Category: Uncategorized

  • Feds take over manhunt for Washington father accused of killing 3 young daughters

    Feds take over manhunt for Washington father accused of killing 3 young daughters


    After law enforcement officers spent days scouring a remote section of Washington State for a father accused of killing his three young daughters, the local sheriff leading the manhunt turned over the search to federal authorities, officials said Monday.

    Since last week, the search for Travis Decker, 32, has covered hundreds of square miles by air, land and water, the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release, and the department reached the point “where we need to rest our local resources.”

    “Our command staff continues to be engaged with the search command while we give our teams time off to rest and recuperate and be ready to rejoin the search for, and capture of, the suspect,” the sheriff’s office said.

    The sheriff’s office remains the lead agency on the criminal investigation into the deaths of Decker’s three daughters, Evelyn, 8, Paityn, 9, and Olivia Decker, 5, the department said.

    Paityn, Olivia and Evelyn Decker
    Paityn, Olivia and Evelyn Decker. Whitney Decker via AP

    The girls were found dead June 2 near a campground east of Seattle after Decker failed to return them from a visitation three days before. An arrest warrant accuses him of first-degree murder and kidnapping.

    An autopsy completed Friday attributed the girls’ cause of death to suffocation, according to Monday’s release. A detective previously wrote in an affidavit in support of an arrest warrant that they had bags over their heads and had been zip-tied.

    Two bloody handprints were found on Decker’s white pickup, which was found near the girls, and one of the blood samples recovered from the scene belonged to a man, the department said. Another blood sample was non-human.

    The department said additional DNA and fingerprint analyses are being conducted.

    Travis Decker.
    Travis Decker.Wenatchee Police Department

    Authorities said they have collected a large amount of evidence from the scene, along with Decker’s dog, which was turned over to a local animal rescue.

    Authorities previously described Decker, a military veteran and active member of the Washington State National Guard, as a longtime outdoorsman known to go “off-grid” for months. The sheriff has warned people with cabins in the area to lock their doors and leave their lights on at night.

    The affidavit shows that Decker’s ex-wife, Whitney Decker, described her relationship with her ex-husband as cordial and said he’d never previously failed to return their children. A parenting plan imposed by a court last year required him to seek mental health treatment and domestic violence-anger management counseling but he had not done so and refused to sign the plan, according to the affidavit.

    Since the girls were found dead, Whitney Decker has called for reforms to the Amber Alert system, which sends out text messages to all cell phones in the area of missing children but was not used after she told authorities that her ex-husband had violated their parenting plan.

    A spokesman for the agency that manages the system, Washington State Patrol, has said that a request for an alert from local authorities did not meet strict criteria required by the federal program.



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  • Supreme Court just gave DOGE access to Social Security data. Here’s what personal information is at stake.

    Supreme Court just gave DOGE access to Social Security data. Here’s what personal information is at stake.



    The Supreme Court on Friday granted the Department of Government Efficiency access to Social Security Administration data that includes sensitive personal information of millions of Americans.

    The decision comes as the federal government sought a stay, or temporary suspension, after a federal judge blocked DOGE’s access to that data in April. The nation’s highest court granted an emergency application from the Trump administration to lift that injunction; the case is expected to proceed in lower courts.

    In its decision, the Supreme Court concluded the Social Security Administration may give DOGE access to agency records while the case plays out “in order for those members to do their work.”

    Both the White House and the Social Security Administration called the Supreme Court decision a victory. In a statement, White House spokesperson Elizabeth Huston said it will allow the Trump administration to “carry out commonsense efforts to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse and modernize government information systems.”

    Likewise, Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignano in a statement said the agency “will continue driving forward modernization efforts, streamlining government systems, and ensuring improved service and outcomes for our beneficiaries.”

    Yet others expressed grave concern in reaction to the decision, including Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, advocacy groups and plaintiffs in the case against DOGE and the Social Security Administration.

