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Ghislaine Maxwell moved from Florida to minimum security prison in Texas
WASHINGTON — Ghislaine Maxwell has been quietly moved from a federal institute in Tallahassee, Florida, to a minimum security prison in Texas for white-collar female criminals.
“Ghislaine Maxwell is in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) at the Federal Prison Camp (FPC) Bryan in Bryan, Texas,” the agency told McClatchy.
No reason ...Read more

Captain who crashed barge into sailboat in Miami Beach not impaired, officials say
MIAMI — The captain of the tugboat pushing a barge that slammed into a Miami Yacht Club summer-camp sailboat Monday morning in Biscayne Bay — killing two young girls and critically injuring two others — was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol, the Coast Guard said.
Capt. Frank Florio, commander of U.S. Coast Guard Sector Miami, ...Read more

Analysis: Trump uses lavish ballroom, pro wrestling legend to move past Epstein saga
WASHINGTON — Trade deals and a luxury ballroom and Triple H in the Roosevelt Room. Oh my.
President Donald Trump began the week trying to play down his past relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, but he wrapped it up announcing more trade deals, revised tariff rates for dozens of countries and a major White House renovation project, as ...Read more

Park Avenue gunman Shane Tamura fired nearly 50 shots during rampage
NEW YORK — Gunman Shane Tamura fired nearly 50 shots Monday during his rampage on a Park Avenue skyscraper, where he killed an NYPD officer and three civilians before taking his own life — with slightly more shots fired at the 33rd-floor office he mistakenly took an elevator to, police said Friday.
The degree of damage on the upper floor, ...Read more

NASA, SpaceX punch through weather threat for Crew-11 launch
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — SpaceX was back one day after a weather-related scrub and threaded the needle amid threatening clouds to send up the Crew-11 mission to the International Space Station.
A Falcon 9 rocket topped with the Crew Dragon Endeavour lifted off from Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Pad 39-A at 11:43 a.m. Eastern time carrying ...Read more
State obligations for future retiree costs continue to grow, study finds
While more than a dozen states have shrunk their pension debt obligations in recent years, a majority continue to see growth in the gap between the amount of money retirees have been promised and the amount of cash states have set aside.
In a new analysis released this week, The Pew Charitable Trusts concluded that states’ unfunded pension ...Read more

Sean 'Diddy' Combs no 'ordinary john,' feds say in urging NY judge to keep him jailed
NEW YORK — Sean “Diddy” Combs was “no ordinary john,” but a violent and controlling mastermind of perverse sex sessions where participants were drugged and brutalized, prosecutors wrote in new court papers opposing his latest bail bid — and indicating they’ll push for a longer prison term than expected.
In late-night filings ...Read more

Foie gras still on some store shelves in California, despite state ban
LOS ANGELES — Despite California's ban on foie gras, the pumped-up bird livers are being sold in Southern California stores.
Foie gras, which is made by force-feeding ducks and geese, was spotted by Times journalists this week on the shelves of Wild Fork Foods stores in Venice, Manhattan Beach and Westlake Village.
Ben Williamson, the ...Read more

Ahead of the 2028 Olympics, Los Angeles launches a program to expand shade across the city
LOS ANGELES — As heat waves grow longer and more intense across Southern California, the absence of shade is becoming a serious public health concern — but vast stretches of Los Angeles remain dangerously exposed.
Research shows shaded areas can have a “heat burden” — a combined measure of temperature, humidity and wind — up to 68�...Read more

'This fire could have been prevented': How utilities fought removal of old power lines
LOS ANGELES -- The abandoned power line suspected of igniting the Eaton fire could have been removed years ago under a rule proposed by state Public Utilities Commission staffers, but the regulation was weakened amid opposition from Southern California Edison and other utilities, according to records and interviews.
State regulators have long ...Read more

Long Beach man gets 358-year sentence for killing 17-year-old girl, shooting at four other minors
LOS ANGELES — Seventeen-year-old Briana Soto was walking home from her job at McDonald's last March when she was shot and killed just steps from her Long Beach home. Now, her killer will spend the rest of his life behind bars.
On Thursday, Troy Lamar Fox, 34, received a sentence of 358 years to life for the first-degree murder of Soto and the...Read more

Former President Joe Biden tells lawyers convention in Chicago: 'We need new heroes'
CHICAGO — Former President Joe Biden called on attorneys to lead the fight to uphold the Constitution during the Trump administration in a speech at a downtown Chicago hotel on Thursday in which he also reflected on his more than five-decade career in politics and beginnings as a young lawyer.
“It’s not enough to honor the heroes who came...Read more

What wildfire smoke is doing to your health
MINNEAPOLIS -- Wildfire smoke has been easy to spot in Minnesota this week, coating the Twin Cities in a brownish haze that obscured the downtown skylines. But experts in lung health are more concerned about the particles you can’t see.
Particles in the smoke are so small that they can evade some of the lung’s natural defenses, causing not ...Read more

Trump freezes $200 million in UCLA science and medical research funding, citing antisemitism
LOS ANGELES – The Trump administration has frozen hundreds of science, medical and other federal grants to UCLA worth nearly $200 million, citing the university's alleged "discrimination" in admissions and failure to "promote a research environment free of antisemitism."
The decision to pull funding comes after Attorney General Pam Bondi and ...Read more

Trump urges Fed board to 'assume control' if rates not cut
President Donald Trump called on the Federal Reserve board to “assume control” if Chair Jerome Powell does not lower interest rates, escalating his ongoing feud with the central bank’s head.
“Jerome ‘Too Late’ Powell, a stubborn MORON, must substantially lower interest rates, NOW. IF HE CONTINUES TO REFUSE, THE BOARD SHOULD ASSUME ...Read more

Gary Busey pleads guilty to groping woman at NJ horror movie convention
Actor Gary Busey pleaded guilty to a sex crime charge Thursday in connection to a 2022 incident at a horror movie convention in New Jersey.
Busey, 81, pleaded guilty to one count of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact after admitting to intentionally touching a woman inappropriately at the Monster-Mania Convention at the Doubletree Hotel in ...Read more

For Trump's Harvard deal, $500 million is only a starting point
WASHINGTON— The White House views a payment of $500 million by Harvard University as a floor in negotiations for a settlement, and the cost of a deal could climb far higher if the school doesn’t submit to government oversight provisions, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
One of the Trump administration’s key demands is ...Read more

California Gov. Gavin Newsom wants a special election on redistricting in November
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to ask voters in November to approve a series of new congressional maps to redistrict the state and combat a similar effort in Texas, he said Thursday.
The special election would be held the first Tuesday of November, and the maps would be in effect for the 2026, 2028, and 2030 election cycles, ...Read more

2 suspects on the run after ramming ICE officers near Colorado Springs
DENVER — Two people are on the run after ramming a vehicle into U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers during an operation near Colorado Springs on Thursday, federal officials said.
An ICE officer fired three shots into the vehicle and the suspects – who agency officials said are in the country illegally – fled the scene and ...Read more

Philly judge dismisses lawsuit against city ban on rapid-fire gun switches and bump stocks
PHILADELPHIA — A Philadelphia judge on Wednesday dismissed a lawsuit filed against the city for banning rapid-fire gun devices known as “bump stocks” and “switches,” and lawyers for the plaintiffs quickly filed an appeal.
Common Pleas Court Judge Caroline Turner’s one-sentence order, which provided no explanation, dismissed the ...Read more
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- Gary Busey pleads guilty to groping woman at NJ horror movie convention