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Jack Smith Could Be Prevented From Using Evidence by Aileen Cannon
The transfer of grand jury testimony from Washington, D.C. to Florida could be a big boost to Trump, a former prosecutor has said.
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newsweek.com
Democrat Candidates Get 10,000 Missing Votes After 'Human Error'
An additional 10,000 mail-in ballots which had been overlooked in a "human error" were added to a Democratic primary.
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newsweek.com
Migrants Hiding at School Sparks Fears for Students
Illegal immigrants have blended in at middle schools in New Mexico twice in the past week, sparking warnings from federal agents.
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newsweek.com
Injured Allied Navy Sailors Given Combat Medals After China Clash
The Philippine navy personnel were injured during the China's coast guard's water cannon broadsides near a South China Sea hot spot.
newsweek.com
Jon Stewart Responds to Claims He Overvalued Apartment
Stewart was accused of "hypocrisy" after selling his New York penthouse for 829 percent above the estimated value.
newsweek.com
Family of Boeing whistleblower John Barnett speaks out
In a CBS News exclusive interview, the family of a Boeing whistleblower who was found dead earlier this month is speaking out. John Barnett, a former Boeing employee, had been giving evidence in a whistleblower lawsuit against the company. A coroner says he died from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. It comes as Boeing's safety practices have come under new scrutiny due to a series of recent midair incidents. Mark Strassmann spoke with Barnett's mother and brother.
cbsnews.com
Lawmakers on Capitol Hill remember longtime former Sen. Joe Lieberman
Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are mourning the loss of Joe Lieberman, 82, a longtime senator from Connecticut who was once the Democratic Party's nominee for vice president in 2000. He died Wednesday in New York City from complications from a fall, according to a statement from his family.
cbsnews.com
Investigation into Baltimore bridge collapse underway as port remains blocked
Federal investigators have begun their examination of a cargo ship linked to the catastrophic bridge collapse in Baltimore, conducting interviews with crew members still onboard and retrieving the vessel's data recorder.
cbsnews.com
What we know about the victims from the Baltimore Bridge collapse
The bodies of two men were recovered Wednesday from the site of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse in Baltimore. Four people remain missing and are presumed dead. Divers are working through dangerous conditions that include changing currents, cold temperatures and bridge debris.
cbsnews.com
Eye Opener: Investigators reveal new details about the Baltimore bridge collapse
Investigators reveal new details about the Baltimore bridge collapse, as we learn more about the lives of the workers who died. Also, in a CBS News exclusive, we speak to the family of a Boeing whistleblower found dead. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener.
cbsnews.com
Supplement pill with mold recalled after deaths, hospitalizations
Health supplement products believed to have caused two deaths and sickened more than 100 people have been ordered to be taken off store shelves in Japan.
cbsnews.com
California Snow Map Shows Which Areas Will Have 'Major Impact'
The second of three back-to-back systems is currently hitting California, resulting in "hazardous" driving conditions in some areas.
newsweek.com
TikTok's Chinese Cousin Bans AI Content
Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, will ban artificial intelligence-generated content that spreads rumors or misinformation.
newsweek.com
Criminal profiling: The techniques used by police to catch dangerous offenders
Criminal profiling is an investigative technique used by law enforcement to identify offenders based on distinct behavioral characteristics and motives.
foxnews.com
Doctors visiting Gaza hospital reveal 'gut-wrenching' details of war's impact on Palestinian children
An international team of doctors arrived in central Gaza say they were "stunned" by the gruesome impact that the war against Hamas is having on Palestinian children.
foxnews.com
Traffic deaths rise despite billions spent to make streets safer
CBS News analysis shows most federal traffic safety grants go to planning projects, rather than actual construction. Critics say slow progress contributes to rising deaths on America's roads.
cbsnews.com
Dethroned Crypto King Sam Bankman-Fried to be Sentenced for Defrauding FTX Investors
Former crypto king Sam Bankman-Fried faces the potential of decades in prison when he is sentenced for his role in the 2022 collapse of FTX.