    “This is a sad day for our democracy and a scary day for millions of people,” said the coalition of plaintiffs including American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees; the American Federation of Teachers; and the Alliance for Retired Americans, who are represented by Democracy Forward.

    “This ruling will enable President Trump and DOGE’s affiliates to steal Americans’ private and personal data,” they said, while vowing to “use every legal tool at our disposal” to prevent the misuse of public data as the case moves forward.

    Millions of Americans’ sensitive data at stake

    The dispute focuses on how much access DOGE should have to Americans’ personal data.

    The plaintiffs filed an initial complaint in early March, stating the Social Security Administration had “abandoned its commitment to maintaining the privacy” of the sensitive personal information of millions of Americans under DOGE’s influence.

    The Social Security Administration collects and stores some of the “most sensitive” personally identifiable information of millions of Americans, ranging from seniors to adults to children, the complaint notes.

    When applying for a Social Security number, the agency requires the disclosure of place and date of birth, citizenship, ethnicity, race, sex, phone number and mailing address. It also requires parents’ names and Social Security numbers.

    But the agency is also privy to other personal data, including personal health information, the complaint notes. That includes:

    • driver’s license and identification information
    • bank and credit cards
    • birth and marriage certificates
    • pension information
    • home and work addresses
    • school records
    • immigration and naturalization records
    • family court records
    • employment and employer records
    • psychological and psychiatric health records
    • hospitalization records
    • addiction treatment records
    • records for HIV/AIDS tests

    The Social Security Administration also collects tax information, including total earnings, Social Security and Medicare wages and annual employee withholdings.

    DOGE has not only accessed the agency’s sensitive and protected information; it has also publicly shared it, according to the complaint. The actions of the defendants, including the Social Security Administration, DOGE and leaders including former head Elon Musk, have deprived Americans of privacy protections guaranteed by federal law and made their personal information vulnerable, the complaint alleges.

    In her dissent, Jackson, joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, notes that records show “DOGE received far broader data access” than the Social Security Administration usually allows in fraud, waste and abuse investigations. Typically, those investigations start with high level, anonymized data, with more access to more detailed information only granted as necessary.

    Justice Elena Kagan also dissented in the 6-3 decision.

    “The government wants to give DOGE unfettered access to this personal, non-anonymized information right now – before the courts have time to assess whether DOGE’s access is lawful,” Justice Jackson wrote.

    While litigation is pending, the government has asked to temporarily suspend the lower court’s temporary limitations on DOGE’s access to Social Security data, she noted.

    “But the government fails to substantiate its stay request by showing that it or the public will suffer irreparable harm absent the court’s intervention,” Justice Jackson wrote.



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  • California AG says he is suing Trump over ‘unlawful’ National Guard order

    California AG says he is suing Trump over ‘unlawful’ National Guard order


    California Attorney General Rob Bonta said Monday he is suing the Trump administration for deploying hundreds of National Guard members to Los Angeles over the weekend, a move he called “unlawful.”

    Bonta said President Donald Trump’s move to federalize 2,000 members of the state National Guard on Saturday in response to protests of the administration’s immigration actions was unnecessary and an “infringement” on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s authority.

    The suit will seek a court finding that Trump’s order was illegal, he said.

    “The president is trying to manufacture chaos and crisis on the ground for his own political ends. Federalizing the California National Guard is an abuse of the President’s authority under the law – and not one we take lightly. We’re asking a court to put a stop to the unlawful, unprecedented order,” Bonta said.

    Bonta also argued that the move took crucial resources away from wildfire season.

    The White House had contended the move was necessary to combat “lawlessness that has been allowed to fester” in Los Angeles, referring to clashes and confrontations between federal agents carrying out immigration raids and protesters.

    Newsom had said there was no need to deploy the National Guard, and that Trump took the drastic step out of a desire for a “spectacle.”

    He also accused Trump of trying to “manufacture a crisis.”

