operational service, plus additional lessons. Military buildup The move is part of a broader military buildup by the Nordic nation. In February, Denmark's government announced plans tobolster its militaryby setting up a $7 billion fund that it said would raise the country's defense spending to more than 3% of gross domestic product this year. Parts of the conscript program are being financed by the so-called Acceleration Fund. "We see a sharpened security situation in Europe. We have the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. We have focus on the Baltic countries, where Denmark is contributing a lot of soldiers. So, I think it's a general effort to strengthen the Danish defense," said researcher Rikke Haugegaard from the Royal Danish Defense College. But Haugegaard notes there are many challenges, from ill-fitting equipment and a lack of additional barracks, to potential cases of sexual harassment. "For the next year or two, we will be building a lot of new buildings to accommodate all these people. So, it will be a gradual process," she added. In 2017, neighboring Sweden instituted amilitary draft for both men and womenafter its government spoke of a deteriorating security environment in Europe. Norwayintroduced its own lawapplying military conscription to both sexes in 2013.

Women can be drafted into the Danish military as Russian aggression and military investment grows

Women can be drafted into the Danish military as Russian aggression and military investment grows HOVELTE, Denmark (AP) — Peering across a d...
TomTom to cut 300 jobs amid AI shiftNew Foto - TomTom to cut 300 jobs amid AI shift

(Reuters) -Dutch location technology company TomTom said on Monday it would cut 300 jobs as it realigns its organization and embraces artificial intelligence as part of its product-led strategy. The group said the staff reductions concern its units working on the application layer, as well as sales and support functions. (Reporting by Mathias de Rozario in Gdansk, editing by Milla Nissi)

TomTom to cut 300 jobs amid AI shift

TomTom to cut 300 jobs amid AI shift (Reuters) -Dutch location technology company TomTom said on Monday it would cut 300 jobs as it realigns...
Nations are meeting to drum up trillions to combat poverty — but the US isn't goingNew Foto - Nations are meeting to drum up trillions to combat poverty — but the US isn't going

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Many of the world's nations are gathering starting Monday in Spain for a high-level conference to tackle thegrowing gap between rich and poor nationsand try to drum up trillions of dollars needed to close it. The United States, previously a major contributor, pulled its participation, so finding funding will be tough. The four-day Financing for Development meeting in the southern city of Seville is taking place as many countries face escalating debt burdens, declining investments,decreasing international aidandincreasing trade barriers. The United Nations and Spain, the conference co-hosts, believe it is an opportunity to reverse the downward spiral, close the staggering $4 trillion annual financing gap to promote development, bring millions of people out of poverty and help achieve the U.N.'s wide-ranging and badlylagging Sustainable Development Goalsfor 2030. U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said Wednesday that despite"the headwinds"and high geopolitical tensions, there is hope the world can address one of the most important global challenges — ensuring all people have access to food, health care, education and water. "This conference is an appeal to action," Spain's U.N. Ambassador Hector Gomez Hernandez said, "and we have the extraordinary opportunity to send a very strong message to defend the international community's commitment to multilateralism." High-level delegations, including more than 70 world leaders, are expected in Seville, Mohammed said, along with several thousand others from international financial institutions, development banks, philanthropic organizations, the private sector and civil society. At its last preparatory meeting on June 17, the United States rejected the 38-page outcome document that had been negotiated for months by the U.N.'s 193 member nations and announced its withdrawal from the process and from the Seville conference. The rest of the countries then approved the document by consensus and sent it to Seville, where it is expected to be adopted by conference participants without changes. It will be known as the Seville Commitment — or Compromiso de Sevilla in Spanish. The document says the leaders and high-level representatives have decided to launch "an ambitious package of reforms and actions to close the financing gap with urgency," saying it is now estimated at $4 trillion a year. Among the proposals and actions, it calls for minimum tax revenue of 15% of a country's gross domestic product to increase government resources, a tripling of lending by multilateral development banks, and scaling up private financing by providing incentives for investing in critical areas like infrastructure. It also calls for a number of reforms to help countries deal with rising debt. U.N. trade chief Rebeca Grynspan told a news conference Friday that "development is going backward" and theglobal debt crisishas worsened. Last year, 3.3 billion people were living in countries that pay more interest on their debts than they spend on health or education — and the number will increase to 3.4 billion people this year, she said. And developing countries will pay $947 billion to service debts this year, up from $847 billion last year. She spoke at a press conference where an expert group on debt appointed by U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres presented 11 recommendations that they say can resolve the debt crisis, empower borrowing countries and create a fairer system. While the U.S. objected to many actions in the outcome document, American diplomat Jonathan Shrier told the June 17 meeting: "Our commitment to international cooperation and long-term economic development remains steadfast." He said, however, that the text "crosses many of our red lines," including interfering with the governance of international financial institutions, tripling the annual lending capacity of multilateral development banks and proposals envisioning a role for the U.N. in the global debt architecture. Shrier also objected to proposals on trade, tax and innovation that are not in line with U.S. policy, as well as language on a U.N. framework convention on international tax cooperation. The United States was the world's largest single funder of foreign aid. TheTrumpadministration has dismantled its main aid agency, the U.S. Agency for International Development, while drasticallyslashing foreign assistancefunding, calling it wasteful and contrary to the Republican president's agenda. Other Western donors also have cut back international aid. The U.N.'s Mohammed said the U.S. withdrawal from the conference was "unfortunate," stressing that "many of the recommendations you see cannot be pursued without a continuous engagement with the U.S." After Seville, "we will engage again with the U.S. and hope that we can make the case that they be part of the success of pulling millions of people out of poverty."

