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  • Southern California judge found guilty of fatally shooting wife

    Southern California judge found guilty of fatally shooting wife



    LOS ANGELES — A California jury on Tuesday convicted a judge of fatally shooting his wife after an argument at their Anaheim Hills home in 2023, the district attorney’s office said.

    Orange County Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Ferguson was convicted of second-degree murder around six weeks after an earlier jury deadlocked 11-1 in favor of a guilty verdict, leading to a mistrial. The case was re-tried, resulting in Tuesday’s conviction.

    Ferguson, 72, shot his wife, Sheryl, on Aug. 3, 2023, but said the shooting was accidental.

    Prosecutors said he shot her in the chest with a .40-caliber Glock handgun while he was drunk during an argument over money. He then texted his court bailiff that, “I just lost it. I just shot my wife,” prosecutors said.

    Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said the murder case was emotional because he has known Ferguson and his wife for three decades, and their adult son since since he was a child.

    “Jeff Ferguson took the life of Sheryl. He took her strength, he took her body, he took her will to live and crushed it,” Spitzer said after the guilty verdict.

    During the trial, it was revealed that Ferguson drank alcohol at lunch and then returned to hear cases.

    Spitzer said his office will review cases that have been adjudicated by Ferguson while he may have been under the influence of alcohol, or where something inappropriate may have occurred.

    “That system is being set up as we speak,” Spitzer said.

    Ferguson has been a superior court judge since 2015, and before that was an Orange County deputy district attorney for more than 30 years.

    Ferguson’s attorney, Cameron J. Talley, said that they respect the jury’s decision but disagreed with it.

    “The jury made its statement, we respect that,” Talley said. “At the same time, we still believe in Jeff Ferguson. We believe that he is not guilty, and there will be an appeal in this case.”

    Ferguson faces up to life in prison. Sentencing is scheduled for June 13.



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  • ‘Doomsday mom’ Lori Vallow Daybell is convicted in fourth husband’s death

    ‘Doomsday mom’ Lori Vallow Daybell is convicted in fourth husband’s death



    “Doomsday mom” Lori Vallow Daybell was convicted Tuesday of conspiring to kill her fourth husband, Charles Vallow.

    A Maricopa County Superior Court jury found Vallow Daybell guilty of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder in the July 2019 fatal shooting.

    Vallow Daybell, who represented herself at trial, told jurors that her brother, Alex Cox, shot Charles Vallow in self-defense following a family argument. Cox died later that year from a pulmonary embolism and was never charged.

    According to Vallow Daybell, her husband got into an argument with her daughter, Tylee Ryan, and threatened the teen with a bat. Charles Vallow was at his estranged wife’s home in Chandler, Arizona, to take their son, Joshua “JJ” Vallow, to school.

    Vallow Daybell, 51, was convicted in Idaho in 2023 of killing her two children and her husband’s first wife, Tammy Daybell. She’s already serving life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    Prosecutors in the Arizona case dismissed Vallow Daybell’s self-defense claim, arguing that she had several reasons for wanting her husband dead, including her desire to start a life with another man.

    “Lori Vallow wanted to be Lori Daybell, wife of Chad Daybell. And in July of 2019, Lori Vallow wanted to keep the same lifestyle that she had with Charles. And she could get all of this if Charles was dead,” prosecutor Treena Kay said in her opening statements.

    Kay continued: “She could marry Chad Daybell and become Lori Daybell. She would get a million-dollar life insurance policy from Charles Vallow. She would get Social Security for herself and their son, JJ, as the child of a dead spouse. And all of this would be true if Charles Vallow was dead.”

    The prosecutor added that Vallow Daybell labeled people who disagreed with her as “dark” or “possessed by evil spirits” and used religion to justify Charles Vallow’s death.

    Vallow Daybell and Chad Daybell, a doomsday author, married in November 2019.

    In her closing argument on Tuesday, Vallow Daybell said prosecutors tried to “retrofit a crime that doesn’t exist.”

    “Under Arizona law, I had the right to self-defense. Tylee had the right to self-defense. Alex had the right to self-defense. This event was not planned or expected. It was shocking,” she said. “This event was not a crime. It was a tragedy. Don’t let them turn my family tragedy into a crime.”

    During Vallow Daybell’s trial, the jury heard from a medical examiner who testified that Charles Vallow could have been lying on a firm surface like a floor when he was shot. The fatal shot went through his heart, medical examiner Derek Bumgarner said.