    “He’s hoping for chaos so he can justify more crackdowns, more fear, more control,” Newsom said in a post Sunday on X, where he also urged protesters to “stay peaceful.”

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.



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  • Mike Vrabel: Stefon Diggs is engaged, I like his energy

    Mike Vrabel: Stefon Diggs is engaged, I like his energy



    After receiver Stefon Diggs got himself into a bit of controversy, he’s been with the team to end the club’s offseason program — including at minicamp this week.

    Head coach Mike Vrabel was asked about Diggs and how he’s done in the building on Monday.

    “Good. I mean, he’s tried to figure out where everything is and what his role is, making sure that as we add those situations — the third down, the no-huddle, the red zone — that he’s staying up on it,” Vrabel said in his press conference. “He’s working hard in his rehab and when he can — there’s certain drills he can be out there and certain drills he won’t be. But I think he’s engaged and I like his energy.”

    That’s about all the Patriots can ask for inside the building, as Diggs continues to rehab from a torn ACL suffered midway through the 2024 season.

    In eight games for Houston last year, Diggs caught 47 passes for 496 yards with three touchdowns.





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  • The Pacers won’t win the NBA Finals unless Tyrese Haliburton can improve in this area

    The Pacers won’t win the NBA Finals unless Tyrese Haliburton can improve in this area



    When Tyrese Haliburton hit what would be the game-winning shot with 0.3 seconds left in Game 1 of the NBA Finals, the flashpoint moment obscured what was otherwise a relatively quiet performance for the Indiana Pacers star, as he finished the opener with 14 points and six assists.

    In Game 2, which the Pacers lost 123-107 after trailing by double digits for most of the night, there were no late heroics by Haliburton to save what was another so-so effort.

    While Haliburton’s winner will forever be etched in Finals lore, it also can’t be used to hand-wave what’s been a significant issue for Indiana, which has trailed for the vast majority of the first 96 minutes of the championship round: Haliburton needs to play much better if the Pacers are going to win the series.

    In his first two games against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Haliburton is averaging 15.5 points, 6.5 rebounds and 6.0 assists. Alarmingly, he’s also averaging 4.0 turnovers (compared with 1.6 during the season), and he hasn’t attempted a single free throw.

    On Sunday, he scored only 5 points through the first three quarters on 2-of-7 shooting.

    Haliburton’s scoring and assists are both down compared with the regular season, and especially compared with the rest of the playoffs. And after turning the ball over only 10 times in six games of the Eastern Conference Finals, he’s nearly matched that total with eight so far against the Thunder.

    “Defensively, they have a lot of different guys who can guard the ball, fly around,” Haliburton said after Game 2. “They are really physical. I think I’ve had two really poor first halves. I just have to figure out how to be better earlier in games. But kudos to them. They are a great defensive team, but watch the film and see where I can get better.”

    One issue for Haliburton has been his inability to create for himself and his teammates via driving into the paint.

    In the regular season, Haliburton averaged nearly 11 drives a night, forays into the teeth of the defense that would often lead to good offense for Indiana. In the conference finals, Haliburton averaged closer to 13 drives per game and shot 57.9% from the field when attempting a field goal on such plays, while also never turning the ball over.

    Against a long-armed and athletic Thunder defense with fewer weak points to attack, Haliburton is under nine drives a game, with a total of no assists and six turnovers.

    “They were the best in the league during the year at keeping people out of [the paint],” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said Sunday. “They are great at it. We have to find ways to get in the ball in there, and you know, it’s just there are so many things that have to go right on a set of two possessions to get the ball into the heart of their defense.”

    While Haliburton is not the kind of takeover scorer say, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is for the Thunder, he is unique in the way he is able to create offense for his teammates. But unlike in previous rounds of the playoffs, Haliburton hasn’t been able to find mismatches to attack in order to scramble Oklahoma City’s defense.

