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  • Rep. Angie Craig launches Senate run in Minnesota ahead of a competitive Democratic primary

    Rep. Angie Craig launches Senate run in Minnesota ahead of a competitive Democratic primary



    Democratic Rep. Angie Craig announced Tuesday that she’s running for the Senate in Minnesota, a long-expected campaign that sets up a crowded primary among Craig, the state’s lieutenant governor and a former state legislative leader.

    In her announcement video, Craig criticized President Donald Trump for “trampling our rights and freedoms as he profits,” Elon Musk as “an out-of-control, unelected billionaire trying to take control of our government and burn it to the ground” and “cowardly congressional Republicans.”

    “It’s time to fight back. We’ve got to break through the chaos and take them head on,” Craig says.

    Craig frames herself as an underdog who went from growing up in a mobile home and working through college to defeating a Republican member of Congress, and she says she and her wife “fought like hell to be the parents of our four wonderful boys” when she lived in Tennessee.

    “We’re proud Minnesotans — a state of fierce independence, freedom and community. People willing to take on the powerful and fight for what’s right,” Craig says in her launch video. “It’s why I’m running for U.S. Senate: to listen, to fight for all of Minnesota and to win.”

    She’s part of a growing field of candidates looking to replace Sen. Tina Smith, the Democrat who announced this winter she wouldnt seek re-election. Smith is one of four Democratic senators who are leaving at the end of 2026, and her departure opens up a seat in a state Democrats are favored to win (the last time Republicans won a Senate seat in Minnesota was 2002) but one that has become more competitive in recent years.

    Craig is no stranger to difficult races, which her allies are likely to point to as she contends for a statewide nomination. Back when Minnesota’s 2nd District was one of the top battlegrounds in the country, Craig lost narrowly to GOP Rep. Jason Lewis in 2016 but toppled him two years later and joined the House in 2019. She won tough re-elections in 2020 and 2022 before she scored a double-digit victory last year.

    Despite winning the top Democratic slot on the House Agriculture Committee ahead of this Congress, Craig will leave her seat to seek a spot in the Senate (leaving Democrats to defend her seat as they hope to retake control of the House). And she won’t have a clear path: The current field includes Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and former state Senate Minority Leader Melisa López Franzen.

    Flanagan, who would be the first Native American woman in the Senate if she wins, immediately signaled after Smith’s retirement that she would run to replace her. She is in her second term as Gov. Tim Walz’s No. 2, and she got some national attention when she spoke at the Democratic National Convention. She has sought in the early weeks of her campaign to frame herself as a candidate promising to stand up to Trump and his “billionaire besties.”

    Ahead of Craig’s expected announcement, Flanagan rolled out a handful of endorsements from key Democrats in the state, like Attorney General Keith Ellison and former Sen. Al Franken (who resigned in 2017 amid allegations of sexual misconduct), as well as a handful of state lawmakers in Craig’s congressional district.

    López Franzen has, in her campaign’s early weeks, leaned on both her time in the Legislature and an electability argument in a state that she told Minnesota Public Radio is “purple.” While Republicans haven’t won a Senate election in more than two decades, Trump lost the state by just 4 points last year, and the state House is evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats.

    While the Democratic nominee is likely to enter the general election favored given the Democrats’ success statewide, the open seat gives Republicans an opportunity.

    Royce White, the GOP nominee who lost to Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar last year and has gained notoriety (and stoked controversy) with an incendiary online presence, is running again.

    Retired Navy SEAL Adam Schwarze is running, too, and it’s possible the field could grow — former longtime sports broadcaster Michele Tafoya (who previously worked for NBC) has become more outspoken in recent years in support of conservative policies, criticizing Minnesota Democrats on social media, and she hasn’t yet closed the door on running.

    National Republicans didn’t spend much time and money supporting Royce’s bid last year and were able to take control of the Senate. But while some are bullish on the idea that an open seat gives them a better chance in the state, it’s unclear how competitive the seat will be next year.