    Adam Cox told the court that he had “no doubt” his sister conspired with their brother to kill Charles Vallow. He testified that before the shooting, Vallow Daybell had been making odd religious comments and that he and Charles Vallow wanted to hold an intervention to address it.

    Other testimony included Chandler police officer Cassandra Ynclan, who told the court that Vallow Daybell “seemed very kind of ordinary and kind of nonchalant” on the day of her husband’s death.

    The state rested its case last week. Vallow Daybell rested without presenting any evidence or calling any witnesses.

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



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  • At least 26 tourists killed by gunmen at a resort in Kashmir, Indian police say

    At least 26 tourists killed by gunmen at a resort in Kashmir, Indian police say



    SRINAGAR, India — Gunmen shot and killed at least 26 tourists on Tuesday at a resort in Indian-controlled Kashmir, police said in what appeared to be a major shift in a regional conflict in which tourists have largely been spared.

    Police said it was a “terror attack” and blamed militants fighting against Indian rule. “This attack is much larger than anything we’ve seen directed at civilians in recent years,” Omar Abdullah, the region’s top elected official, wrote on social media.

    Two senior police officers said at least four gunmen, whom they described as militants, fired at dozens of tourists from close range. The officers said at least three dozen people were wounded, many of them reported to be in serious condition.

    Most of the killed tourists were Indian, the officers said, speaking on condition of anonymity in keeping with departmental policy. Officials collected at least 24 bodies in Baisaran meadow, some 5 kilometers (3 miles) from the disputed region’s resort town of Pahalgam. Two others died while being taken for medical treatment.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Police and soldiers were searching for the attackers.

    “We will come down heavily on the perpetrators with the harshest consequences,” India’s home minister, Amit Shah, wrote on social media. He arrived in Srinagar, the main city in Indian-controlled Kashmir, and convened a meeting with top security officials.

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was cutting short his two-day visit to Saudi Arabia and returning to New Delhi early Wednesday, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.

    Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, a key resistance politician and Kashmir’s top religious cleric, condemned what he described as a “cowardly attack on tourists,” writing on social media that “such violence is unacceptable and against the ethos of Kashmir which welcomes visitors with love and warmth.”

    The gunfire coincided with the visit to India of U.S. Vice President JD Vance, who called it a “devastating terrorist attack.” He added on social media: “Over the past few days, we have been overcome with the beauty of this country and its people. Our thoughts and prayers are with them as they mourn this horrific attack.”

    U.S. President Donald Trump on social media noted “deeply disturbing news out of Kashmir. The United States stands strong with India against terrorism.” Other global leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, condemned the attack.

    “The United States stands with India,” U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on X.

    Nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan each administer a part of Kashmir but both claim the territory in its entirety.

    Kashmir has seen a spate of targeted killings of Hindus, including immigrant workers from Indian states, after New Delhi ended the region’s semi-autonomy in 2019 and drastically curbed dissent, civil liberties and media freedoms.

    Tensions have been simmering as India has intensified its counterinsurgency operations. But despite tourists flocking to Kashmir in huge numbers for its Himalayan foothills and exquisitely decorated houseboats, they have not been targeted.

    The region has drawn millions of visitors who enjoy a strange peace kept by ubiquitous security checkpoints, armored vehicles and patrolling soldiers. New Delhi has vigorously pushed tourism and claimed it as a sign of normalcy returning.

    The meadow in Pahalgam is a popular destination, surrounded by snow-capped mountains and dotted with pine forests. It is visited by hundreds of tourists every day.

    Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi, while condemning the attack, said Modi’s government should take accountability instead of making “hollow claims on the situation being normal” in the region.

    Militants in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir have been fighting New Delhi’s rule since 1989. Many Muslim Kashmiris support the rebels’ goal of uniting the territory, either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.

    India insists the Kashmir militancy is Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. Pakistan denies the charge, and many Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle. Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.

    In March 2000, at least 35 civilians were shot and killed in a southern village in Kashmir while then-U.S. President Bill Clinton was visiting India. It was the region’s deadliest attack in the past couple of decades.

    Violence has ebbed in recent times in the Kashmir Valley, the heart of anti-India rebellion. Fighting between government forces and rebels has largely shifted to remote areas of Jammu region, including Rajouri, Poonch and Kathua, where Indian troops have faced deadly attacks.