    In the conference finals, Haliburton averaged 17.3 potential assists a game and created 27.0 points a night on assists. Against the Thunder, he’s dropped to 14.0 potential assists while creating only 31 points total through two games.

    “I feel like in the first half we were just moving the ball on the outside and I don’t think we had a single point in the paint in the first quarter, if I’m not mistaken,” Haliburton said about Game 2. “Our offense is built from the inside out, and we have to do a better job getting downhill.”

    He added: “We know that the paint is our emphasis and the paint is our friend. The more that we’re able to attack the paint, usually better things happen for us.”



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  • NFLPA hasn’t released 61-page collusion ruling to Russell Wilson, Kyler Murray

    NFLPA hasn’t released 61-page collusion ruling to Russell Wilson, Kyler Murray



    Earlier this year, a key collusion case filed by the NFL Players Association regarding certain veteran quarterback contracts resulted in a 61-page ruling. The outcome was a mixed bag for both sides. And the document continues to be hidden from view by the league and the union.

    And we’ve decided to continue to push for its release.

    Beyond the fact that the public has a clear interest in any and all questions regarding a sports league that millions religiously follow and state and local governments routinely subsidize, the members of the NFLPA have a right to know. The document has not been shared with them.

    It also hasn’t been given to at least two of the three players who were the focal points of the case — Giants quarterback Russell Wilson and Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray. (We don’t currently know whether Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson did or did not receive the document.)

    It’s one thing for the league and the union to refuse to let the media see the document. It’s quite another to conceal it from the members of the union, including the members who were most directly impacted by the case.

    We nevertheless will keep pushing for its release. We’ve asked both the league and the union for the document. And if the answer is no, we hope to get a semi-plausible explanation for that from both parties.

    It won’t keep us from continuing to push for its release. We all have a right to see it. Especially the members of the NFLPA. Especially those who were at the heart of the case.





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  • Southern Baptists target porn, sports betting, same-sex marriage and ‘willful childlessness’

    Southern Baptists target porn, sports betting, same-sex marriage and ‘willful childlessness’



    Southern Baptists meeting this week in Dallas will be asked to approve resolutions calling for a legal ban on pornography and a reversal of the U.S. Supreme Court’s approval of same-sex marriage.

    The proposed resolutions call for laws on gender, marriage and family based on what they say is the biblically stated order of divine creation. They also call for legislators to curtail sports betting and to support policies that promote childbearing.

    The Southern Baptist Convention, the nation’s largest Protestant denomination, is also expected to debate controversies within its own house during its annual meeting Tuesday and Wednesday — such as a proposed ban on churches with women pastors. There are also calls to defund the organization’s public policy arm, whose anti-abortion stance hasn’t extended to supporting criminal charges for women having abortions.

    In a denomination where support for President Donald Trump is strong, there is little on the advance agenda referencing specific actions by Trump since taking office in January in areas such as tariffs, immigration or the pending budget bill containing cuts in taxes, food aid and Medicaid.

    Remnants of the epic showdown in Dallas 40 years ago

    Southern Baptists will be meeting on the 40th anniversary of another Dallas annual meeting. An epic showdown took place when a record-shattering 45,000 church representatives clashed in what became a decisive blow in the takeover of the convention — and its seminaries and other agencies — by a more conservative faction that was also aligned with the growing Christian conservative movement in presidential politics.

    The 1985 showdown was “the hinge convention in terms of the old and the new in the SBC,” said Albert Mohler, who became a key agent in the denomination’s rightward shift as longtime president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.

    Attendance this week will likely be a fraction of 1985’s, but that meeting’s influence will be evident. Any debates will be among solidly conservative members.

    Many of the proposed resolutions — on gambling, pornography, sex, gender and marriage — reflect long-standing positions of the convention, though they are especially pointed in their demands on the wider political world. They are proposed by the official Committee on Resolutions, whose recommendations typically get strong support.

