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'This is ur chance to help fight back the Gov': Chicago bank robber's unusual demand note steals show
CHICAGO — When it comes to writing a demand note, bank robbers tend to follow a certain unspoken etiquette of brevity and clarity.
But that’s not what happened in downtown Chicago earlier this week, when federal prosecutors say a man walked into the Chase Bank building at 10 S. Dearborn St. and handed a note to a teller that may have set ...Read more
McAfee challenger out of contention for Fulton County judicial race, judge rules
ATLANTA — An attorney challenging the judge overseeing the Fulton County election interference case remains disqualified from the May 21 race, a DeKalb County judge determined Thursday.
After hearing arguments for nearly four hours, DeKalb Superior Court Judge Stacey Hydrick opted to uphold a recent ruling from an administrative law judge ...Read more
Israel-Hamas war protesters clash with officers at Emory in Atlanta
ATLANTA — Hundreds of people protesting the Israel-Hamas war and Atlanta’s planned public safety training center set up camp at Emory University’s quadrangle Thursday morning, prompting clashes with law enforcement and the arrests of several activists.
The encampment mirrors a growing number of college protests across the country. A ...Read more
Man who drove Tesla off cliff with family in car was 'psychotic,' doctors say
LOS ANGELES — Two doctors testified that the California man who drove his Tesla off a cliff with his wife and children in the car suffered from major depressive order and was experiencing a psychotic break at the time of the crash.
The testimony came Wednesday in the case of Dharmesh Patel, a Pasadena radiologist who was charged with three ...Read more
Casey, McCormick to debate three times in key contest for U.S. Senate
U.S. Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania and his Republican opponent, former hedge fund CEO David McCormick, will debate three times this fall — including once in Pittsburgh — the campaigns announced Thursday.
The other two debates were scheduled for Philadelphia and Harrisburg. Dates were not announced.
Both men won their primaries without ...Read more
2 arrests made, encampments taken down at Princeton following pro-Palestinian protests on college campus
Princeton University is the latest local university to see pro-Palestinian student protesters erect tents on campus as a national movement grips the nation and catalyzes debate over the war in Gaza, free speech on college campuses and American support for Israel.
Calling it a “Gaza Solidarity encampment,” the group said in a news release ...Read more
Northwestern students set up pro-Palestinian encampment as university changes protest policy
EVANSTON, Ill. — Hundreds of Northwestern students joined nationwide protests against Israel’s war in Gaza on Thursday, prompting school administrations to abruptly change campus policies and ban tents or other temporary structures in previously public spaces.
University President Michael Schill informed students of the policy change just ...Read more
Dexter Reed shot 13 times by Chicago police officers, autopsy finds
CHICAGO — Dexter Reed was shot 13 times by Chicago police officers during a fatal March traffic stop that left one of the officers shot in the wrist, authorities found.
The Cook County medical examiner’s office released Reed’s autopsy and toxicological reports Thursday, five weeks after he was fatally shot in the Humboldt Park ...Read more
Harvey Weinstein NYC rape conviction overturned by appeals court
NEW YORK — In a bombshell ruling Thursday morning, the New York state Court of Appeals has overturned fallen movie mogul Harvey Weinstein’s Manhattan rape and sex crime conviction.
The 4-3 ruling reverses a Manhattan Supreme Court jury’s 2020 verdict that Weinstein, 72, was guilty of rape for an attack on aspiring actress Jessica Mann at ...Read more
Supreme Court's conservatives lean in favor of limited immunity for Trump as an ex-president
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court’s conservative justices said Thursday they agree a former president should be shielded from prosecution for his truly official acts while in office, but not for private schemes that would give him personal gain.
They also suggested the case against former President Donald Trump will have to be sent back to ...Read more
Feds greenlight return of grizzlies to Washington's North Cascades
SEATTLE —Grizzly bears will soon return to the North Cascades.
The National Parks Service and U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service filed a decision Thursday outlining a plan to capture three to seven grizzlies from other ecosystems in the Rocky Mountains or interior British Columbia and release them in the North Cascades each summer for five to 10 ...Read more
USC cancels 'main stage' commencement
LOS ANGELES — The University of Southern California announced Thursday that it is canceling its main May commencement ceremony, capping a dramatic series of moves that began last week after it informed valedictorian Asna Tabassum, who had been opposed by pro-Israel groups, that she would not be delivering the traditional speech.
In ending the...Read more
Wolf connected to livestock killings could be breeding, wildlife officials say
Wildlife officials said they will not remove a gray wolf potentially connected to recent livestock killings, despite requests from stockgrowers.
Two of the gray wolves reintroduced to Colorado’s Grand County in December — including one suspected in recent depredations — are likely “denning” and in the breeding process, Colorado Parks ...Read more
Amid Gaza protests and 'hateful graffiti,' Cal Poly Humboldt closes campus through the weekend
Cal Poly Humboldt will remain closed through the weekend, with classwork continuing remotely as the Northern California university struggles with Gaza protests and what it calls “hateful graffiti” on campus, officials said.
Administrators at the public university in Arcata are weighing whether to keep the campus closed beyond then as ...Read more
Supreme Court sounds conflicted over Trump criminal immunity
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appeared conflicted over how to handle Donald Trump’s claim that his presidency shielded him from federal prosecution during oral arguments Thursday in a case almost certain to shape this year’s presidential campaign.
The justices explored the breadth of the criminal case alleging Trump masterminded an ...Read more
Trump immunity protesters see 'make-or-break moment for our republic'
WASHINGTON — The sidewalk outside the Supreme Court was dotted with more reporters than protesters Thursday morning as oral arguments in the Donald Trump immunity case played out inside.
Dozens of demonstrators banged drums, blared music and at times hurled insults at one another. But it was a relatively subdued gathering as the morning wore ...Read more
Cat hides in Amazon return package -- then ends up in California 700 miles from home
A cat went missing after hiding in an Amazon return package. Then her Utah owner got a call — from hundreds of miles away — that “changed everything.”
On April 10, Galena the kitty “vanished” from her home in Lehi, her owner, Carrie Stevens Clark, said in an April 21 Facebook post.
Clark said she searched “every nook and cranny�...Read more
Israel-Hamas war creates 'really fraught times' at Minnesota colleges
MINNEAPOLIS — Fadwa Wazwaz attended a pro-Palestinian protest at the University of Minnesota recently and intentionally took a picture with a Jewish attendee to show they could coexist despite the war in the Gaza Strip.
"This has to stop," Wazwaz, a Palestinian U employee, said of the violence.
Jewish student Jon Greenspan felt unnerved a ...Read more
Idaho Attorney General Labrador questions doctors' accounts of abortion emergencies
BOISE, Idaho — Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador cast doubts on doctors’ claims that they’re transferring an increasing number of patients out of state for care to comply with the state’s strict abortion laws.
The claims were central to a U.S. Supreme Court hearing Wednesday that will determine whether Idaho abortion law conflicts ...Read more
How bird flu virus fragments get into milk sold in stores, and what the spread of H5N1 in cows means for the dairy industry and milk drinkers
The discovery of viral fragments of avian flu virus in milk sold in U.S. stores suggests that the H5N1 virus may be more widespread in U.S. dairy cattle than previously realized.
The Food and Drug Administration was quick to stress on April 24, 2024, that it believes the commercial milk supply is safe. However, highly pathogenic avian...Read more
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