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  • Tesla earnings fall short of Wall Street expectations

    Tesla earnings fall short of Wall Street expectations



    Tesla reported first-quarter earnings that came in far below expectations Tuesday, signaling the real impact of CEO Elon Musk’s political activities of late.

    Investors appeared to take heart that the company did not initially report that Musk’s role at the company would be changing.

    The company reported $399 million in operating income, a wide miss from estimates for $1.13 billion.

    Shares of Tesla were little changed in after-hours trading.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.



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  • Marco Rubio unveils a massive overhaul of the State Department, with a reduction of staff and bureaus

    Marco Rubio unveils a massive overhaul of the State Department, with a reduction of staff and bureaus



    Secretary of State Marco Rubio unveiled a massive overhaul of the State Department on Tuesday, with plans to reduce staff in the U.S. by 15% while closing and consolidating more than 100 bureaus worldwide as part of the Trump administration’s “America First” mandate.

    The reorganization plan, announced by Rubio on social media and detailed in documents obtained by The Associated Press, is the latest effort by the White House to reimagine U.S. foreign policy and scale back the size of the federal government.

    “We cannot win the battle for the 21st century with bloated bureaucracy that stifles innovation and misallocates scarce resources,” Rubio said in a department-wide email obtained by AP. He said the reorganization aimed to “meet the immense challenges of the 21st Century and put America First.”

    State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce echoed that sentiment, saying the “sweeping changes will empower our talented diplomats” but adding that it would not result in the immediate dismissal of personnel.

    “It’s not something where people are being fired today,” Bruce told reporters Tuesday. “They’re not going to be walking out of the building. It’s not that kind of a dynamic. It is a roadmap. It’s a plan.”

    It includes consolidating 734 bureaus and offices to 602, as well as transitioning 137 offices to another location within the department to “increase efficiency,” according to a fact sheet obtained by AP.

    There will be a “reimagined” office focused on foreign and humanitarian affairs to coordinate the aid programs overseas still left at the State Department. The reorganization was driven in part by the need to find a new home for the remaining functions of the U.S. Agency for International Development, an agency that Trump administration officials and billionaire ally Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency have dismantled.

    The State Department reorganization plan appears to eliminate an office charged with surging expertise to war zones and other erupting crises and scale back work on human rights and justice.

    Although the plan will implement major changes in the department’s bureaucracy and personnel, it is far less drastic than an alleged reorganization plan that was circulated by some officials over the weekend. Numerous senior State Department officials, including Rubio himself, denied that the plan was real.

    Work that had been believed targeted in that alleged leaked document survived — at least as bureau names on a chart — in the plan that Rubio released Tuesday. That includes offices for Africa affairs, migration and refugee issues, and democracy efforts.

    It was not immediately clear whether U.S. embassies were included in the installations slated for closing. Earlier reports of wholesale closings of embassies, especially in Africa, triggered warnings about shrinking the U.S. diplomatic capacity and influence abroad.

    Some of the bureaus that are indeed expected to be cut in the new plan include the Office of Global Women’s Issues and the State Department’s diversity and inclusion efforts, which have been eliminated government-wide under Trump.

    The department also is expected to eliminate some offices previously under the undersecretary of state for civilian security, democracy and human rights, but the fact sheet says that much of that work will continue in other sections of the department.

    It is unclear if the reorganization would be implemented through an executive order or other means.

    The official plans came a week after the AP learned that the White House’s Office of Management and Budget proposed gutting the State Department’s budget by almost 50% and eliminating funding for the United Nations and NATO headquarters.

    While the budget proposal is still in a highly preliminary phase and not expected to pass muster with Congress, the reorganization plan got an initial nod of approval from Republicans on Capitol Hill.

    “Change is not easy, but President Trump and Secretary Rubio have proposed a vision to remake the State Department for this century and the fights that we face today, as well as those that lie ahead of us,” Idaho Sen. Jim Risch, Republican chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement.

    Democrats blasted the effort as Rubio and the Trump administration’s latest attempt to gut “vital components of American influence” on the world stage.

    “On its face, this new reorganization plan raises grave concerns that the United States will no longer have either the capacity or capability to exert U.S. global leadership, achieve critical national security objectives, stand up to our adversaries, save lives, and promote democratic values,” Hawaii Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz said.