time.com
New AI test measures how fast robots can respond to user commands
A benchmarking group for artificial intelligence has released new results evaluating the speed of hardware in running AI applications and responding to users.
foxnews.com
Book made with human skin removed from Harvard Library
The book contains a handwritten note by its first owner saying, "a book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering."
cbsnews.com
Prince Harry Police Security Quest Came at a Heavy Price
The Duke of Sussex's costs from a failed lawsuit over his police bodyguards could top $1.25 million, a lawyer has told Newsweek.
newsweek.com
Sneak peek: The Troubled Case Against Jane Dorotik
A woman convicted of murdering her husband discovers serious problems with some key evidence used against her at trial. "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty reports Saturday, March 30 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
cbsnews.com
GOP senator visits border, hails Abbott's success slowing migrant surge despite Biden admin opposition
Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., is offering her support for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who has fought with the Biden administration on his efforts to secure the border.
foxnews.com
Americans Increasingly Want to Move to Another Country
New polling suggests the number of U.S. adults wanting to settle elsewhere has more than trebled in the past 50 years.
newsweek.com
11 outfits from Amazon to help you conquer your spring workout routine
The perfect workout outfit is a great motivator to get you moving. We've selected 10 to get you in the mood for a spring routine.
foxnews.com
Diddy, Stevie J Sexual Relationship Claims Detailed in Bombshell Filing
Sean "Diddy" Combs' storm of controversy has seen a number of people associated with him also face allegations.
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newsweek.com
Illegal immigrant charged with raping ‘mentally incapacitated’ 14-year-old girl in Alabama
Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville called it proof President Biden “is aiding and abetting these monsters.”
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nypost.com
Jane Goodall to celebrate 90th birthday with talks on urgency of environmental action
Dr. Jane Goodall, a renowned British primatologist and conservationist, is approaching her 90th birthday and plans to celebrate with a series of environmental talks.
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foxnews.com
The Islanders’ decision not to sell at the 2022 deadline only looks worse with this playoff fizzle
If this Islanders season ends on April 17, the pathway there will have begun 24 months ago.
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nypost.com
US congressional delegation reaffirms defense support for Taiwan
A bipartisan U.S. congressional delegation has affirmed continued support for Taiwan following recent approval of $300 million in military aid, officials said.
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foxnews.com
White House still insists 'Bidenomics' is effective despite Democrats all but ditching slogan: Report
According to Axios, President Biden and Democratic Party leaders have all but stopped using the term "Bidenomics" even though the president still insists it's an effective message.
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foxnews.com
Australian soccer club with several transgender players dominates women's tournament, sparking outrage
An Australian soccer club with apparently five transgender players won a women's preseason tournament, sparking outrage in the country and online.
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foxnews.com
Two More Victims Recovered From Baltimore Wreckage, Hazardous Material Onboard
It is thought the four remaining victims may now be entombed in vehicles below the wreckage of the bridge. The post Two More Victims Recovered From Baltimore Wreckage, Hazardous Material Onboard appeared first on Breitbart.
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breitbart.com
‘Crazed’ Kathie Lee Gifford was worried about raising ‘spoiled brats’ in Hollywood
The former "Today" show anchor, 70, shares daughter Cassidy, 30, and son Cody, 34, with late husband Frank Gifford.
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nypost.com
King Charles Delivers Easter Message in First Public Address Since Kate Middleton’s News
King Charles gave an Easter message in his first public address since Kate Middleton announced she was diagnosed with cancer.
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time.com
Gambling scandal involving Shohei Ohtani’s ex-interpreter won’t be a Dodgers distraction: Mookie Betts
"We're just focused on business, taking care of business and that's all we keep first."
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nypost.com
Fired NATO General Maintains Innocence in Intel Probe
"I have nothing to blame myself for," Lieutenant General Jarosław Gromadziński said in response to the investigation.
