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Washington ICE arrests drop 25% in July but remain comparatively high
SEATTLE — After a sharp spike in Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Washington arrests, the agency slowed down in July, according to data released this week.
ICE arrests in the state dropped 25% between June and July 29, according to government information obtained through Freedom of Information requests by the University of California's ...Read more
Whales and dolphins have an 'intriguing' relationship, study finds. What to know
MIAMI — The relationship between whales and dolphins has long been shrouded in mystery.
But, new research reveals that — despite their vast difference in size — these marine mammals often enjoy playful interactions, much like a Great Dane romping with a Chihuahua.
Scientists at Griffith University in Australia came to this conclusion by ...Read more

LA volunteers who document ICE raids are being arrested. How to do it safely
LOS ANGELES — Amanda Trebach, a Los Angeles resident who volunteers to document immigration enforcement operations on Terminal Island in San Pedro, found herself early Friday morning on the wrong side of an enforcement action.
She was pinned to the ground, handcuffed and put into an unmarked black van by masked federal agents.
The arrest put...Read more

Schools to open with unprecedented protections for children and their parents amid ICE raids
LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles public schools are opening Thursday for the new academic year confronting an intense and historically unique moment: They will be operating in opposition to the federal government's immigration raids and have set in motion aggressive moves to protect children and their immigrant parents.
School police and officers ...Read more

Putin heads to Trump summit confident he is winning in Ukraine
Vladimir Putin is heading to Friday’s planned summit with Donald Trump confident that Russia is in a dominant position on the battlefield as his military advances in Ukraine.
That’s likely to strengthen his determination to secure major territorial concessions when the Russian and U.S. presidents meet in Alaska in return for a ceasefire ...Read more

Thai PM faces ouster as court poised to rule in ethics case
BANGKOK — Thailand’s Constitutional Court will rule on Aug. 29 whether to disqualify Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, who has been previously suspended from duty, over allegations she breached ethical standards in handling a border dispute with Cambodia.
The nine-member court will read out the verdict at 3 p.m. local time, it said in ...Read more
Tropical Storm Erin path shifts, but still forecast to grow into major hurricane, NHC says
ORLANDO, Fla. — Tropical Storm Erin on Wednesday continued to push west through the Atlantic with it forecast to become the season’s first hurricane, growing to major hurricane strength by the weekend, according to the National Hurricane Center.
As of the NHC’s 5 a.m. update, the center of Erin was located about 1,400 miles east of the ...Read more

Why a Connecticut group provides 'rush hour resistance' to connect with voters in protest of Trump's policies
HARTFORD, Conn. — If you travel along Interstate 91 during rush hour in Hartford on any given weekday you may notice a smiling face waving to you above on the pedestrian overpass bridge along with American flags, signs and messages to alert motorists below that “things are not normal.”
The Hartford Visibility Brigade, a group of area ...Read more

The LAPD is struggling to hire Black recruits. Will Trump's war on DEI make it harder?
LOS ANGELES — Convincing young Black people to become cops long been a tough sell at summer job fairs.
But in recent months the pool of recruits at the Los Angeles Police Department has shriveled to the point of running dry. The last two training academy classes haven't included a single a Black graduate.
Despite offering generous pay and ...Read more

Are sharks an 'overwhelming problem' in Florida? What the experts say
MIAMI — Florida anglers say sharks are snatching their catches at unprecedented rates, calling it an “overwhelming problem” and blaming a boom in Gulf shark numbers.
But scientific research paints a more complicated picture.
Scientists who study sharks acknowledge that depredation — the act of fish being eaten by an underwater predator...Read more

California farmers, anglers and researchers often clash over salmon. Science united them
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In better times, droves of young winter-run Chinook salmon would travel 300 miles downstream from the Sacramento River, beneath the Golden Gate Bridge and into the Pacific. They would return as adults, shimmering silver and red, and spawn at their exact place of birth in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta.
Today, fewer ...Read more

Congress looks to ease restrictions on veterans' use of non-VA clinics and hospitals
WATERLOO, Iowa — John-Paul Sager appreciates the care he has received at Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics, but he thinks it should be easier for veterans like him to use their benefits elsewhere.
Sager, a Marine Corps and Army veteran, uses his VA coverage for non-VA treatment of back injuries stemming from his military ...Read more

As California's behavioral health workforce buckles, help is years away
If you or someone you know may be experiencing a mental health crisis, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline by dialing or texting “988.”
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REDDING, Calif. 𑁋 This spring, the Good News Rescue Mission, which runs the only emergency homeless shelter in Shasta County, received a game-changing $17.8 million state grant to build a ...Read more

ULA Vulcan cuts through night skies on landmark national security mission
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — United Launch Alliance knocked out its first Vulcan Centaur launch of the year Tuesday night, and its first ever for the Space Force.
The company’s new workhorse rocket lifted off on the USSF-106 mission from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s Space Launch Complex 41 at 8:56 p.m. under clear skies except for a ...Read more

Putin briefs Kim Jong Un in phone call ahead of Trump meeting
SEOUL, South Korea — Vladimir Putin held a phone conversation with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to brief him on the war in Ukraine ahead of the Russian president’s planned summit with President Donald Trump in Alaska.
During the call on Tuesday, Putin thanked Kim for supporting his war on Ukraine as the two leaders “exchanged views on...Read more

Tropical Storm Erin surges through Atlantic with Caribbean islands now at risk, NHC says
Tropical Storm Erin on Tuesday continued to push west through the Atlantic as the National Hurricane Center forecasted it to become a major hurricane with Puerto Rico and other Caribbean islands in its potential path.
As of the NHC’s 5 p.m. Eastern time update, the center of Erin was located about 1,635 miles east of the northern Leeward ...Read more

Fla. AG Uthmeier said judge who sanctioned him should visit Alligator Alcatraz. She's down
A Miami judge overseeing an environmental lawsuit seeking to shut down Alligator Alcatraz said Tuesday at the end of a contentious afternoon of witness testimony that she would like to take up Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier on his invitation to visit the Everglades immigration detention center.
Surprising attorneys for the DeSantis ...Read more

Third hearing set for Baltimore Archdiocese abuse survivors to share stories
Victims of child sexual abuse linked to the Roman Catholic Baltimore Archdiocese will have a third chance to be seen and tell their stories.
On Monday, Judge Michelle Harner ordered a two-hour status conference for Oct. 6 at 1 p.m., meant to raise awareness of and understanding for sexual abuse victims of the Baltimore Archdiocese.
In February...Read more

South Korea prosecutors arrest ex-first lady in corruption probe
SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Keon Hee, wife of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, was arrested late Tuesday in an ongoing investigation into allegations ranging from suspected stock manipulation to bribery, investigators said.
The arrest was made after the Seoul Central District Court approved an arrest warrant for the former first ...Read more

'Haiti can be rebuilt,' UN humanitarian coordinator says as she departs for Libya
A $900 million request for humanitarian assistance for Haitians, millions of whom are facing starvation, has received the lowest level of support for any such plan in the world, the United Nations’ outgoing humanitarian coordinator said Tuesday.
Ulrika Richardson, who has spent the past three years guiding the U.N.’s response amid ...Read more
Popular Stories
- Putin heads to Trump summit confident he is winning in Ukraine
- Why a Connecticut group provides 'rush hour resistance' to connect with voters in protest of Trump's policies
- Are sharks an 'overwhelming problem' in Florida? What the experts say
- Tropical Storm Erin path shifts, but still forecast to grow into major hurricane, NHC says
- The LAPD is struggling to hire Black recruits. Will Trump's war on DEI make it harder?