    “These have always been bipartisan endeavors for good reason,“ he added. ”They make America safer, stronger, and more prosperous. Now they are at risk.”

    The proposed changes at the State Department come as the Trump administration has been slashing jobs and funding across agencies, from the Education Department to Health and Human Services.

    On foreign policy, beyond the destruction of USAID, the administration also has moved to defund so-called other “soft power” institutions like media outlets delivering objective news, often to authoritarian countries, including the Voice of America, the Middle East Broadcasting NetworksRadio Free Asia and Radio/TV Marti, which broadcasts to Cuba.



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  • Gavin Newsom says Democrats need to stop looking for a savior on a ‘white horse’

    Gavin Newsom says Democrats need to stop looking for a savior on a ‘white horse’



    SAN ANSELMO, Calif. — Gov. Gavin Newsom, widely viewed as a potential contender for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, had tough words for his own party — “We are as dumb as we want to be,” he said — in an exclusive interview with NBC News Monday in this Marin County suburb north of San Francisco.

    Democrats have been too focused on the personality of candidates at the top of the ticket, rather than building a platform that is bigger than the nominee and addresses how the party will fight for what voters want, he said.

    “We just have to move beyond the guy or gal on the white horse that’s going to come save the day — it’s exhausting,” the second-term chief executive of the nation’s most-populous state said. “This party needs to rebuild itself from the bottom up, not top down. We are as dumb as we want to be.”

    In his nascent quest to help revitalize the Democratic Party, Newsom has been criticized by some progressives for hosting a pair of high-profile allies of President Donald Trump — Steve Bannon and Charlie Kirk — on his new podcast, “This is Gavin Newsom.” (The writer of this article sat for an interview on the podcast this week.)

    In his talk with Kirk, Newsom further infuriated some allies in the LGBTQ community and on the left by announcing that he opposes trans athletes competing in women’s and girls’ sports. In the 2024 election, Trump weaponized trans issues, including Kamala Harris’ past support for taxpayer-funded gender-affirming treatments.

    Newsom said he has been surprised by the ferocity of the backlash against his interviews with MAGA figures, but he appears to be committed to learning from Trump’s victories in two of the last three presidential elections. He was particularly struck by Trump’s advantage with young men, which he attributed to the attention the current president paid to them — which was demonstrated in part by appearing on podcasts and YouTube shows popular with that cohort.

    “He had no policy to back up for young men, how to take care of these kids,” Newsom said. “But he at least expressed that — I see you, you matter, I care.”

    His approach to the shadow-primary phase of the next nomination fight is decidedly different from those of his potential rivals, some of whom are already making visits to states that have traditionally held early contests. Newsom may have less need for urgency because he has a robust fundraising network, a relatively high national profile for a governor and functional control of the state party that sends the most delegates to the Democratic National Convention.

    Democrats have been discussing internally how they might shake up their primary calendar — including possibly holding some contests as early as the fall of 2027 — according to one DNC official. Newsom doesn’t like that idea.

    “It’s ridiculous,” he said, sticking to his view that Democrats have to focus on substance and message rather than personality and process.

    Newsom reached back into the Democratic past to find a model for the kind of rebuild he seeks. In 1992, then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton won the presidency running on an agenda that Clinton helped build through the centrist Democratic Leadership Council. But the DLC and its ideas were bigger than Clinton. Its influential members included then-Sen. Joe Biden, who would go on to win the White House in 2020. The point, Newsom argued, is that Democrats are too consumed with the idea of being rescued instead of saving themselves.

    “I’m not worried about [whether] we will find a great candidate,” he said. “But what do we stand for? What are we about? What are we going to fight for?”

    He added that he has been part of the problem at times.

    “Who are we? And if we’re a bunch of dangling verbs and policy statements — I make this mistake often, too. I answer a question with 10 policy responses, as opposed to what do [I] stand for.”



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  • Pope Francis’ death leaves Catholic Church at a crossroads after he charted a progressive path

    Pope Francis’ death leaves Catholic Church at a crossroads after he charted a progressive path


    For Elijah Smith, who grew up Lutheran and Southern Baptist, Pope Francis‘ teachings centering on social justice and recognition of the marginalized helped to influence his decision to convert to Catholicism a year ago.

    “He led by example,” said Smith, 22, a college student from Rockwell, North Carolina, “and he was very accepting. Accepting of the LGBTQ community, accepting of immigrants and very understanding of different cultures.”