    A proposed resolution says legislators have a duty to “pass laws that reflect the truth of creation and natural law — about marriage, sex, human life, and family” and to oppose laws contradicting “what God has made plain through nature and Scripture.”

    To some outside observers, such language is theocratic.

    “When you talk about God’s design for anything, there’s not a lot of room for compromise,” said Nancy Ammerman, professor emerita of sociology of religion at Boston University. She was an eyewitness to the Dallas meeting and author of “Baptist Battles,” a history of the 1980s controversy between theological conservatives and moderates.

    “There’s not a lot of room for people who don’t have the same understanding of who God is and how God operates in the world,” she said.

    Mohler said the resolutions reflect a divinely created order that predates the writing of the Scriptures and is affirmed by them. He said the Christian church has always asserted that the created order “is binding on all persons, in all times, everywhere.”

    Southern Baptist views more politically viable today

    Separate resolutions decry pornography and sports betting as destructive, calling for the former to be banned and the latter curtailed.

    At least some of these political stances are in the realm of plausibility at a time when their conservative allies control all levers of power in Washington and many have embraced aspects of a Christian nationalist agenda.

    A Southern Baptist, Mike Johnson, is speaker of the House of Representatives and third in line to the presidency.

    At least one Supreme Court justice, Clarence Thomas, has called for revisiting the 2015 Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide. Other religious conservatives — including some in the Catholic postliberal movement, which has influenced Vice President JD Vance — have promoted the view that a robust government should legislate morality, such as banning pornography while easing church-state separation.

    And conservatives of various stripes have echoed one of the resolution’s call for pro-natalist policies and its decrying of “willful childlessness which contributes to a declining fertility rate.”

    Some call for eliminating Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission

    Some preconvention talk has focused on defunding the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, the Southern Baptist Convention’s public policy arm, which has been accused of being ineffective. Ten former Southern Baptist presidents endorsed its continued funding, though one other called for the opposite.

    A staunchly conservative group, the Center for Baptist Leadership, has posted online articles critical of the commission, which is adamantly anti-abortion but has opposed state laws criminalizing women seeking abortions.

    The commission has appealed to Southern Baptists for support, citing its advocacy for religious liberty and against abortion and transgender identity.

    “Without the ERLC, you will send the message to our nation’s lawmakers and the public at large that the SBC has chosen to abandon the public square at a time when the Southern Baptist voice is most needed,” said a video statement from the commission president, Brent Leatherwood.

    A group of Southern Baptist ethnic groups and leaders signed a statement in April citing concern over Trump’s immigration crackdown, saying it has hurt church attendance and raised fears. “Law and order are necessary, but enforcement must be accompanied with compassion that doesn’t demonize those fleeing oppression, violence, and persecution,” the statement said.

    The Center for Baptist Leadership, however, denounced the denominational Baptist Press for working to “weaponize empathy” in its reporting on the statement and Leatherwood for supporting it.

    Texas pastor Dwight McKissic, a Black pastor who shares many of the Southern Baptist Convention’s conservative stances, criticized what he sees as a backlash against the commission, “the most racially progressive entity in the SBC.”

    “The SBC is transitioning from an evangelical organization to a fundamentalist organization,” he posted on the social media site X. “Fewer and fewer Black churches will make the transition with them.”

    Amendment to ban churches with women pastors

    An amendment to ban churches with women pastors failed in 2024 after narrowly failing to gain a two-thirds supermajority for two consecutive years. It is expected to be reintroduced.

    The denomination’s belief statement says the office of pastor is limited to men, but there remain disagreements over whether this applies only to the lead pastor or to assistants as well. In recent years, the convention began purging churches that either had women as lead pastors or asserted that they could serve that role. But when an SBC committee this year retained a South Carolina megachurch with a woman on its pastoral staff, some argued this proved the need for a constitutional amendment. (The church later quit the denomination of its own accord.)

