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  • 10-year-old girl killed by falling tree in Atlanta after storms sweep through Georgia

    10-year-old girl killed by falling tree in Atlanta after storms sweep through Georgia



    A cold front that brought showers and storms across Georgia turned deadly on Saturday when a 10-year-old girl died in southwest Atlanta after a tree fell on her home, according to the city’s fire department.

    The girl’s mother and grandmother were also hospitalized following the incident but are expected to recover, the Atlanta Fire Department said in a statement.

    The AFD said six people lived in the home and that the American Red Cross was contacted to assist the family.

    Officials did not release the names of the family members.

    Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp acknowledged the girl’s death on X.

    “This morning, we’re saddened by the tragic passing of this young girl as a result of last night’s storms,” Kemp wrote. “We ask that all Georgians join us in praying for her loved ones during this difficult time.”

    The incident comes a few weeks after parts of the South and the Midwest — including Atlanta — experienced unprecedented, extreme weather.

    Last month, the regions were slammed with historic rainfalls, strong winds and deadly flash flooding, killing at least 19 people.

    Around 73 million people were under flood alerts during the episode of extreme weather, according to the National Weather Service.



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  • Singapore’s long-ruling party wins another landslide in election boost for new prime minister

    Singapore’s long-ruling party wins another landslide in election boost for new prime minister


    SINGAPORE — Singapore’s long-ruling People’s Action Party won another landslide in Saturday’s general elections, extending its 66-year unbroken rule in a huge boost for Prime Minister Lawrence Wong who took power a year ago.

    The Election Department announced the PAP won 82 Parliamentary seats after vote counting ended. The party had earlier won five seats uncontested, giving it 87 out of a total 97 seats. The opposition Workers Party maintained its 10 seats.

    The PAP’s popular vote rose to 65.6%, up from a near-record low of 61% in 2020 polls. Jubilant supporters of the PAP, which had ruled Singapore since 1959, gathered in stadiums waved flags and cheered in celebration.

    “We are grateful once again for your strong mandate. We will honor the trust you have given to us by working even harder for all of you,” Wong said in a speech earlier to his constituency before the full results were out.

    Eugene Tan, a law professor at the Singapore Management University, said the opposition’s failure to make further inroads after 2020 was a surprise. “Singapore voters played their cards close to their chest. Today, they indicated that their trust is with a party that has delivered over the years,” he said.

    Singapore Election
    Workers’ Party (WP) supporters react at an assembly centre during the general election, in Singapore on Saturday.Suhaimi Abdullah / AP

    A U.S.-trained economist who is also finance minister, Wong’s appeal for a resounding mandate to steer trade-reliant Singapore through economic turbulence following U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff hikes has hit home. The government has lowered its growth forecast and warned of a possible recession.

    Wong, 52, succeeded Lee Hsien Loong to become the city-state’s fourth leader. Lee stepped down in May 2024 after two decades at the helm but remained in the Cabinet as a senior minister. His retirement as premier ended a family dynasty started by his father, Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s first leader, who built the former colonial backwater into one of the world’s richest nations during 31 years in office.

    The PAP is seen as a beacon of stability and prosperity, but tight government control and the rising cost of living in one of the world’s most expensive cities also has led to growing unhappiness, especially among younger voters. Widening income disparity, increasingly unaffordable housing, overcrowding and restrictions on free speech have loosened the PAP’s grip on power.

    The opposition says giving it a stronger presence in Parliament will allow a more balanced political system and greater accountability. But they face an uphill task, often hamstrung by a lack of resources, fragmented support and a lack of unity. Critics said gerrymandering also gives the PAP an advantage.

    Pritam Singh, leader of the Workers Party, acknowledged it was a tough contest and vowed to continue the fight for a more balanced Parliament. “The slate is wiped clean, we start work again tomorrow, and we go again,” he said.

    While the Workers Party failed to expand its presence, it had consolidated its support with increased share vote in some areas, said Southeast Asia political analyst Bridget Welsh. Other smaller opposition parties however, failed to make a breakthrough.

    Welsh said voters opted for stability amid concerns over global volatility due to sweeping U.S. tariffs. Wong’s more approachable leadership in engaging yunger voters and efforts to renew PAP by bringing in about a-third of new faces also helped swung votes, she said.

    “I call this the Wong and Trump effect,” she said. “The issue of economic insecurity really did reinforce his mandate.”