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    But with Francis’ death Monday at 88, the Catholic Church is at a crossroads: After 12 years of his leadership, does it continue on a progressive path to invigorate new followers with a message of inclusivity, or return to traditional roots at a time when some have yearned for church doctrine bound by conservative customs and liturgy?

    Megan Mlinarcik, who was raised Catholic, said she hopes to “keep the tradition that’s happened for hundreds of years” as a worshipper at a Latin Mass in the Pittsburgh area.

    Pope Francis during an audience with children from middle schools across Italy on June 2, 2017, at the Vatican.
    Pope Francis during an audience with children from middle schools across Italy on June 2, 2017, at the Vatican.L’Osservatore Romano via AFP – Getty Images

    For centuries, the church’s traditional Mass was said in Latin and required priests to face the altar with their backs to the congregation, until the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s sought to modernize rituals. Changes included Mass being conducted in local languages and laypeople becoming integral to the services’ readings.

    But in 2007, Francis’ predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, relaxed restrictions, allowing the celebration of Latin Mass to return.

    Francis, however, set his own limits on the traditional Mass, saying in 2023 that it was “being used in an ideological way, to go backward.” 

    Mlinarcik, 41, attends Latin Mass services with her husband and six children in a church that has only grown post-pandemic, she said. Women wear veils, commonly called mantillas, as a sign of respect. Mlinarcik also moderates a Latin Mass Moms group on Facebook with 3,000 members.

    “As traditional Catholics, we pray for the pope, and we want a pope who’s accepting of the Latin Mass and our traditional practices,” she added. “Of course, we want to see our religion grow, but there has to be a place for us.”

    The next leader of the world’s roughly 1.4 billion Catholics faces a tall order — to unite a religion that has declined in some countries with significant Catholic populations, including the United States, and an explosive rise in others.

    While the loss of followers has leveled off in recent years in the U.S., where there are an estimated 53 million adult Catholics, according to the Pew Research Center, the largest growth of the religion continues to be in Africa, the Vatican said in statistics released this year.

    Africa and Asia also saw significant increases in new priests, according to the Vatican.

    Mathew Schmalz, the founding editor of the Journal of Global Catholicism, said Francis — the first Latin American pope — made a significant choice to appoint new cardinals from developing countries and other nontraditional places.

    “The Western world is no longer the center of the Catholic world,” said Schmalz, a religious studies professor at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts.

    Francis made the plight of migrants a focal point of his papacy, and two months ago criticized the Trump administration’s efforts to conduct mass deportations in a letter to American bishops. It came after he rebuked then-presidential candidate Donald Trump during the fall for his plan to deport migrants, while also condemning then-Vice President Kamala Harris’ stance supporting abortion rights.

    Whomever the cardinals elect as the next pope in a secretive gathering known as a conclave must grapple with the very specific needs of Catholics where the religion is thriving and has a viable future.

    While marriage equality and abortion are often at the center of polarizing religious debates in the West, Schmalz said, “those aren’t necessarily the primary issues for people in the global south, who have to deal with, oftentimes, poverty, wealth inequality, social justice issues and the religion’s relationship with Islam.”

    He said the cardinals may choose to select a pope who can continue Francis’ reforms, roll them back or simply “take a breather, let the reforms sink in, and allow the Catholic Church to catch its breath.”

    “They’ll probably choose someone who has a pastoral style the way Pope Francis did, but who is not going to push reforms even further or necessarily roll them back,” Schmalz added.

    Stephen White, the executive director of The Catholic Project, a research initiative at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., said a pope must be “the rock” who can guarantee unity and the church’s integrity, rather than micromanage each diocese.

    “I think it is unlikely that the cardinals choosing the next pope will be looking simply to double down on Francis’ pontificate, but neither will they be looking to repudiate it,” he said.

    “Pope Francis spoke often of the need to ‘make a mess,’ to shake things up,” White said, referring to a speech the pope made to a group of South American children. “He certainly did that. I expect the next pope to look to consolidate things a bit and perhaps do a little tidying up.”

    Potential frontrunners to succeed Francis represent both traditional factions of leadership when it comes to family, marriage, gay rights and immigration, while others have championed pressing social issues in their home nations.