    Democrats need a net gain of four seats to win back control of the Senate, a difficult task considering that they have to defend Democratic-held seats in two states Trump won last year (Georgia and Michigan) and two open seats (in Minnesota and New Hampshire) and that they have limited opportunities to go on offense, with only a handful of races in competitive Republican-held seats.



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  • ‘I just smoked a dude’

    ‘I just smoked a dude’


    HENDERSON, Texas — Timothy Michael Randall was on the phone with his mother when a police car pulled up behind his Nissan Altima with its lights flashing. It was just after 12:30 a.m. on Sept. 14, 2022, and Randall was heading to his cousin’s house after a night out.

    “He had called to let me know that he was going to be home a few minutes later,” Randall’s mother, Wendy Tippitt, recalled. “So I wouldn’t worry.”

    Randall, 29, pulled over and hung up with his mom. Sgt. Shane Iversen of the Rusk County Sheriff’s Office walked up to the Altima and told Randall that he had run a stop sign, police dash camera footage shows. Randall denied doing so, and Iversen ordered him out of the car. 

    What began as a routine traffic stop, on a country road two hours east of Dallas, quickly spun out of control. 

    Shane Iverson, left, is pressing Michael Randall up against a vehicle and moving both of Michael's arms up in the air
    Moments before Sgt. Shane Iversen fatally shot Timothy Michael Randall in Rusk County, Texas, in 2022.Rusk County Sheriff’s Office

    As Randall was stepping out of the car, he put his wallet in his back pocket and adjusted his waistband.

    Iversen dug his hands into the front of Randall’s pants and then told him to put his hands behind his back, the dash cam footage shows. Randall kept his arms raised.

    “Officer, I don’t have anything on me,” he said. 

    “Officer, please, can you tell me what I’m under arrest for?” Randall asked moments later. 

    Iversen didn’t respond. Instead, he wrestled Randall to the pavement.

    “Officer, please,” Randall pleaded again as he struggled to get to his feet.

    Then Iversen threw Randall to the ground again. He landed on his back several feet away, but the momentum brought him back to his feet. Randall began to turn to run away from Iversen, who had already pulled out his gun and was pointing it at Randall. 

    Shane Iverson fatally shoots Timothy Michael Randall outside at night
    Iversen fatally shoots Randall, who had been stopped for a traffic violation.Rusk County Sheriff’s Office

    “Get down,” Iversen yelled as he fired one shot, striking Randall in the chest.

    Randall continued to run down the street but collapsed face down. Iversen radioed for help and then tried to render medical aid, but Randall died on the pavement. The bullet had torn through his ribs, lungs and heart, according to autopsy records.

    After another deputy arrived minutes later, Iversen, then 57, returned to his patrol car and phoned a colleague. 

    “I just smoked a dude,” he said in a hushed voice. 

    In the following days and weeks, Randall’s mother searched for answers in vain, calling the Texas Rangers and the Rusk County district attorney’s office. She had no idea how her son wound up dead after a police traffic stop.

    “No one was telling us anything,” said Tippitt, who was born and raised in Rusk County and now cleans houses for a living.

    Wendy Tippitt sits outside on the wooden railing of a porch, surrounded by the exterior white siding of her home
    Wendy Tippitt.Rich Schapiro / NBC News

    Her first shock came two months after the shooting when a grand jury returned a no bill in the case, meaning it chose not to indict Iversen for killing an unarmed man.

    The second came last summer when Iversen’s lawyers turned over the dashcam video after she filed a federal lawsuit. Nearly two years after the shooting, she finally got to see, in brutal detail, what happened in the moments before her youngest son was killed.

    “The only person that was attacking anybody was Sgt. Iversen attacking my son,” Tippitt said. 

    Iversen quietly retired after the shooting and fought in court to keep the video from being made public. Its release sparked a backlash in rural Rusk County. It also set Randall’s mother on a crusade to get justice for his killing.