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  • Murdered woman’s divorce attorney arrested in her 2013 killing

    Murdered woman’s divorce attorney arrested in her 2013 killing


    More than twelve years after Aliza Sherman was fatally stabbed in downtown Cleveland, police arrested a man on Friday in connection with her death.

    A grand jury has indicted Gregory Moore, 51 — Sherman’s former divorce attorney — on charges related to the fatal stabbing of the 53-year-old nurse and mother of four while she was waiting outside of his office building on March 24, 2013. The indictments include one count of aggravated murder, one count of conspiracy, six counts of murder and two counts of kidnapping.

    Security footage captured a hooded person running from the scene of the crime, but the person, now believed to be Moore, was never identified. The case remained unsolved at the time.

    Aliza Sherman.
    Aliza Sherman.Obtained by NBC News

    The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigations took on Sherman’s case in 2021, months after NBC’s “Dateline” featured Sherman’s case — speaking with her daughter Jennifer, eight years after the killing.

    “The Sherman family has waited over a decade for answers regarding their mother’s homicide,” Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael C. O’Malley said in a statement. “Through the tenacious work of multiple law enforcement agencies, evidence was accumulated that paints the unmistakable picture that Gregory Moore orchestrated and participated in the brutal murder of Aliza Sherman.”

    It does not appear that Moore has been assigned an attorney.

    The indictment states that on the Sunday that Sherman was killed, Moore texted her to meet him at his office building at 4:30 p.m. and to let him know when she was leaving.

    While Sherman waited outside the building, “Moore or an unnamed conspirator” approached her from behind and stabbed her more than 10 times, leading to her death, according to the indictment.

    The indictment alleges Moore texted and called Sherman before and after he allegedly killed her.

    “These texts and requests for calls were for the purpose of creating false evidence that Moore was unaware of Sherman’s assault,” the indictment says.

    The grand jury’s indictment said Moore killed Sherman to prevent her divorce trial, which was scheduled to start the following day.

    The indictment states that at the time of Sherman’s murder, Moore was being investigated for sending bomb threats to the courthouse on the days he had to appear in court to similarly avoid trials. Moore knew he was being investigating for the bomb threats, according to the indictment.

    In 2017, Moore pleaded guilty to inducing panic related to the bomb threats and falsification for giving authorities misleading statements during the Sherman investigation.

    Moore will be arraigned at the Cuyahoga County Justice Center at a later date, prosecutors said.



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  • Warren Buffett to ask board to make Greg Abel CEO of Berkshire Hathaway at year-end

    Warren Buffett to ask board to make Greg Abel CEO of Berkshire Hathaway at year-end



    OMAHA, Nebraska — An end of an era was announced in Omaha Saturday as Warren Buffett said he will soon ask the board of Berkshire Hathaway to have Greg Abel replace him as CEO at year end.

    While Buffett is 94 and Abel was designated as CEO successor in 2021, it nonetheless came as surprise to the thousands of admiring shareholders gathered for this year’s annual meeting to once again hear the investing legend opine on the future of the company.

    “Tomorrow, we’re having a board meeting of Berkshire, and we have 11 directors. Two of the directors, who are my children, Howie and Susie, know of what I’m going to talk about there. The rest of them, this will come as news to, but I think the time has arrived where Greg should become the chief executive officer of the company at year end,” said Buffett, in the final few minutes of the meeting.

    Buffett noted he would still ‘hang around’ to help, but the final word on company operations would be with Abel, 62, currently the vice chairman of non-insurance operations for Berkshire.

    “I could be helpful, I believe, in that in certain respects, if we ran into periods of great opportunity or anything,” he added, at the annual meeting celebrating 60 years of him at the helm of Berkshire.

    Buffett is the largest shareholder of Berkshire and he said he wouldn’t sell a single share of the stock after he transitions to this new phase.

    “I would add this, the decision to keep every share is an economic decision because I think the prospects of Berkshire will be better under Greg’s management than mine,” said Buffett, who used a cane to walk around the meeting, but answered questions for four hours with surprising energy and clarity for his age.

    Buffett’s new role?

    Buffett and Abel told CNBC’s Becky Quick after the shareholder meeting that the pair would discuss at the Sunday board meeting what Buffett’s role will be formally next year. Buffett is currently also chairman of the conglomerate.

    So it’s not clear whether Abel will also assume the chairman role.

    “I think they’ll be unanimously in favor of it,” Buffett said of the board’s pending decision Sunday.

    The meeting ended with a standing ovation for Buffett.