    In the U.S., surveys have shown younger Catholics have become more theologically conservative than their older counterparts, while younger priests are also more theologically conservative and politically moderate. Voters identifying as Catholic overwhelmingly voted for Republicans in the 2024 election.

    “There’s no doubt that the majority of American bishops are conservative and back Trump, and there’s a great political cleavage in the Catholic Church,” said Andrew Chesnut, the Catholic studies chair at Virginia Commonwealth University.

    He said he expects conservative Catholics in Western countries to voice opposition if another pope like Francis is chosen.

    “We might see some significant defection, particularly if we have two reformist popes back to back,” Chesnut added.

    Schmalz agreed that whoever becomes Francis’ successor may be met with some resistance in the U.S., “simply because the Catholic community is so divided.”

    “We live in divisive times,” he said. “It’s going to be an open question whether the next pope will try to heal those divisions or unintentionally deepen them.”



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  • This Health Science High School Prepares Students to Succeed

    This Health Science High School Prepares Students to Succeed



    When Tanaya Pinkston was 5 years old, she witnessed her mother have a stroke. It was one of the scariest moments of her life, but the compassion and care she received from the 911 operator left a lasting impression.

    “As soon as they heard that it was a child’s voice on the phone, they were like, this is probably a serious situation, and they had to take a different approach to it,” Pinkston said.

    Now a senior at McClure Health Science High School in Duluth, Georgia, Pinkston wants to become a pediatric ICU nurse.

    “If I didn’t come to McClure, I feel like I would have known that I wanted to go into health care, but the actual career would have never been solidified, and so I would have been stuck wondering,” Pinkston said.

    The $38 million school prepares teens for healthcare careers through hands-on learning using state-of-the-art equipment, including dummy patients, EKG machines and dissection tables. Students also train outside the classroom through partnerships with local hospitals and healthcare facilities.

    “When you take a child or a student, and they are getting a chance to put their hands on it and do it — whether they succeed or fail at using it — it gives them a chance to interact with it and they’re gaining so much more knowledge than what they would ever get from a piece of paper,” McClure teacher James Boulware said.

    Students typically graduate with certifications that set them up for careers in healthcare. “Our students can go to a hospital and just start working there until they figure out what they want to do with their future, or they can go to college and continue reaching their working experience with these certifications they’re graduating with,” principal Dr. Gypsy Hernandez said.

    The school serves a majority Hispanic and lower-income population. According to the Association of American Medical Colleges, about 6% of U.S. physicians identify as Hispanic. Dr. Hernandez said McClure is helping bridge the racial gap.

    “Students are going to be able to not just provide a service in another language, but also understand culturally where patients or communities are coming from so that they will be able to help them,” Dr. Hernandez said.

    Learn more about McClure Health Sciences High School in the video above. Find out more about its curriculum here.



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  • Idaho woman forcibly dragged from GOP town hall seeks $5 million in damages

    Idaho woman forcibly dragged from GOP town hall seeks $5 million in damages



    The Idaho woman who was forcibly dragged out of a local Republican town hall in February is seeking $5 million in damages.

    Teresa Borrenpohl was dragged from her seat and onto the floor by private security guards who did not identify themselves after disrupting a GOP town hall in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, on Feb. 22, according to video of the event and statements from officials.

    Borrenpohl filed a notice of tort claim on Monday with the Kootenai County Clerk, asserting that a group of men — which she says includes Kootenai County Sheriff Robert Norris — and a private security company hired for the event violated her constitutional rights.

    “Town halls are intended to foster conversation and discourse across the aisle, which is why I am deeply alarmed that private security dragged me out of the public meeting for simply exercising my fundamental right of free speech,” Borrenpohl said in a statement.

    Norris and the private security firm, LEAR Asset Management, did not immediately return requests for comment.

    The court filing comes several days after prosecutors said six men were charged with crimes in connection with the town hall.

    The Coeur d’Alene City Attorney’s Office announced in a statement on April 17 that it had filed charges against six men involved in the event.

    Paul Trouette, Russell Dunne, Chistofer Berge and Jesse Jones were all charged with battery, false imprisonment, security agent uniform violation and security agent duties violation, according to the attorney’s office.

    Alex Trouette was charged with security agent uniform violation and security agent duties violation, and Michael Keller was charged with battery, the statement said.

    It was not immediately clear whether any of the men had legal representation. NBC News’ attempts to reach the Kootenai County office of the Idaho Public Defender were unsuccessful.