    But whether that will happen — and what it would even look like — remains to be seen. 

    ‘Survival instinct kicked in’

    In every year of the past decade, roughly 1,000 people have been shot and killed by police in the U.S., according to a database created by The Washington Post

    The vast majority of these shootings don’t make national headlines. Many involve a person who was armed at the time or who acted aggressively toward officers.

    Randall was not armed, and the video shows he was not aggressive toward Iversen. Yet the case has received little attention outside Rusk County — leaving Randall’s family to process his killing alone and further reinforcing their feeling that, to the police and outside world, his life didn’t matter.

    “Me and my family, we don’t come from money,” said Randall’s older brother Douglas, an Army veteran who served for 10 years.

    Douglas, left, and Wendy sit on a porch outside
    Wendy Tippitt and her son Douglas in Rusk County, Texas, on April 8.NBC News

    Their parents divorced when the boys were toddlers, and their mother worked several jobs — customer service rep, waitress, school lunch lady — to keep the family afloat while raising the boys alone.

    “No one has said an apology in Rusk County,” Douglas added. “No one has shown remorse.”

    When their paths crossed in the fall of 2022, Randall and Iversen were at very different stages of life. 

    Randall had struggled to find his footing after graduating from high school, where he played football and basketball. He found work as a welder but was arrested a handful of times on drug possession charges, leading to two felony convictions and two stints in prison.

    Despite spending three years behind bars, Randall remained easygoing and optimistic, family members said. He was working in construction at the time of the shooting and had recently moved in with his mother following a break-up.

    “He always tried to look at the positive,” his mother said. “He was just an upbeat, happy person.” 

    Wendy Tippitt, left, and Timothy Michael Randall stand together for a photo outside
    Wendy Tippitt and her son Timothy Michael Randall.via Facebook

    Iversen was nearing the end of his law enforcement career. By the time he pulled over Randall, he had been working as a police officer for 13 years, first in Dallas and then in Rusk County, where he was hired in 2020. He was also a decorated Army special forces soldier who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Iversen’s military career began in 1986 with the Marines. He later joined the Army and then served in special forces, rising to the rank of senior sergeant, military records show. He deployed to Afghanistan for four months in 2003 and then to Iraq from April 2007 to September 2008 — earning a Bronze Star for valor, the fourth highest military decoration.

    Two days after the killing, Iversen sat for an interview with the Texas Rangers, the agency that investigates police shootings. Reflecting on his military career, he said he was involved in one or two “direct fire engagements” in Afghanistan and at least 10 in Iraq.

    “Those were most of the raids that we did,” he said about his time in Iraq, according to a transcript obtained by NBC News.

    Iversen told the investigators he was on high alert when he walked up to Randall’s car because Randall had been driving in an area known for drug trafficking and didn’t immediately pull over.

    An aerial view of a road, houses, and trees outside
    Rusk County is a two-hour drive east of Dallas.NBC News

    Iversen observed an open can of Modelo lime beer in Randall’s car and suspected he was drunk, Iversen told the investigators. After he asked Randall to step out of the vehicle, Randall made a “furtive gesture” with his right hand that made Iversen think he might have a weapon, the deputy told investigators. 

    He patted down Randall and felt a rectangular, soft object in his pants. When he squeezed it, Iversen said, he felt something small and hard inside that he thought might be a mini revolver.

    “At that point, I’m like I have an issue here,” Iversen said in the interview. 

    Iversen said he threw Randall to the ground because he was concerned the man might be able to reach what he thought was a gun. But Randall was quicker than he was and managed to get back up to his feet, Iversen said.

    “At this point in time, I see him running towards me,” Iversen said. “I’m on my knees and I’m like he’s coming at me.”

    “I don’t want to be caught on my knees with this active guy with a weapon in his waistband,” Iversen added. “At that point … survival instinct kicked in, and I drew and fired one round at him.”