    The meeting comes as the Southern Baptist Convention continues its long membership slide, down 2% in 2024 from the previous year in its 18th consecutive annual decline. The organization now reports a membership of 12.7 million members, still the largest among Protestant denominations, many of whom are shrinking faster.

    More promising are Southern Baptists’ baptism numbers — a key spiritual vital sign. They stand at 250,643, exceeding pre-pandemic levels and, at least for now, reversing a long slide.



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  • Newsom Slams Use of National Guard on ICE Protesters in LA

    Newsom Slams Use of National Guard on ICE Protesters in LA


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    California Gov. Gavin Newsom is criticizing President Donald Trump’s use of the National Guard to crack down on demonstrators in Los Angeles protesting immigration raids by federal agents, saying it only inflames the situation. Meanwhile, border czar Tom Homan said officials who stand in the way of law enforcement operations could be arrested. NBC’s Liz Kreutz reports for TODAY.



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  • Israel Intercepts Gaza-Bound Ship With Greta Thunberg on Board

    Israel Intercepts Gaza-Bound Ship With Greta Thunberg on Board


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    Israeli forces on Monday intercepted a ship full of activists including celebrity climate activist Greta Thunberg, as their ship tried to approach the Gaza Strip to break Israel’s years-long blockade. The yacht, operated by the pro-Palestinian Freedom Flotilla Coalition, had intended to make a symbolic delivery of humanitarian aid in Gaza but expected to be stopped by Israel forces. NBC’s Matt Bradley reports for TODAY.



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  • L.A. immigration protests intensify and Israel intercepts Gaza aid ship: Morning Rundown

    L.A. immigration protests intensify and Israel intercepts Gaza aid ship: Morning Rundown


    California Gov. Gavin Newsom threatens to sue the Trump administration. Israel intercepts a Gaza-bound aid ship with Greta Thunberg aboard. And residents of a San Diego neighborhood say they live in fear after a fiery jet crash.

    Here’s what to know today.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom blasts Trump administration’s deployment of National Guard in Los Angeles

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom said he plans to sue the Trump administration over its deployment of the National Guard in Los Angeles as protests in the city intensified over the weekend. President Donald Trump’s order required the Defense Department to coordinate with Newsom before he sent in the National Guard, Newsom said, adding that the administration failed to do so.

    “There’s a protocol; there’s a process,” Newsom told correspondent Jacob Soboroff yesterday in an interview on MSNBC. “He didn’t care about that. And the worst part? He completely lied.” Newsom noted that Trump had said on social media that everything was safe because after he had sent the guard — except the guard had not been deployed at the time.

    This is Morning Rundown, a weekday newsletter to start your day. Sign up here to get it in your inbox.

    Newsom also mentioned that he and Trump spoke by phone on Friday, but Trump didn’t express concern about his ability to manage the growing protests or the prospect of federalizing National Guard troops.

    Newsom also dared for Trump’s “border czar” Tom Homan to “arrest me.” On Saturday, Homan threatened to arrest anyone who obstructs the immigration effort, including city and state leaders.

    “He knows where to find me,” Newsom said of Homan. “That kind of bloviating is exhausting. So, Tom, arrest me. Let’s go.”

    Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass have intensely criticized Trump’s decision to authorize the deployment of at least 2,000 National Guard troops in response to the protests. As of Sunday, around 300 National Guard members were in the city. U.S. Northern Command said on Sunday that 500 Marines were on standby and ready to provide backup to National Guard troops if needed.

    Protests around the Southern California city escalated over the weekend, with tensions rising between demonstrators and authorities yesterday in downtown. At one point, both sides of the 101 Freeway were shut down after protesters streamed onto the roadway. Video showed police launching flash-bangs to disperse protesters, as well as tear gas and less-lethal projectiles. By the end of the night, an unlawful assembly declaration had been expanded to include all of downtown. Authorities said at least 56 people had been arrested, including 29 on Saturday and at least 17 when the 101 Freeway was shut down.