    The February town hall was hosted by the Kootenai County Republican Central Committee.

    The committee, in a Facebook post at the time, stated that Borrenpohl “shouted down legislators with insults,” thereby disrupting the town hall. She was eventually asked to leave.

    At the time, the chairman of the committee, Brent Regan, said Borrenpohl was removed by “licensed and bonded professional security” after interrupting the event at least seven times. He accused her of having a history of disrupting meetings.

    All of the town hall attendees were told that they would be removed if they did not “respect the rights of others,” Regan said.

    According to a video of the incident, Kootenai County Sheriff Robert Norris asked the woman to leave, but she refused. After attempting to remove Borrenpohl himself by pulling her arm, Norris instructed men wearing black clothing to remove her.

    Video shows Borrenpohl asking the men who they were, but they did not answer. She asked Norris if the men were deputies; he also did not reply.

    Norris was seen on the video shouting at Borrenpohl to leave as she accused the men of assaulting her. She was then physically dragged out of her seat and onto the floor.

    Coeur d’Alene Police Department Sgt. Jared Reneau told NBC News at the time that the police chief recommended revoking the city’s license for LEAR Asset Management, the security company for which the men dressed in black worked.

    The company has since had its business license revoked for violating Coeur d’Alene City ordinances regarding security markings and identification, according to NBC News affiliate KTVB of Boise.

    After the incident, Borrenpohl told KTVB that she felt her First Amendment rights were taken from her in that moment.

    “I could have never imagined my right to free speech and my right to assemble could be stripped in such a violent way,” the statement said. “Due to the sensitivity and shock of the matter, I am unable to speak on this situation immediately, but I will make my voice heard when the time is appropriate.”



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  • Over 150 college presidents sign letter rebuking ‘government overreach’

    Over 150 college presidents sign letter rebuking ‘government overreach’



    More than 150 university and college presidents co-signed a letter on Tuesday condemning the Trump administration’s recent efforts to dictate the policies of private higher education institutions in exchange for federal funding.

    In recent weeks, the Trump administration has paused billions of dollars in federal grants to several of the nation’s most prestigious universities — including Harvard, Columbia and Princeton — in an attempt to get the universities to change their admissions processes and penalize student protestors.

    The letter’s signatories range from large public universities to small liberal arts schools, and include each of the Ivy League schools, except for Columbia University and Dartmouth University.

    “As leaders of America’s colleges, universities, and scholarly societies, we speak with one voice against the unprecedented government overreach and political interference now endangering American higher education,” the Tuesday letter, orchestrated by the American Association of Colleges and Universities, says.

    “We are open to constructive reform and do not oppose legitimate government oversight,” the letter continues. “However, we must oppose undue government intrusion in the lives of those who learn, live, and work on our campuses.”

    “We will always seek effective and fair financial practices, but we must reject the coercive use of public research funding,” it adds.

    The White House did not immediately return a request for comment.

    So far, the Trump administration has only paused or threatened to pause billions of dollars of federal funding, which is vital to the operations of several universities, including Columbia, Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania, and Princeton. The moves are part of the administration’s broader effort to “root out” antisemitism on college campuses.

    Columbia ceded to a list of demands by the Trump administration last month in exchange for starting talks to restore funding. The demands included instituting a mask ban at protests in most cases, hiring an outsider to oversee its Department of Middle East, South Asian, and African studies, committing to “greater institutional neutrality” and enlisting three dozen new security officers.

    The New York City-based university’s acquiescence prompted outrage among the higher education community. Columbia’s interim president at the time, Katrina A. Armstrong, resigned a week later. 

    Harvard was similarly sent a list of demands by the Trump administration, which mandated that the university audit the viewpoints of students and professors and shutter its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.

    Although it initially appeared that the university would take a similar approach to Columbia, Harvard ultimately rejected the administration’s orders.

    Harvard, which was founded more than a century before the United States, sued the administration on Monday and asked a federal judge in Massachusetts to reverse the termination of $2.2 billion in federal grants to the university.

    Tuesday’s letter also denounced the Trump administration’s unprecedented effort to deport international students.

    In recent weeks, the Trump administration has revoked hundreds of student visas from foreign students, many of whom are Middle Eastern. Immigration authorities have also apprehended foreign students, some of whom were involved in pro-Palestinian protests at universities last year.



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