    After the shooting, Iversen said, he searched Randall’s pockets and found a soft glasses case with a meth pipe inside. The dashcam footage doesn’t show Iversen finding a pipe — Randall’s body is mostly out of the frame — but at one point he does mention it to another deputy.

    “It was a f—— meth pipe, man,” Iversen said.

    Overhead view of a gun, a meth pipe, and a quarter that are laid atop a wooden table
    A printed photo of what Iversen’s lawyers say is the meth pipe found in Randall’s pants and a gun (not Randall’s) like the one Iversen suspected Randall had.Lawyers for Sgt. Shane Iversen / NBC News

    Toxicology testing found that Randall had in his system methamphetamine, marijuana and alcohol, though his blood alcohol level — 0.017 — was far below the legal limit. A crystal-like substance found in his wallet was determined to be meth, according to a state crime lab report. 

    ‘There was no threat’

    After reviewing the dashcam footage and the Texas Rangers report, two police use-of-force experts contacted by NBC News said they saw no reason for Iversen to open fire during the encounter.

    Mickie McComb, a former New Jersey state trooper, said Randall never made any movement that would suggest he was “drawing or attempting to draw a weapon” and at no point was he “charging the officer.”

    “There was no threat,” added McComb, who now works as an expert witness on use-of-force cases. “He should have never used deadly force. It was completely uncalled for.”

    David Klinger, a former police officer in Los Angeles and Redmond, Washington, offered a similarly blunt assessment. 

    “It doesn’t make any sense why he shot the guy,” said Klinger, a criminology professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis who researches police shootings. 

    Klinger said he doesn’t understand why Iversen would try to tackle a man whom he believed to be carrying a gun. If he wasn’t able to grab the weapon himself, Klinger said, he should have stepped back, drew his own firearm, radioed for back up and ordered the man onto his knees or onto a prone position on the ground. 

    “You give him verbal commands to keep his hands in plain view,” Klinger added. 

    McComb said he believes that Iversen would have faced criminal charges — and likely ended up in prison — had the incident occurred in the Northeast. 

    “It’d be a completely different ball game,” McComb said. “That’s a bad case.”

    Grand jury proceedings are held in secret, so it’s not clear what evidence was presented. 

    Micheal Jimerson, the district attorney for Rusk County, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

    ‘Worst police shooting I’ve ever seen’

    In October 2023, Tippitt filed a federal lawsuit against Iversen and Rusk County alleging constitutional violations for excessive use of force, unlawful detention and false arrest. 

    At that point, neither Randall’s mother nor any member of the public had seen video of the encounter. Last summer, a judge compelled Iversen’s lawyers to turn over evidence in the case, which included the dashcam footage. 

    Shane Iversen smiles, has sunglasses resting on the top of his head
    Shane Iversen.via LinkedIn

    Iversen then asked a judge to bar the public release of the video, arguing that it could compromise his safety and taint a jury pool. But a judge ruled against him in June 2024. 

    Tippitt’s lawyer, Joseph Oxman, was in his office in Philadelphia when he played the clip for the first time. He said at first he couldn’t believe what it showed. 

    “I think it’s the worst police shooting I’ve ever seen,” Oxman said. “It looks like an execution.”

    The video showed something else that stood out to Oxman.

    An early portion indicates that, at the time Randall allegedly ran the flashing stop sign, Iversen was likely too far away from the intersection to see it. Iversen acknowledged as much in his interview with the Texas Rangers, saying he couldn’t see the full intersection but knew it well enough to deduce that Randall’s vehicle hadn’t come to a stop. 

    “There’s no way he could have seen him,” said Oxman, who is an adjunct professor of law at Rutgers University. “He was over 2,000 feet away.”