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



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  • Lando Norris wins a rainy and crash-filled Formula 1 sprint race in Miami

    Lando Norris wins a rainy and crash-filled Formula 1 sprint race in Miami



    MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — McLaren driver Lando Norris won the Formula 1 sprint race Saturday in Miami after a rain-soaked contest produced crashes and ended under the “safety car” as marshals collected debris on the track.

    Norris started in third place and jumped to second in the first corner, before overtaking fellow McLaren driver Oscar Piastri during a frenzied series of pit stops during the final stretch of the race.

    “Lovely job. Well done boys,” a subdued Norris said over team radio.

    It was an encouraging victory for Norris after struggling in recent races and losing the championship lead to Piastri, who finished second ahead of Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton.

    “I’m so happy with that,” Hamilton, a seven-time world champion who’s in his first year with Ferrari, said after the sprint race. “It’s been a tough year so far.”

    It was a tragic sprint race for Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli, who took a sensational pole position on Friday, becoming the youngest ever pole-sitter in F1 for any race format. But he lost positions in the first corner amid a battle with Piastri and his car was hit by Red Bull reigning world champion Max Verstappen in the pit lane.

    Antonelli accused Piastri of unfairly pushing him off the track in the first corner, but the officials didn’t take any action, deeming his maneuver valid. He finished 10th, outside the points.

    Verstappen, who was running in third place for much of the race, was given a 10-second penalty for an “unsafe release” in his pit stop, an error by his team.

    The shortened race, which was delayed by heavy rain, included multiple crashes. Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc slid into the wall on his lap to the grid and failed to start. Williams driver Carlos Sainz failed to finish after puncturing his tire.

    In the final laps, Aston Martin driver Fernando Alonso crashed out after a collision with Racing Bulls driver Liam Lawson, which brought out a safety car so marshals could collect the debris.



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  • Get in 151st Kentucky Derby spirit with a 3-year-old fashion show

    Get in 151st Kentucky Derby spirit with a 3-year-old fashion show




    Get in the Kentucky Derby spirit with the cutest fashion show you will ever see.



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  • Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan, who halted executions and went to prison for corruption, dies at 91

    Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan, who halted executions and went to prison for corruption, dies at 91



    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Former Illinois Gov. George Ryan, disgraced by a corruption scandal that landed him in prison yet heralded by some for clearing the state’s death row, has died. He was 91.

    Kankakee County Coroner Robert Gessner, a family friend, said Ryan died Friday afternoon at his home in Kankakee, where he was receiving hospice care.

    Ryan started out a small-town pharmacist but wound up running one of the country’s largest states. Along the way, the tough-on-crime Republican experienced a conversion on the death penalty and won international praise by halting executions as governor and, eventually, emptying death row.

    He served only one term as governor, from 1999 to 2003, that ended amid accusations he used government offices to reward friends, win elections and hide corruption that played a role in the fiery deaths of six children. Eventually, Ryan was convicted of corruption charges and sentenced to 6½ years in federal prison.

    During his more than five years behind bars, Ryan worked as a carpenter and befriended fellow inmates, many of whom addressed him as “governor.” He was released in January 2013, weeks before his 79th birthday, looking thinner and more subdued.

    He’d been defiant heading to prison. The night before he went in, Ryan insisted he was innocent and would prove it. But when Ryan asked President George W. Bush to grant him clemency in 2008, he said he accepted the verdict against him and felt “deep shame.”

    “I apologize to the people of Illinois for my conduct,” Ryan said at the time.

    Ryan was still serving his sentence when his wife, Lura Lynn, died in June 2011. He was briefly released to be at her deathbed but wasn’t allowed to attend her funeral. On the day he left prison and returned to the Kankakee home where he and his wife had raised their children, one of his grandchildren handed him an urn containing his wife’s ashes.

    Born in Iowa and raised in Kankakee, Ryan married his high school sweetheart, followed his father in becoming a pharmacist and had six children. Those who knew Ryan described him as the ultimate family man and a neighbor’s neighbor, someone who let local kids use his basketball court or rushed to Dairy Queen to buy treats when they missed the ice cream truck.

    “He’s even offered to deliver the papers,” newspaper delivery boy Ben Angelo said when Ryan was running for governor. “He was serious.”

    In 1968, Ryan was appointed to fill an unexpired term on the county board, beginning a quick rise in politics. Eventually, he served as speaker of the Illinois House, lieutenant governor, secretary of state and, finally, governor.

    A glad-handing politician from the old school, Ryan emphasized pragmatism over ideology. He worked with officials from both parties and struck deals on the golf course or during evenings of cigars and booze.