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newsweek.com
U.C. Berkeley Parents Hired Private Security to Patrol Near Campus
The parents were worried about crime, but the university said that the move raised concerns about training and experience, and that security was better left to its own police force.
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nytimes.com
‘Late Night with the Devil’ Comes Under Fire For Using A.I. — But That’s Not The Only Unnervingly Phony Thing About It
AI is just details -- but that's where the devil lives!
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nypost.com
ISIS-K, the group linked to Moscow’s terror attack, explained
People lay flowers at Crocus City Hall in Moscow, the concert hall where a terror attack killed at least 140 people on March 22. | Sefa Karacan/Anadolu via Getty Images ISIS-K has become a global terror threat while the world has been distracted. The Islamic State — the notorious group known for building a brutal regime in Iraq and Syria — has claimed responsibility for Friday’s terror attack at a Moscow concert venue that killed at least 139 people. ISIS released graphic footage via its media apparatus, claiming that it was their gunmen who left more than 100 people injured at the Crocus City concert hall. And it likely is the case, despite Russia’s attempts to tie the incident to Ukraine. US intelligence officials linked the terror group’s outpost in the historical Khorasan region — which encompasses parts of Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan — to the attack. Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged that Islamic radicals perpetrated the attack, but the Kremlin has still tried to link Ukraine to the incident. “We know by whose hand the crime against Russia and its people was committed. But what is of interest to us is who ordered it,” Putin said in a video address Monday. ISIS has always been somewhat rhizomatic, with offshoots connected to the main entity in Iraq and Syria. For years, ISIS welcomed the emergence of affiliate groups that might have more local or regional goals, like ISIS-K and ISIS-West Africa, as long as they pledged allegiance to the caliphate ISIS had declared. But after ISIS suffered a major territorial defeat in Iraq and Syria five years ago, ISIS-K has since solidified its distinct political grievances, which center around its battle for power with the Taliban in Afghanistan. And because of its location in a fairly lawless region, the group can recruit and train without significant interference. For ISIS-K and the larger group, attacking Russia is a logical outgrowth of ISIS’s territorial defeat, since Russia supports the Assad regime in Syria and helped it regain control of the land ISIS briefly held. ISIS-K also has grievances with Russia because of its 1979-1989 war in Afghanistan, as well as Russia’s slaughter of Chechen Muslims in its war there. While it seems like ISIS-K holds some degree of responsibility, just how much the organization was involved in Friday’s attack is a lot less clear, according to Riccardo Valle, the director of research at the Khorasan Diary, which provides analysis on non-state and militant actors in the region. “There are several hints, some stronger, some weaker, that could suggest the involvement of the Islamic State of Khorasan branch in the implementation of the attack,” Valle told Vox, “from providing financial support or logistic support, operational support, or could be also more limited involvement,” like using its Russian- and Tajik-language propaganda to encourage local ISIS cells in Russia to attack. There’s a lot of noise around ISIS-K, and whether the Moscow attack means ISIS is “back” — meaning it has the ability to carry out attacks in Western countries and hold territory the way it did a decade ago. While it’s difficult to say what ISIS-K or the core group might do next, recent events show that the threat of extremism isn’t gone. What we know about ISIS and its affiliates now ISIS is an extremist group that follows a fundamentalist version of Sunni Islam and grew out of Al Qaeda’s Iraqi affiliate following the US invasion there in 2003. It gained prominence, though, in 2014 when it captured large swaths of Iraq and Syria. That was central to the group’s primary goal: to establish a global caliphate — traditionally understood as an Islamic political and religious state like the one that existed following the death of the prophet Muhammad, but which ISIS interpreted in a much more violent and repressive manner, especially when it came to women and religious minorities. The nature of ISIS has always been somewhat diffuse; it has historically claimed attacks or groups, like a splinter faction of Boko Haram in northwestern Africa, often referred to as ISWAP, that pledges its allegiance to the broader organization, even encouraging lone wolf actors to increase its reach. “It’s much