    The release of the video set off small protests in Rusk County and triggered a flood of angry posts on the sheriff department’s Facebook page

    Iversen filed a motion for summary judgment, asking for the case to be thrown out on the grounds of qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that shields police officers from civil lawsuits. He argued that Randall’s mother failed to identify any action of his that had violated the constitution and that his conduct was “objectively reasonable.” 

    “Sgt. Iversen believed if Randall reached him, Sgt. Iversen would be in a fight for his life, with either Randall’s weapon used to injure or kill him, or Randall taking away his own weapons and using them against him,” wrote Iversen’s attorneys, Robert Davis and Lee Correa.

    In an interview with NBC News, Davis portrayed Randall as the aggressor in the confrontation  and called him a “three time loser,” a term for people who face long prison sentences after getting a third felony conviction. 

    “I think the suspect made up his mind that he was fleeing,” Davis said. “If he had to fight the officer or injure the officer, I don’t think the suspect cared at all.”

    Earlier this year, a federal magistrate judge in Texas took a different view and recommended that Iversen’s motion for summary judgment be denied. The judge, John Love, wrote that based on the evidence presented, “a reasonable juror could find” that:

    • “The use of deadly force was excessive as the crimes at issue were minor non-violent crimes (e.g., traffic violation, open container, possession).”
    • “[Randall’s] resistance was not physical towards [Iversen].”
    • “And [Randall] was unarmed with his hands empty and open while Defendant Iversen shot him from a kneeling position as [Randall] was turning to run away.”

    A district judge is expected to make a decision in the coming days, which will determine if the case moves forward. (Rusk County was previously removed from the case after a judge granted its motion for a dismissal.)

    A memorial is seen outside on a lawn, a wooden cross is erected that reads "Michael" as well as various colorful ornaments on the lawn and atop a rock
    Timothy Michael Randall’s memorial at the scene of his fatal shooting in Rusk County, Texas.Rich Schapiro / NBC News

    On the night he was killed, Randall had gone out to the Texas Player’s Club, a local sports bar. When the police car pulled up behind him, he told his mother he was worried that his car might be impounded because it had expired tags, she said. 

    “I was about four minutes away,” Tippitt said. “I told him I’d be right there.”

    By the time she arrived, an officer was setting up police tape.

    “I had this horrible, horrible feeling,” she recalled before breaking down.

    She saw her son’s car at the top of a hill, its door open. But she couldn’t muster the strength to drive any closer. So she went to her nephew’s house — where Randall had been heading — and then the two of them returned to the scene together.

    At that point, Tippitt saw officers covering Randall’s body with a sheet. Tippitt said one of them told her: “Go home and be with your family.”

    “My family was laying in the road!” Tippitt told NBC News, her voice rising in anger.

    Since that night, she has struggled to sleep and to get out of bed. She often finds herself dwelling on her son’s final moments. One moment in particular.  

    In the second or two before he was fatally shot, he uttered two words to Iversen, the last he would ever speak. 

    “Officer, please.”



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  • Israel accused of using aid as a ‘weapon of war’ against Gaza in World Court hearing

    Israel accused of using aid as a ‘weapon of war’ against Gaza in World Court hearing


    U.N. and Palestinian representatives at the International Court of Justice accused Israel of breaking international law by refusing to let aid into Gaza, on the first day of hearings about Israel’s obligations to facilitate aid deliveries.

    Since March 2, Israel has completely cut off all supplies to the 2.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip, and food stockpiled during a ceasefire at the start of the year has all but run out.

    At the opening of the hearings at the U.N.’s top court, the U.N.’s legal counsel said Israel had a clear obligation as an occupying force to allow and facilitate humanitarian aid for the people in Gaza.

     The humanitarian crisis in Gaza has worsened significantly since Israel blocked all aid from entering the territory on March 2, days before resuming its military campaign following the collapse of a ceasefire.
    A Palestinian boy watches as a man bakes bread in the Bureij refugee camp, central Gaza on Monday.Eyad Baba / AFP – Getty Images

    “In the specific context of the current situation in the occupied Palestinian Territories, these obligations entail allowing all relevant U.N. entities to carry out activities for the benefit of the local population,” Elinor Hammarskjold said.