Nations are meeting to drum up trillions to combat poverty — but the US isn't going

Nations are meeting to drum up trillions to combat poverty — but the US isn't going UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Many of the world's nation...
US police end 'shelter in place' warning after two firefighters shot deadNew Foto - US police end 'shelter in place' warning after two firefighters shot dead

Two firefighters have been shot dead with a high-powered rifle after responding to a brush fire in Idaho, say US officials The killings prompted a manhunt on a mountain, with police saying they had been under active "sniper fire" from at least one suspect But the manhunt has now ended after a SWAT team found the body of a man with a firearm nearby, the local sheriff's office says Officials have lifted a "shelter in place" order for nearby residents but said the wildfire remains active and to be "prepared and ready should further action need to be taken" Helicopters with heat-seeking technology were used during the manhunt US police end 'shelter in place' warning after two firefighters shot dead

US police end 'shelter in place' warning after two firefighters shot dead

US police end 'shelter in place' warning after two firefighters shot dead Two firefighters have been shot dead with a high-powered r...
Hong Kong's security net extends beyond arrests as small businesses pressuredNew Foto - Hong Kong's security net extends beyond arrests as small businesses pressured

HONG KONG (AP) — It's been years sincemass arrestsall but silenced pro-democracy activism in Hong Kong. But a crackdown on dissent in the semiautonomous Chinese city is still expanding, hitting restaurants, bookstores and other small businesses. Shops and eateries owned by people once associated with the largely subdued pro-democracy movement are feeling a tightening grip through increased official inspections, anonymous complaint letters andother regulatory checks. Those critical of the city's political changes say it's a less visible side of a push to silence dissent that began five years ago when Beijing imposeda national security lawto crush challenges to its rule, under which opposition politicians were jailed and pro-democracy newspaperApple Daily was shuttered. China said the law was necessary for the city's stability following anti-government protests in 2019. In 2024, the city passed its own national security law, which has been used to jail people for actions likewriting pro-independence messages on the back of bus seatsand wearing a T-shirt carrying a protest slogan that authorities deemed could imply the separation of Hong Kong from China, a red line for Beijing. In recent weeks, food authorities sent letters to restaurants warning that their business licenses could be revoked if the government deems them to be endangering national security or public interest. Frequent inspections Leticia Wong, a former pro-democracy district councilor who now runs a bookstore, says her shop is frequently visited by food and hygiene inspectors, the fire department or other authorities over complaints about issues like hosting events without a license. It happens most often around June 4, the anniversary ofthe 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Her records show government authorities took measures against her shop some 92 times between July 2022 and June 2025, including inspecting her shop, conspicuously patrolling outside, or sending letters warning her of violations. She has been studying regulations to protect herself from accidentally breaking them. "Some areas look trivial — and they really are — but they still have the power to make you face consequences," she said. In an emailed reply to The Associated Press, the fire department said it conducted checks at Wong's business following multiple complaints this year. Wong's bookstore passed most of them but still faces enforcement action for failing to provide valid certificates for two fire extinguishers and its emergency lighting system, it said. Other small business owners described similar experiences. A bakery that put up pro-democracy decorations duringthe 2019 protestssaw food authorities' inspections jump from quarterly to monthly over the past one to two years, mostly over labeling complaints. Its owner, who asked to remain anonymous fearing government retribution, said the frequent inspections made running the business a struggle. A restaurant owner who received the notice of the newly added terms on possible license revocation over national security violations