more about ‘taking the fight to our enemies,’ rather than focused on particularly the nuances of Islamic theology,” Daniel Byman, senior fellow with the Transnational Threats Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Vox. And that broad ideology incorporates political motivations as well as religious ones. So although according to ISIS the US, Israel, Europe, Iran, and Russia are all “idolators,” or enemies based on religious affiliation, they’re also political adversaries. In other words, ISIS is predominantly interested in creating that global caliphate over which it maintains territorial, ideological, and political control. Enter: ISIS-K. The group was founded in 2014 or 2015 (around the same time as the core ISIS group rose to prominence) as something of an offshoot of the original group. It was also founded in opposition to the Taliban and made the case for a global caliphate, not a national emirate like the Taliban wanted — particularly, the control of the entire Khorasan region. The historical Khorasan region is important to Islam, and particularly Islamic jihadist and messianic tradition because of a teaching attributed to the Prophet Muhammad, which claims that Muslims will fight non-believers in the region at the end of the world. ISIS-K has been fighting the Taliban since 2015 — a tension that really ramped up following the fall of Afghanistan’s elected government in August 2021 after the US withdrew. It has repeatedly attacked ethnic Hazara in Afghanistan under the Taliban regime — both as a repudiation of the minority group’s Shia ideology, but also to prove the Taliban’s poor handle on security in the country and its lack of willingness to protect minorities. The Taliban is also, according to ISIS-K, “just the natural successors to the Afghan Islamic Republic, and hence they are basically [allies] of all regional countries and of the United States [who are] all united to fight the Islamic State in Afghanistan and globally,” Valle said. But, again, given the group’s global focus, their conflict doesn’t stop with the Taliban. Russia became another natural target, for example. That’s in part because the core ISIS group sees the country as responsible for its destruction, due to Russia and Iran’s role in propping up the Assad regime in Syria, especially as it regained control of ISIS’s former caliphate. (It doesn’t help that both the Assad regime and Iranian government are Shia.) How to understand the ISIS threat now What is clear, according to the experts Vox spoke to, is that ISIS is still well coordinated and capable of causing harm across the region. Take the latest attack in Russia, which was pulled off in Moscow amid a war: “All that points to some significant training,” said Colin Clarke, an analyst at the Soufan Center. “This wasn’t an example of an incident where some [random] radicalized Central Asians living in Russia were sitting around on their phones, imbibing ISIS propaganda, and they decided to launch an attack of their own.” We don’t know exactly what the directives for last Friday’s attack might have looked like or how much the core group is instructing affiliates — so we might never know the breakdown of how exactly it happened. Russia has released photos of the alleged attackers, but the exact order of operations and planning is unlikely to come out any time soon, both because of the nature of Russian propaganda and the groups themselves. More broadly: It’s difficult to tell how connected ISIS-K and other affiliates are to the core ISIS group, and to what extent the affiliates take direction from the core and coordinate with each other to carry out attacks. “These groups are basically fluid, they are not armies, they are not states,” Valle said. “So they move in a fluid manner. So we cannot [distinguish] from one to the other so sharply; sometimes people work with different entities and networks.” But in Afghanistan and parts of Pakistan where ISIS-K trains and operates, there’s very little ability for the Taliban — let alone the international community — to monitor or threaten the group. “Afghanistan has been a free-for-all” since the US withdrawal in 2021, Clarke said. “The US probably still has decent signals intelligence … but probably almost no human intelligence. And that’s gonna lead to some blind spots naturally. And so I think we don’t know a lot about what’s been going on in Afghanistan, clearly.” Though Western intelligence services adapted to the ISIS threat in the mid-2010s, Clarke noted that the world’s attention had turned away from those kinds of terror threats. “Now, it’s all about great power competition, China, artificial intelligence, all these other things,” he said. “There’s a certain sense of terrorism fatigue, after 20 years of the global war on terrorism, people don’t want to think about it. They don’t want to talk about it. They don’t want to prepare for it.” But ISIS, and ISIS-K in