    Palestinian representative Ammar Hijazi said Israel was using humanitarian aid as “a weapon of war”, while people in Gaza were facing starvation.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said Israel had submitted its position in writing to the hearings, which he described as a “circus”.

    Speaking in Jerusalem on Monday, Saar said the court was being politicized, while the U.N. was failing to root out employees of its Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA who are members of Gaza militant groups.

    “They are abusing the court once again to try and force Israel to cooperate with an organization that is infested with Hamas terrorists,” Saar said. “The goal is to deprive Israel of its most basic right to defend itself.”

    The U.N. said in August that nine UNRWA staff may have been involved in Hamas’ October 7, 2023 assault and had been fired. Another Hamas commander, confirmed by UNRWA as one of its employees, was killed in Gaza in October, according to Israel.

    The ICJ, also known as the World Court, was tasked in December to form an advisory opinion on Israel’s obligations to facilitate aid to Palestinians that is delivered by states and international groups, including the United Nations.

    Israel has repeatedly said it would not allow the entry of goods and supplies into Gaza until Hamas releases all remaining hostages. It has accused Hamas of hijacking humanitarian aid, which the militant group denies.

    “This case is about Israel destroying the fundamentals of life in Palestine, while it blocks the U.N. and other providers of humanitarian aid from providing life-saving aid to the population,” Hijazi, the head of the Palestinian mission to the Netherlands, told the hearing.

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday said he had pushed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to allow food and medicine into Gaza. Germany, France and Britain last week called to allow the unhindered passage of humanitarian aid into the besieged Palestinian territory.

    Advisory opinions of the ICJ carry legal and political weight, although they are not binding and the court has no enforcement powers.

    After the hearings, the World Court will likely take several months to form its opinion.



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  • Four killed after vehicle hits after-school program site in Illinois

    Four killed after vehicle hits after-school program site in Illinois


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    A jaw-dropping video from Arizona captures the moment a speed boat racing at 200 miles-per-hour flips through the air and crashes. NBC News’ Ryan Chandler has the story on how the drivers walked away with minor injuries. 

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  • Mark Carney to remain prime minister as Liberal Party defeats Conservatives

    Mark Carney to remain prime minister as Liberal Party defeats Conservatives



    Canadian voters backed Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberal Party on Monday, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. projects, in a national election strongly influenced by President Donald Trump.

    The CBC said it was too early to know whether the Liberals would win enough seats to form a majority government, but it projected another term for the party, which has governed the U.S. ally for almost a decade.

    Only a few months ago, they looked set to be ousted by the Conservatives amid public frustration with soaring inflation, rising immigration and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s approach to Trump, then the president-elect.

    Trudeau announced his resignation Jan. 6, two weeks before Trump was inaugurated president in the United States, after polls showed him struggling with Canadian voters.

    Trump’s influence on Canadian politics did not end there. He enraged Canadians by imposing tariffs and promoting a quixotic plan that Canada should become the 51st U.S. state.

    Carney is a former central banker, having served as the governor of both the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England. He was elected prime minister by the Liberal Party in March.

    On the campaign trail, he touted his experience as head of the Bank of Canada during the 2008 financial crisis.

    “Mark offers the proven leadership and real plan we need to deliver change for our party and our country, and to build the strongest economy in the G7,” his campaign said.

    Poilievre promised change in his campaign pitch. He ran on job opportunities and on promises that Gen Z voters would be able to afford housing. In a rally Sunday, the CBC quoted him as calling the Trudeau government “the lost Liberal decade of rising crime, chaos, drugs and disorder.”

    Poilievre was part of former Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government, which preceded Trudeau’s, and has been re-elected numerous times as a member of parliament, his party notes.