    Ryan helped block the Equal Rights Amendment in the early 1980s during his term as speaker of the Illinois House, triggering some of the most heated demonstrations ever seen at the Capitol.

    “They wrote my name in blood on the floor in front of the House, in front of the governor’s office,” Ryan said. “They were trying, hectic times, frankly.”

    His willingness to set aside party orthodoxy sometimes put him at odds with more conservative Republicans.

    He led a failed effort in 1989 to get the General Assembly to restrict assault weapons. He backed gambling expansion. He became the first governor to visit Cuba since Fidel Castro took power. And in 2000, after signing off on the execution of one killer, he decided not to carry out any more. He imposed a moratorium on executions and began reviewing reforms to a judicial system that repeatedly sentenced innocent men to die.

    Ultimately, Ryan decided no reforms would provide the certainty he wanted. In virtually his last act as governor, he emptied death row with pardons and commutations in 2003.

    “Because the Illinois death penalty system is arbitrary and capricious — and therefore immoral — I no longer shall tinker with the machinery of death,” Ryan said.

    Ryan found himself mentioned as a contender for the Nobel Peace Prize at the same time federal prosecutors were closing in. Before year’s end, he would be charged with taking payoffs, gifts and vacations in return for steering government contracts and leases to cronies, as well as lying to investigators and cheating on his taxes.

    Much of the illegal activity took place during Ryan’s two terms as Illinois secretary of state, including the 1994 deaths of six children. They burned to death after their minivan struck a part that had fallen off a truck whose driver got his license illegally from Ryan’s office.

    Federal investigators found that Ryan had turned the secretary of state’s office into an arm of his political campaign, pressuring employees for contributions — some of which came through bribes from unqualified truck drivers for licenses. After the children’s deaths, Ryan also gutted the part of his office responsible for rooting out corruption.

    Then as governor, he steered millions of dollars in state leases and contracts to political insiders who in turn provided gifts such as trips to a Jamaican resort and $145,000 loans to his brother’s struggling business, investigators found. He was convicted on all charges April 17, 2006.

    The father of the six dead children criticized Ryan’s attitude at the time.

    “There was no remorse in George Ryan after the verdict. That didn’t surprise me. That’s Ryan’s same attitude, a chip on the shoulder,” said the Rev. Scott Willis. “It makes it a little easier to feel elation. His attitude confirms the verdict was right.”

    Anger at Ryan weakened Republicans for years and energized the gubernatorial campaign of a charismatic young Democrat who promised to clean up Springfield — Rod Blagojevich. Later, as federal investigators probed his own conduct, Blagojevich would call for Ryan to be granted clemency and released from prison.



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  • Which horse is the favorite to win the 2025 Kentucky Derby?

    Which horse is the favorite to win the 2025 Kentucky Derby?


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  • Germany hits back at Rubio’s defense of far-right AfD party

    Germany hits back at Rubio’s defense of far-right AfD party



    Germany rebuked Secretary of State Marco Rubio after he slammed the country’s intelligence agency for classifying the far-right political party Alternative for Germany a “proven-right wing extremist organization.”

    “We have learnt from our history that right-wing extremism needs to be stopped,” Germany’s foreign office wrote on X, in direct reply to Rubio.

    AfD, whose staunch supporters include Vice President JD Vance and billionaire Elon Musk, was already under surveillance for suspected extremism by Germany’s intelligence services, which on Friday classified the party as a “proven right-wing extremist organization.” 

    Rubio, who on Friday became the acting national security adviser for President Donald Trump, pushed back on the designation, calling the move “tyranny in disguise,” in a post on X Friday. “Germany just gave its spy agency new powers to surveil the opposition.”

    “That’s not democracy,” Rubio said.

    To that, Germany’s foreign office replied, “This is democracy.” 

    The rise of AfD, which made huge gains in Germany’s general elections in February and finished second, has been part of a surge of the far right in Europe, whose proponents have forged close ties with Trump’s White House.

    AfD’s co-leader, Alice Weidel, called her party’s electoral gains a “glorious success,” alarming large swaths of a country deeply aware of its Nazi past. 

    Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz, the country’s intelligence agency, said the party “aims to exclude certain population groups from equal participation in society.” AfD also does not consider German nationals with a history of migration from Muslim countries as equal to German people, the agency said in its Friday statement.

    Weidel’s response to the designation aligned with Rubio’s criticism, accusing the agency of advancing the ruling government’s political interests.