particular, haven’t stopped training and planning just because the Western world stopped paying attention. The group’s bold and well-coordinated attack in Moscow, as well as the ISIS-K attack in Iran in January, indicate that at least some affiliates possess the capabilities, funding, and motivation to inflict significant casualties and serious damage on their perceived enemies. And though the threat is diminished compared to the height of ISIS’s power in the mid-2010s, the overall terror threat is “in absolute terms, I would say it’s pretty high,” Valle said. Specifically, there is “risk that something similar or to a lesser extent — still dangerous — can happen also in Europe, and this is because in the last months of 2023 and the first months of 2024, several cells and local networks of militants were dismantled in Europe, in Austria, Germany, Netherlands, and the UK.” Indeed, both Italian and French authorities ramped up security following the attacks in Moscow. Both countries have major cultural events upcoming — Holy Week celebrations in Italy and the Summer Olympics in Paris. ISIS-K has a pattern of attacking large cultural events, including mosques during prayers in Afghanistan and a memorial service for assassinated Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani in Iran earlier this year. But it’s important to note that European counterterror services are much more capable of detecting these kinds of threats than they were a decade ago. And US intelligence knew about the Iran and Moscow attacks before they happened, warning both countries of the threats. None of that is to say that a terror attack on a Western country is impossible, but the US and Europe are better equipped for one than a decade ago.
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vox.com
In Florida's Housing Market, Insurance-Free Homes Become Big Selling Point
Florida homeowners selling their homes are boasting about their properties not needing flood insurance in an attempt to attract buyers.
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newsweek.com
Hazardous Material Leaking From "Dali" Ship After Baltimore Bridge Crash
A total of 56 containers on board the ship were carrying 764 tons of hazardous materials, including corrosives, flammables and lithium-ion batteries.
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newsweek.com
‘Mamma Mia’ Star Replaced With AI in BBC Project: ‘Sobering’
Mike Marsland/GettyAn actress who performed in the stage production of Mamma Mia! for over a decade has been dropped from a BBC project because they’ve decided to give the gig to artificial intelligence instead.Musical theater star Sara Poyzer publicly shared a screenshot of an email she received from an unnamed production company which read: “Sorry for the delay—we have had the approval from BBC to use the AI generated voice so we wont need Sara anymore.” “Sobering…” Poyzer captioned the post, along with a sad face emoji.Poyzer replied to several messages from well-wishers describing the situation as “grim” and “proper shit.” She also tagged the performing arts union Equity in her original post—the organization is running a campaign called “Stop AI Stealing the Show” to “strengthen performers’ rights in response to the rise of AI across the entertainment industry.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
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thedailybeast.com
Caitlin Clark pens emotional farewell message after final Iowa home game
Caitlin Clark said goodbye to Carver-Hawkeye Arena for the last time after scoring 32 points in her final game in Iowa City on Monday.
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nypost.com
Russia-Ukraine War Analysts Reveal Plan to Defeat Putin
"The West has the advantage, but it must decide to use it," the Institute for the Study of War think tank said.
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newsweek.com
A White Woman Told Me I Was Under-Experienced. It Was an Awakening
It hit me like a cold, blunt slap in the face.
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newsweek.com
The sights and sounds from the Yankees’ memorable trip to Mexico City
Where else do you get Giancarlo Stanton taking batting practice with a wrestling mask on, a team party with unlimited street tacos and two games in an unrivaled atmosphere?
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nypost.com
Fani Willis Dealt Blow as Judge to Hear Donald Trump Arguments
Judge Scott McAfee is set to hear arguments on two pretrial motions in the high-profile Georgia elections interference case.
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newsweek.com
Kenan Thompson Breaks Silence on Nickelodeon Allegations
A recent docu-series, 'Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV', featured accusations of "fostering a toxic workplace."
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newsweek.com