    Carney has never been elected to political office, but his party has highlighted his financial experience and leadership during both the 2008 financial crisis and Brexit.

    Both Carney and Poilievre rebuked Trump over his comments about a “51st state” and his statements about the Canadian election.

    “They can become divided and weak,” Carney said in a video on social media Monday, speaking of the United States. “But this is Canada. And we decide what happens here.”

    Poilievre wrote Monday on X: “President Trump, stay out of our election.”

    “The only people who will decide the future of Canada are Canadians at the ballot box,” he wrote. “Canada will always be proud, sovereign and independent and we will NEVER be the 51st state.”

    One voter said he voted Liberal because Poilievre “sounds like mini-Trump to me.” Reid Warren, of Toronto, told The Associated Press that tariffs were also a concern.

    “Canadians coming together from, you know, all the shade being thrown from the States is great, but it’s definitely created some turmoil, that’s for sure,” Warren said.

    Bernie Goldman in Thornhill, Ontario, told the CBC that the economy was his top concern.

    “We’ve had 10 years of Liberal government and I really believe we’ve spent like drunken sailors and that’s what the cause of inflation was,” Goldman told the news organization.

    Trump’s tariffs on Canadian imports prompted retaliatory measures from Ottawa. Trade tensions between the neighboring countries have yet to subside.



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  • An inside look at the El Salvador prison where Kilmar Abrego Garcia was moved after supermax site

    An inside look at the El Salvador prison where Kilmar Abrego Garcia was moved after supermax site


    SANTA ANA, El Salvador — The sprawling penitentiary where Kilmar Abrego Garcia was last known to be held offers a sharp contrast to the supermax mega-prison to which he was first deported. 

    Rather than tattooed gang members in brightly lit, crowded cells, the inmates at the Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana wear yellow t-shirts and move more or less freely. Some spend much of their time outdoors raising dairy cows and growing vegetables. Others work in factories making uniforms for the armed forces or desks for public schools. 

    The government calls these “trusted inmates”: They have exhibited good behavior and are in the final years of their sentences. And the prison categorically excludes anyone accused of belonging to a gang. 

    Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana el salvador
    An imate feeds a baby cow in Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana El Salvador, in April 2025. NBC News

    “We only house the common population,” said Samuel Diaz, the prison’s director and warden. “No gang members work here.”

    NBC News obtained access Monday to the Centro Industrial in Santa Ana in a carefully choreographed tour. Officials did not provide access to Abrego Garcia, and they would not answer questions about his location, the conditions of his detention or any other aspects of his case. But they facilitated interviews with other inmates, who described the conditions in the prison as “perfect” and “excellent.”

    The Trump administration has been ordered by the Supreme Court to “facilitate” the return of Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man who the Justice Department has acknowledged should not have been sent to a prison in his native El Salvador because of an immigration judge’s 2019 order barring such action.

    For human rights advocates in El Salvador and the United States, the details of Abrego Garcia’s transfer — from the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, a supermax prison specifically designed for gang members, to a low-security prison from which gang members are excluded — contradicts a central claim made by both governments: That Abrego Garcia is a dangerous member of MS-13 and a terrorist. (His wife and attorney deny those allegations.)

    Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana el salvador
    Inmates paint in Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana, El Salvador.NBC News

    Abrego Garcia’s precise whereabouts and condition remain unknown. Since his deportation, Abrego Garcia has been allowed no contact with his family or lawyers. In a meeting with Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen on April 17 (the only time he has been seen since his deportation), Abrego Garcia said he had been transferred out of CECOT to a different facility. Documents filed in federal court by the U.S. Department of Justice on April 20 subsequently confirmed that facility to be the Centro Industrial in Santa Ana. There have been no updates since. 

    From that perspective, Abrego Garcia’s transfer out of CECOT is worrisome, said Gabriela Santos, director of the Human Rights Institute at the Central American University in San Salvador. 