    “Since the AfD is the strongest party in polls now, they want to suppress the opposition & freedom of speech,” she said in a post on X.

    The German foreign office said the classification was a result of a “thorough & independent investigation to protect our Constitution & the rule of law.”

    Under Weidel, AfD has moved from the fringes to a swift-rising movement winning its first regional elections and garnering support from the Trump administration.

    The party promotes a populist economy policy of large tax cuts and steep public spending, fosters strong anti-immigrant sentiments, and champions traditional family values, including opposing gay marriange though Weidel herself raises two sons with her Sri Lankan-born female partner, Sarah Bossard.

    Weidel has been able to harness a nationalist, anti-E.U sentiment along with hostilities against Muslims and foreigners, to build a stronghold for the party in the regions that once made up East Germany, where skepticism for NATO and Germany’s support for Ukraine are among the strongest in the country.

    Vance, and Musk followed Rubio in his criticism, with the Vice President saying the AfD was the “most popular party in Germany and by far the most representative of East Germany.”

    “The West tore down the Berlin Wall together. And it has been rebuilt — not by the Soviets or the Russians, but by the German establishment,” Vance said in a post on X.

    Banning the AfD “would be an extreme attack on democracy,” Musk in a post on X said, calling the party “centrist” and repeating Vance’s claims that it was Germany’s “most popular party.”

    AfD, and Weidel herself, have denied allegations of extremism, though the party’s co-founder Alexander Gauland once dismissed Hitler’s dictatorship as a “speck of bird poop” and its top candidate, Maximilian Krah, said the SS, the Nazis’ main paramilitary force, were “not all criminals.”



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  • Temu halts shipping direct from China as de minimis tariff loophole is cut off

    Temu halts shipping direct from China as de minimis tariff loophole is cut off



    Chinese bargain retailer Temu changed its business model in the U.S. as the Trump administration’s new rules on low-value shipments took effect Friday.

    In recent days, Temu has abruptly shifted its website and app to only display listings for products shipped from U.S.-based warehouses. Items shipped directly from China, which previously blanketed the site, are now labeled as out of stock.

    Temu made a name for itself in the U.S. as a destination for ultra-discounted items shipped direct from China, such as $5 sneakers and $1.50 garlic presses. It’s been able to keep prices low because of the so-called de minimis rule, which has allowed items worth $800 or less to enter the country duty-free since 2016.

    The loophole expired Friday at 12:01 a.m. EDT as a result of an executive order signed by President Donald Trump in April. Trump briefly suspended the de minimis rule in February before reinstating the provision days later as customs officials struggled to process and collect tariffs on a mountain of low-value packages.

    The end of de minimis, as well as Trump’s new 145% tariffs on China, has forced Temu to raise prices, suspend its aggressive online advertising push and now alter the selection of goods available to American shoppers to circumvent higher levies.

    A Temu spokesperson confirmed to CNBC that all sales in the U.S. are now handled by local sellers and said they are fulfilled “from within the country.” Temu said pricing for U.S. shoppers “remains unchanged.”

    “Temu has been actively recruiting U.S. sellers to join the platform,” the spokesperson said. “The move is designed to help local merchants reach more customers and grow their businesses.”

    Before the change, shoppers who attempted to purchase Temu products shipped from China were confronted with “import charges” of between 130% and 150%. The fees often cost more than the individual item and more than doubled the price of many orders.

    Temu advertises that local products have “no import charges” and “no extra charges upon delivery.”

    The company, which is owned by Chinese e-commerce giant PDD Holdings, has gradually built up its inventory in the U.S. over the past year in anticipation of escalating trade tensions and the removal of de minimis.

    Shein, which has also benefited from the loophole, moved to raise prices last week. The fast-fashion retailer added a banner at checkout that says, “Tariffs are included in the price you pay. You’ll never have to pay extra at delivery.”

    Many third-party sellers on Amazon rely on Chinese manufacturers to source or assemble their products. The company’s Temu competitor, called Amazon Haul, has relied on de minimis to ship products priced at $20 or less directly from China to the U.S.

    Amazon said Tuesday following a dustup with the White House that had it considered showing tariff-related costs on Haul products ahead of the de minimis cutoff but that it has since scrapped those plans.

    Prior to Trump’s second term in office, the Biden administration had also looked to curtail the provision. Critics of the de minimis provision argue that it harms American businesses and that it facilitates shipments of fentanyl and other illicit substances because, they say, the packages are less likely to be inspected by customs agents.



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