said he doesn't know what could be considered a violation and fears one wrong move could cost his staff their jobs. He spoke on the condition of anonymity, fearing potential impact on his business partners and employees. Food authorities said inspections follow the law, information and public complaints. They maintained that the new national security conditions for food business licenses were clearly defined and would not affect law-abiding operators. The Hong Kong Chief Executive's office has not immediately commented. Anonymous denunciations Others say they have lost opportunities after anonymous letters were sent to employers or business partners. Wong said an anonymous letter sent to an organization that had planned an event at her shop prompted them to cancel the booking. Separately, she lost a freelance job after a funder demanded that a social enterprise not hire her without a specific reason. Her landlord also received an anonymous letter warning them not to rent the space to her. "I feel that this society is working very hard — that is, within the system, under the official system, working very hard to reject me, or to make my life difficult," Wong said. Chan Kim-kam, another former district councilor, says she lost both a part-time job and a role in a play after the people she worked for were pressured. A school where she taught sociology part-time asked her to leave after it received a letter claiming that she made a student uncomfortable. The letter, which was written in the simplified Chinese characters used in mainland China but less prominently in Hong Kong, included links to news reports about her arrest underthe homegrown national security lawlast year, though she was never charged. Meanwhile, the city's Leisure and Cultural Services Department told her drama group to replace her or lose their venue, she said. "I think it's really such a pity. When the culture of reporting people has become so intense, it destroys the trust between people," she said. Cultural authorities, declining to discuss specific bookings, said all their venue bookings were managed under established procedures. Rule of law in question Hong Kong leader John Leehas said the security law upholds the rule of law principle and only an extremely small portion of people were targeted. He noted 332 people have been arrested for offenses related to national security, about 66 each year on average, or 0.2% of the police's annual arrest figures. Still, he warned of persistingsoft resistance, saying "the streets are full of petty people." Local broadcaster i-Cable News said national security guidelines would be issued to government workers. Secretary for Security Chris Tang told the broadcaster that even a cleaner should report words endangering national security, if any are found during their job. But Eric Lai, a research fellow at Georgetown Center for Asian Law, said Hong Kong is using regulatory powers to monitor and regulate dissent without checks and balances. Local courts were unable to check the powers granted to the government under the security laws, he said. It fits a common pattern among undemocratic governments like mainland China, he said. In many cases across the border, law enforcement officers frequently harass and surveil dissenters without formal charges. "It tells the world that the so-called rule of law in Hong Kong is only a facade of rule by men," he said. Outside a court on Jun. 12, members of the pro-democracy party League of Social Democrats protested against their convictions over street booth activities with a banner that says "rule of law in name, silencing voices in reality." They were fined for collecting money without a permit and displaying posters without approval. The judge said freedom of expression was not absolute and restrictions could be imposed to maintain public order. On Sunday,the party announced it had dissolved, citing immense political pressure and consideration of consequences for its members, months after the city's biggest pro-democracy partyannounced to move toward disbandment. Its chairperson Chan Po-ying wiped away tears at the news conference. "In the past, the government said it focused on a small portion of people. Now, it includes various kinds of people in Hong Kong, ordinary residents," she said.

Hong Kong's security net extends beyond arrests as small businesses pressured

Hong Kong's security net extends beyond arrests as small businesses pressured HONG KONG (AP) — It's been years sincemass arrestsall ...

 

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