    “Why was he moved?” Santos said. “And where are all the other migrants that were brought here — are they in CECOT or are they being put in different prisons in El Salvador?” 

    Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana el salvador
    Inmates use sewing machines in Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana, El Salvador, in April 2025.NBC News

    Santos said there is no evident legal basis for Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s agreement with Trump to receive and imprison deportees from the United States.

    “From a legal point of view, there is no reason for [Abrego Garcia] to be here,” Santos said. And because Bukele has consolidated power over all branches of government, she added, there is no viable avenue to challenge the policy. 

    “There is no rule of law here in El Salvador. There is no respect for the principle of legality,” she said.

    Like Abrego Garcia and others the Trump administration deported directly to CECOT, all inmates in the Salvadoran prison system are cut off from contact with lawyers, loved ones and  others on the outside. This policy is the result of a “state of exception” that Bukele declared in 2022 after a particularly brutal wave of gang violence, in which he suspended many constitutional protections to quickly imprison tens of thousands without due process. 

    Some 85,000 people were imprisoned in the state of exception, according to Salvadoran human rights groups. Many were subjected to mass trials of a hundred or more defendants with no access to counsel. Advocates have documented numerous stories of people with no proven affiliation with gangs who were incarcerated indefinitely with virtually no recourse to appeal. 

    Moreover, rights groups in El Salvador and abroad have harshly criticized prison conditions in the country, alleging systematic torture, malnutrition and other abuses. The legal NGO Socorro Jurídico Humanitario has documented 370 deaths in Salvadoran prisons since the state of exception was declared, a number the group says is a likely undercount. 

    woodwork wood work Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana el salvador
    Woodwork created by inmates at the Centro Industrial prison in Santa Ana, El Salvador, in April 2025.NBC News

    “For three years, we have lost all human rights and constitutional guarantees in El Salvador,” said Ingrid Escobar, a lawyer for the organization. 

    Bukele has acknowledged that some innocent people have been arrested under the state of exception. 

    “Obviously, our operations are not perfect, and without the intention of hurting anyone innocent, some innocents have been arrested, in the same way they have been in France, Germany, Japan, and every country in the world,” Bukele said in November. “And we are freeing them — we have freed 8,000 people, and we will free 100% of innocents.”

    The Bukele administration says holding prisoners incommunicado was a necessary measure to break the control that gangs had over El Salvador’s prisons, which involved regularly organizing murders, extortion, and other criminal activity from inside penitentiaries. 

    Since the state of exception, public safety has improved dramatically in El Salvador. Numerous people interviewed on the streets of San Salvador said they now feel free to move around the city and go about their business without fear of harassment, extortion or violence from gangs. These improvements have made Bukele one of the most popular heads of state in the world. 

    But human rights advocates say the improvements have come at a heavy cost to Salvadoran democracy — and that Bukele’s popularity is no justification for authoritarianism. 

    “Popularity cannot be a blank check for him to do anything he wants,” said Santos. “History has taught us that just because someone is popular, that doesn’t mean he’s doing the right thing.”



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  • Four killed when vehicle crashes into after-school program site in Illinois

    Four killed when vehicle crashes into after-school program site in Illinois



    Four people 4 to 18 years old were killed Monday afternoon when a vehicle struck a school camp program in Chatham, Illinois, state police said.

    Authorities have not indicated if they think the crash was intentional.

    The victims included three people who were outside the building and one who was inside, Illinois State Police said in a statement.

    Several others were injured, officials said, including a person who was taken to a hospital by helicopter.

    A vehicle drove into the east side of a building used by the YNOT After School Camp about 3:20 p.m., state police said. It struck several people inside and exited through the building’s west wall, the agency said.

    The driver was the only person in the vehicle and has been hospitalized for injuries sustained in the incident.

    State police said the deadly crash was under investigation.

    A representative for the camp did not immediately respond to a request for information.

    A street outside the venue was closed in the meantime.

    Chatham is about 12 miles south of Springfield.

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



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