    Read the full story here.

    More politics news:

    • A travel ban on 12 countries, including Afghanistan, Iran and Libya, took effect at 12:01 a.m. ET, less than a week after President Donald Trump announced the ban over national security concerns. Another seven countries, including Cuba and Venezuela are under partial restrictions.
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    Israel intercepts aid boat with Greta Thunberg aboard

    Gaza Freedom Flotilla
    Activists raise their hands onboard the Madleen vessel as it is boarded by the Israel Defense Forces, halting its mission to Gaza in the early hours of June 9.@GazaFFlotilla via X

    Israel’s Foreign Minister said the British-flagged yacht Madleen was “safely making its way to the shores of Israel” and that passengers will “return to their home countries” after it was boarded by Israeli forces. The vessel carrying Greta Thunberg and other activists was attempting to break Israel’s naval blockade to deliver aid to Gaza. Israel had previously vowed to stop the vessel.

    Madleen was carrying a symbolic shipment of humanitarian aid to Gaza, where Israel’s 11-week blockade has heightened fears of starvation. Meanwhile, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation announced yesterday the opening of three distribution centers today. Read the full story here.

    Highlights from the 78th annual Tony Awards

    “Maybe Happy Ending” dominated the 2025 Tonys with six awards, including best musical and co-star Darren Criss bringing home the trophy for best leading actor in a musical. This year’s show also saw Nicole Scherzinger win best actress in a musical for her debut Broadway role in “Sunset Boulevard,” while Sarah Snook won for best leading actress in a play for “The Picture of Dorian Gray” (and bringing her closer to an EGOT) and Cole Escola won best lead actor in a play for “Oh, Mary!”

    “Wicked” star Cynthia Erivo hosted the night, charming audiences with a warning that she would “sing off” winners if their acceptance speeches ran beyond the 90-second window and a nod to “Dreamgirls” as she bid everyone farewell. And let’s not forget the “Hamilton” medley, performed by the hit show’s original cast. See more highlights from the night, plus a full list of winners.

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    • The Oklahoma City Thunder dominated the Indiana Pacers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals, winning 123-107 and tying the series, thanks to the same blueprint that led the Pacers to a Game 1 win.
    • Frenzied social media claims about ivermectin’s supposed “miraculous” abilities has some clamoring for over-the-counter access to the drug, but a lack of FDA guidance has some pharmacists worried.
    • Carlos Alcaraz produced one of the greatest comebacks in French Open history to win the men’s title for a second straight year.

    Staff Pick: After a jet crash, these San Diego residents live in dread

    After a jet crashed into their neighborhood, some survivors say their emotional recovery is stunted by living so close to a busy airport.
    After a jet crashed into their neighborhood, some survivors say their emotional recovery is stunted by living so close to a busy airport.Ariana Drehsler for NBC News; AP

    A jet crashed into a military housing neighborhood in San Diego. But with so much going on nationally, it seemed like a blip in the news cycle. I wanted to know how the survivors were recovering after experiencing such stark terror. They were asleep — their babies tucked in nearby — when smoke and fire penetrated their bedrooms in the early morning hours of May 22. They had to flee while jet fuel snaked down the street, igniting every car in its path. Panicked neighbors outside screamed to find their children.

    Two weeks later, their fear endures. The Navy families still live below an active flight path about 2 miles from an airport. That means about every 30 minutes, an aircraft roars above and brings them back to the morning fire roused them out of bed.

    “It terrifies me knowing that we have planes coming over here all day, all the time,” one of the survivors said. “It’s a lot to be reminded of every single day.” Melissa Chan, national reporter

    NBC Select: Online Shopping, Simplified

    Sales are skyrocketing on Amazon for this anti-frizz hair product from Amika. Our team scoured through reviews to help you decide if it’s worth adding to your cart. Plus, your loofah is also probably nastier than you realize. Consider one of these dermatologist-approved alternatives instead.

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