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Chicago FBI boss forced into early retirement, skips lunch with US Attorney Boutros
CHICAGO — Shortly after Douglas DePodesta became head of the FBI’s storied Chicago bureau, he told the Tribune he would love to call it a career in his adopted hometown when he hit the mandatory retirement age in a few years.
“I think I have a lot left in my tank,” DePodesta said in May 2025.
Instead, DePodesta’s impressive FBI ...Read more
Venezuela quake death toll reaches 3,811 two weeks after disaster
Two weeks after Venezuela’s devastating twin earthquakes, the country is entering a new and increasingly painful phase of the disaster. While hopes of finding additional survivors have all but vanished, tens of thousands of families remain waiting for answers about relatives whose whereabouts are still unknown.
Government officials said ...Read more
Judge says US Attorney Andrew Boutros violated her order in Tren de Aragua case, but issues no sanctions
CHICAGO — A contrite U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros told a federal magistrate judge Thursday he was confident that a murder and kidnapping case involving the Tren de Aragua gang would have been unsealed by the time he appeared for a news conference last with his bosses in Washington, D.C.
But, as with the old adage known as Murphy’s Law, “...Read more
Trump says he hasn't spoken to McConnell, unsure of senator's health condition
President Donald Trump said Wednesday night he doesn’t know specifics on Sen. Mitch McConnell’s health condition after more than three weeks of hospitalization.
Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that he hasn’t spoken with McConnell since he was admitted to the hospital last month, according to a post on X from Kristen Holmes, a ...Read more
Kentucky congressman shows clear opposition to data centers in the state
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Kentucky’s lone Democratic congressman said he opposes the construction of massive data centers across the state, and said it should be up to residents to decide what gets built in their communities.
U.S. Rep. Morgan McGarvey, a former state senator who represents Louisville and Kentucky’s 3rd District in Congress, ...Read more
UC San Diego develops way to forecast when coastal landslides are imminent
SAN DIEGO — The University of California, San Diego has developed a rudimentary way to detect when and where coastal landslides are likely to occur, which could lead to an early warning system for a phenomenon that has killed 19 people in greater San Diego since the 1940s.
Scientists say in a study released Thursday they were able to predict ...Read more
Wally Funk, the oldest woman to go to space, dies at 87
Aviation pioneer and commercial astronaut Wally Funk died July 8 in her Grapevine, Texas, home at the age of 87, according to a news release from the City of Grapevine. The statement said Funk passed “peacefully surrounded by her loved ones.”
Funk was born in Las Vegas, N.M., in 1939 and dedicated her life to aviation. She left a legacy of ...Read more
Amid federal scrutiny, research reinforces this rare Gulf whale is a unique species
A recently published study adds more scientific weight to a claim the Trump administration is trying to discredit:
The Rice’s whale, Earth’s only filter-feeding whale that lives exclusively in the Gulf of Mexico offshore Florida, is a species of its own.
A team of university and federal researchers mapped DNA from 25 Rice’s whales, ...Read more
Earthquakes in Venezuela expose a severely under-resourced and unprepared healthcare system
Twin earthquakes struck Venezuela on June 24, 2026, causing major damage in Caracas and a nearby coastal city, La Guaira. At the time of publication, 3,685 people have been declared dead, and more than 30,000 remain missing.
Dr. Hermes Florez and Dr. Zeina Hannoush are physicians who trained in Venezuela, then immigrated to the United...Read more
Climate change could double household water costs in some cities, study finds
Household water costs could nearly double in some American cities, new research suggests, as climate change further stresses municipal water systems.
Researchers at Stanford University and other institutions studied how a hotter, drier climate is poised to spike water bills for residents of Santa Cruz, California, in a peer-reviewed study ...Read more
Gun homicides declined in 2024 as firearm suicides hit record high, data shows
Firearm homicides in the United States fell sharply in 2024, but gun suicides reached a record high, according to a new analysis of federal mortality data by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions.
The report, based on newly released data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, found that 44,447 ...Read more
Feds sending election monitors to Boston, New Bedford for September primary
BOSTON — The Department of Justice is sending election monitors to two Massachusetts cities this year for the September primary, with the Bay State among five other states where federal monitors will be observing voter activity.
The directive was announced this week by Assistant Attorney General for the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division Harmeet ...Read more
Starmer exits world stage unsure his foreign policy will endure
Keir Starmer’s swan-song trip as Britain’s prime minister to the NATO summit this week sought to cement a shaky diplomatic legacy for a successor who’s untested in the international arena.
British diplomats spent the weeks leading up to the gathering in Ankara, Turkey, fretting that no leader would want to meet the outgoing premier, and ...Read more
US, Iran trade airstrikes as fears grow of a return to war
The U.S. military attacked Iran for a second day and Tehran retaliated against American allies in the Persian Gulf, raising fears of a return to war after little progress in efforts to secure a diplomatic outcome.
U.S. Central Command said on X about 90 targets were hit overnight — after 80 the previous day — “to further degrade” Iran�...Read more
PBI is now DJT. But the president's airport may not get the full Trump rebrand
MIAMI — Palm Beach International Airport is now Donald J. Trump International Airport, after the formal name change took effect Thursday — but the airport will only see a partial makeover since Palm Beach County was left holding the bag to pay for the presidential tribute.
Late last year, county staff raised a slew of safety, financial and ...Read more
Predawn Florida skies served up 'space jellyfish' from SpaceX launch
ORLANDO, Fla. — A SpaceX Falcon 9 launch using a booster that has now flown three dozen times created a “space jellyfish” effect in the predawn skies over Florida on Thursday.
The rocket lifted off at 5:25 a.m. from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s Space Launch Complex 40 on the Starlink 10-42 mission with 29 more of the company’s...Read more
The first week of July is typically Philly's most violent. This year, the holiday weekend was markedly calmer
PHILADELPHIA — The first week of July has typically been one of Philadelphia’s most violent, with recent Independence Day weekends marked by mass shootings, police officers shot, and bursts of violence that left a dozen dead.
But this year, amid a dramatic decline in violence and a flood of visitors to the city, the holiday weekend was ...Read more
Trump denies role in María Corina Machado's failed return to Venezuela
President Donald Trump denied this week that he had instructed Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado not to return to her country after last month’s devastating earthquakes, distancing himself from reports that the administration had sought to block the opposition leader’s efforts to reenter the country.
“Oh, no, no, no, not ...Read more
California wolves are eating much more cattle than wild prey, study finds
LOS ANGELES — The return of the wolf in California has been met with joy by conservationists, who delight in the improbable population rebound, and with fury by ranchers who bemoan the toll on their cattle.
Now, a new study on the diet of gray wolves suggests that the population regrowth is a result of the animals feasting on cattle, as their...Read more
A Gaza father's desperate search for his son's body
GAZA CITY — Yusef al-Zaharnah’s eyes were transfixed on the excavator’s bucket as its claws scooped into the rubble, hoping its fresh load would end nine grueling months of uncertainty and allow him to fully grieve.
Once it disgorged its haul, Al-Zaharnah, a burly, weary-looking 56-year-old, climbed over the detritus and bent low for a ...Read more
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