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Federal judge orders return of California DACA recipient deported to Mexico
WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Monday ordered the government to return to the U.S. a California DACA recipient who was deported last month to Mexico.
U.S. District Judge Dena Coggins in Sacramento gave the government seven days to return Maria de Jesus Estrada Juarez, 42, and restore her protections under the Obama-era program Deferred ...Read more
Destitute and at war, Iran surrenders to a joyless Persian New Year
TEHRAN, Iran — In typical times, Nowruz is a much-anticipated moment of hope across Iran.
Preparations for the Persian New Year begin days in advance, with people spring-cleaning their home — “shaking the house,” as the expression goes — or buying new clothes and furniture.
Tehran’s streets burst with shoppers perusing markets for...Read more
Minnesota election judge who allowed 11 unregistered people to vote pleads guilty
MINNEAPOLIS — An election judge in northern Minnesota’s Hubbard County has pled guilty to a felony for allowing 11 unregistered people to vote in November 2024.
Timothy Scouton, 65, of Nevis, Minnesota, was charged with two counts: accepting ballots from the unregistered voters and neglect of duty in his posting at the Badoura Township ...Read more
How Denver International Airport keeps TSA security lines at 12 minutes as other airports see hours-long wait times
DENVER — Tens of millions of dollars that Denver International Airport officials invested in reconfiguring security screening checkpoints have helped keep the airport relatively quick for travelers amid the double trouble of a spring break surge and the federal government shutdown.
Security wait times at DIA over the past two weeks averaged ...Read more
The first No Kings protest of 2026 -- and the third of Trump's term -- is this weekend
PHILADELPHIA — No Kings, the recurring nationwide protests against the policies of President Donald Trump, is back for 2026.
Over 3,000 No Kings rallies are scheduled for Saturday, and will focus on Trump, his policies, escalations of immigration enforcement tactics in Minnesota, and ICE’s increased presence nationwide.
It marks the third ...Read more
Israel says war isn't ending even as Trump touts peace talks
Israeli officials said the country will persist with strikes against Iran even as U.S. President Donald Trump claimed talks are underway to end the conflict, further unsettling energy and financial markets.
Defense Minister Israel Katz said the campaign, now in its 25th day, would continue “at full intensity,” while Energy Minister Eli ...Read more
Minnesota Attorney General Ellison notches early win in case against TikTok
MINNEAPOLIS — Social media giant TikTok will need to provide the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office with internal documents as part of a case brought by the state after a Hennepin County judge ruled the civil lawsuit may proceed.
Tiktok, the mega-popular short-form video purveyor, faces a lawsuit from Minnesota over the way it markets and ...Read more
Trump administration illegally ordered restart of Central Coast oil pipelines, state lawsuit says
LOS ANGELES — The California Department of Justice on Monday filed a lawsuit challenging a Trump administration order that called on a private Texas-based firm to revive controversial oil pipelines along the Central Coast despite ongoing state and local objections.
The March 13 order from U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Chris Wright ...Read more
'Whitey' Bulger's life in a Louisiana oasis still shocks the locals
Grand Isle, a Louisiana seaside oasis, is buzzing over James “Whitey” Bulger’s post-arrest confessions.
This quaint little drinking town with a fishing problem, as the local market sign states, was named by Bulger as one of his favorite hiding places while on the run from the law, as the Boston Herald first reported.
For the couple he ...Read more
Growing up during Sri Lanka’s civil war taught me that getting along with people across divides is a virtue we can learn
I grew up in Sri Lanka. Much of my adolescence was spent in Kandy, a city built around a lake, set amid the lush tea plantations of the hill country. Its northern shore houses the Temple of the Tooth, one of Buddhism’s most sacred sites. Each year, it came alive with drummers, dancers and elephants parading through the streets in a “...Read more
War knocks global economy with dual shock to growth, prices
The world economy’s first signs of a synchronized shock emerged in business surveys revealing how the Iran war’s fallout is crippling growth momentum and stoking prices.
Multiple purchasing manager indexes compiled by S&P Global for March showed declines. Among the releases on Tuesday, composite measures for the U.S. and the euro zone were ...Read more
Pilots killed in LaGuardia Airport crash saved lives with quick reflexes, passengers say
NEW YORK — Passengers of the Air Canada jet that slammed into a Port Authority firetruck at LaGuardia Airport praised the two pilots killed in the crash, saying their quick reflexes likely prevented further deaths.
Multiple passengers recalled feeling the pilots braking “extremely hard” as the plane touched down on the Queens runway ...Read more
Michigan's Grosse Pointe parent's LGBTQ flag video led to school ban. Now he's suing
DETROIT — A Grosse Pointe Public School System parent has sued the district after it issued him a no-trespass order for posting a video on social media criticizing LGBTQ flags hung at the middle school in September 2024, arguing the district violated his free speech rights.
The lawsuit, filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern ...Read more
2 earthquakes reported hours apart in North Carolina community, USGS says
CHARLOTTE, N.C. —Two shallow earthquakes were reported late Monday in Dillsboro, North Carolina, and hundreds of people have reported they felt the shaking, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Both of the quakes count as mild – a 2.7 magnitude around 8 p.m. and a 2.2 magnitude just after 10 p.m. – which are often too subtle to be ...Read more
Maryland joins lawsuit over USDA funding conditions
BALTIMORE — Maryland Attorney General Anthony G. Brown joined a coalition of 21 attorneys general in suing the U.S. Department of Agriculture over new funding conditions the states argue are unlawful and could jeopardize food assistance and other programs.
The lawsuit challenges a policy adopted Dec. 31, 2025, that requires states receiving ...Read more
Deadly LaGuardia crash raises worries about close calls at Sea-Tac, elsewhere
SEATTLE — The deadly collision between an Air Canada plane and a fire truck at LaGuardia Airport in New York City has raised alarm about the possibility of a plane speeding into another aircraft or vehicle on the jetway.
It’s too soon to know what caused Sunday's accident, which saw an Air Canada jet collide with an airport fire engine, and...Read more
CDC dilemma: Nominee may need both MAHA and science chops
WASHINGTON — As a deadline arrives this week to nominate a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, some Republicans are skeptical the administration will find someone who can check all the boxes necessary for confirmation.
The candidate will need the “Make America Healthy Again” mindset of Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s ...Read more
Iran strikes persist even as Trump claims talks to end war
Fighting between the U.S.-Israeli alliance and Iran raged unabated, even as President Donald Trump claimed talks are under way to end the conflict.
Iran carried out overnight missile and drone attacks on the Israeli cities of Tel Aviv, Eilat and Dimona, as well as on U.S. bases in the Middle East. Israel launched a wave of strikes in western ...Read more
Iran is the first war of the social-media age. It's a black box
It’s been half a century since the Vietnam War, when journalists had almost unrestricted access to the battlefield.
In the years since the fall of Saigon ended that first conflict of the television age, restrictions on press freedom have grown.
Now, with the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran — the first major military engagement with American ...Read more
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs law reversing local bans on gas leaf blowers
MIAMI – Gas leaf blowers aren’t just noisy — they spit out pollutants that affect health and contribute to climate change. That’s why cities including Miami Beach, South Miami, Pinecrest and Key Biscayne enacted bans to ditch gas-powered lawn equipment like leaf blowers and chainsaws for quieter and cleaner electric alternatives.
Now, ...Read more
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