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Alligator Alcatraz contractor gave big to Miami-Dade commissioners this spring
MIAMI — This spring, a company helping run Florida’s Alligator Alcatraz immigrant detention camp was the top donor to incumbents in Miami-Dade County government, according to a Miami Herald analysis.
CDR, a Miami company that specializes in emergency management and has won Miami-Dade contracts in the past, gave a combined $105,000 to four ...Read more
Legionnaires’ disease outbreak in Philadelphia in 1976 was mysterious and deadly – 50 years later, scientists know the cause but outbreaks continue
Soon after Philadelphia hosted America’s bicentennial celebrations in late July 1976, more than 200 attendees of the American Legion Convention at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia fell ill with pneumonia symptoms, including fever, cough and trouble breathing.
Thirty-four of them died.
One of us was a newly minted...Read more
Starmer tests his Cabinet's loyalty after Burnham victory
Keir Starmer’s refusal to cede power after Andy Burnham’s election to parliament leaves the Labour Party in a stand-off and the Cabinet considering if they should tell the prime minister his time is up.
A clear majority of the Cabinet think it is now inevitable Burnham will take over from Starmer as premier, according to people familiar ...Read more
US and Iran delay nuclear talks as Lebanon clashes worsen
The U.S. and Iran delayed the start of negotiations over a permanent peace deal and Tehran’s nuclear program after fighting intensified in southern Lebanon, a potential setback to efforts to end the war.
The talks, which were meant to take place in Switzerland on Friday, were delayed because of those clashes between Israel and Iran-backed ...Read more
The B-52 bomber is an iconic, aging warhorse. Probe of fatal crash could influence its future
LOS ANGELES — The B-52 bomber is considered a marvel not only of the U.S. military but of all aviation history.
The massive plane remains a workhorse for the Air Force seven decades after it debuted in the 1950s, and military officials believe the fleet can continue through the century mark with regular modifications and modernization.
...Read more
LA poised to lose $100 million in state grants to fund transportation projects
LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles appears poised to lose in its attempt to keep $100 million in state grant funding for transportation projects in some of the neediest neighborhoods after a state commission declined to hear the city's appeal for an extension.
The state grants came with deadlines for work to be completed, which city officials have ...Read more
Iran delays nuclear talks with US as Lebanon clashes worsen
Iran delayed the start of negotiations over a permanent peace deal with the U.S. after fighting intensified in southern Lebanon, a potential setback to Donald Trump’s efforts to end the war and curb Tehran’s nuclear program.
The talks, which were meant to take place in Switzerland on Friday, were delayed because of those clashes between ...Read more
Baltimore's Confederate monuments are back. No one is saying where they are.
BALTIMORE — Baltimore’s four controversial Confederate monuments, which were removed in the dead of night nearly nine years ago by former Mayor Catherine Pugh, have reentered Charm City as quietly as they left.
But no one is saying exactly where they are being held or what the plan for them is going forward.
“The Confederate monuments ...Read more
After Denver-area venues nix rally with popular streamer Hasan Piker, Democrats weigh whether online figures help or hurt campaigns
DENVER — Three Denver-area venues canceled an event over the weekend that would have featured a popular — albeit controversial — internet personality alongside two Colorado Democratic primary candidates for the U.S. House and Senate.
The venue cancellations, at least two of them said to be based on security concerns with hosting the event...Read more
He graduated high school with honors. ICE detained him the next day
LOS ANGELES — Wilber Urbina Garcia had an ambitious list of errands to run the day after his high school graduation, before his summer really began.
The shy boy was the first in his family to walk the graduation stage, and he was determined to get a head start on his future. He had a diploma to pick up, a high school textbook to return and ...Read more
'Low public safety return': San Diego police oversight commission calls for limits on pretext traffic stops
SAN DIEGO — Black drivers stopped for low-level traffic violations in San Diego were more than four times as likely as white drivers to be frisked and more than three times as likely to be subjected to force, according to an analysis presented by the city’s police oversight commission, which is recommending broad restrictions on so-called ...Read more
Inside college AI cheating wars: extreme surveillance, false accusations, jarring confusion
LOS ANGELES — A cheating crisis is growing at American universities as AI rapidly becomes embedded in learning: Extreme and uneven classroom practices are in force to prevent deception, false accusations against students are increasing and the definition of what it means to cheat is shifting, professors, students and specialists in academic ...Read more
New shelter-in-place order in Boyle Heights after massive warehouse fire
LOS ANGELES — A new shelter-in-place order was issued Thursday in Boyle Heights, where a massive fire at a warehouse was extinguished Wednesday evening. Firefighters said smoke was being vented from the charred structure that could affect residents nearby.
The fire originated Wednesday afternoon on the solar-panel-covered roof of the cold ...Read more
NYC carriage horse industry temporarily shuts down after teen dies in Central Park crash
New York City’s carriage horse industry is shutting down Friday in response to the death of an 18-year-old tourist, killed after a driverless horse bolted in Central Park, a rep for the union representing the industry said Thursday.
The carriage horse union, TWU Local 100, made the call to shutter its stables while it reviews safety protocols...Read more
Baltimore's Confederate monuments are back. No one is saying where they are.
BALTIMORE — Baltimore’s four controversial Confederate monuments, which were removed in the dead of night nearly nine years ago by former Mayor Catherine Pugh, have reentered Charm City as quietly as they left.
But no one is saying exactly where they are being held or what the plan for them is going forward.
“The Confederate monuments ...Read more
US announces military review as European leaders await cuts
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said the United States will kick off a six-month review of its military presence in Europe as leaders in the region brace for a plan for deep cuts to American support for the continent.
President Donald Trump’s administration has floated plans to slash military assets the Pentagon would send to defend Europe...Read more
Inside Miami's hellish week: Wildfires, flying soot, dark clouds, extreme heat
MIAMI — Adam Arenas’ Doral neighborhood was calm and quiet just a few days go. All it took was one flash of lightning to change that.
Suddenly, Miami seemed to be on fire.
One brush fire from the summer storm then split into two, and the raging flames sent plumes of black smoke upward, darkening the skies for miles and fouling the air.
It...Read more
Federal grand jury indicts Bahamian businessman with fresh drug charges
A convicted Bahamian cocaine trafficker and politically connected businessman who survived a plane crash off the coast of Florida last month has been indicted by a federal grand jury on new drug trafficking and firearms charges.
Jonathan Eric Gardiner, 58, known as “Player,” was charged in a three-count indictment that was returned this ...Read more
Trump administration sues Philadelphia over 'ICE Out' face mask ban for law enforcement
PHILADELPHIA — President Donald Trump’s administration sued Philadelphia and some of its top officials Thursday over a new ordinance that bars law enforcement officers from concealing their identities and effectively bans federal immigration agents from wearing masks.
The law, part of City Council’s recently adopted “ICE Out” package ...Read more
Trump administration backtracks on removing ocean sensors
The Trump administration is dropping near-term plans to dismantle a $386 million federal ocean-observing system after encountering resistance from scientists and Congress.
The National Science Foundation said Thursday it will pause efforts to decommission most of the Ocean Observatories Initiative, a network of sensors in the Atlantic and ...Read more
Popular Stories
- FBI records raise new questions about uncharged player in multimillion-dollar food fraud
- More Americans are hungry in the face of federal cuts, rising grocery prices
- NYC carriage horse industry temporarily shuts down after teen dies in Central Park crash
- US announces military review as European leaders await cuts
- Inside Miami's hellish week: Wildfires, flying soot, dark clouds, extreme heat





