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Bryan Kohberger defense asks to strike death penalty over discovery issues
BOISE, Idaho — Bryan Kohberger’s defense team is employing a legal argument used successfully in another high-profile Idaho murder case in another attempt to take capital punishment off the table.
Kohberger is charged with four counts of first-degree murder, making him eligible for the death penalty if convicted, and one count of felony ...Read more

Did you get the measles vaccine in the past? Do you need another shot? How to check
MIAMI — There’s a growing measles outbreak in the country and public health experts say vaccination is the best way to reduce the spread.
Measles is a highly contagious disease that can lead to serious complications, including pneumonia and brain swelling.
So far, more than 300 measles cases have been reported in the U.S. within the first ...Read more

2 house cats infected with bird flu in New York City, health officials say
NEW YORK — Two cats in different households in New York City were infected with bird flu, the city’s health department announced.
Officials did not disclose the cats’ conditions and are still investigating how they contracted the virus, but urged pet owners not to let their felines roam outdoors or feed them raw food or raw milk — ...Read more
Trump orders military action against Houthi fighters in Yemen
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said he ordered military attacks against sites in Yemen controlled by the Iranian-backed Houthi militia after months of disruption to shipping lanes in the Red Sea.
Trump said on Saturday the strikes came in response to the Houthis’ maritime attacks on vessels sailing through the Suez Canal and southern ...Read more

Meeting about 1st proposed Florida bear hunt since 2015 fuels debate, draws hundreds
ORLANDO, Fla. — Although it’s been nearly a decade since Florida last allowed hunting of black bears, hundreds who took part this week in a meeting about another possible hunt proved it remains a divisive issue.
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission staff held the virtual event Thursday after commissioners told them in December ...Read more

Palestinian activist should stay detained in Louisiana, US says
NEW YORK — A Palestinian activist who led anti-Israel protests at Columbia University should remain detained in Louisiana and not transferred to New York as he faces deportation proceedings, U.S. lawyers argued in court filings.
A U.S. judge should reject a request by Mahmoud Khalil to move so he can be closer to his attorneys and pregnant ...Read more

2 house cats infected with bird flu in New York City, health officials say
NEW YORK — Two cats in different households in New York City were infected with bird flu, the city’s health department announced.
Officials did not disclose the cats’ conditions and are still investigating how they contracted the virus, but urged pet owners not to let their felines roam outdoors or feed them raw food or raw milk — ...Read more

Bird flu mutation associated with increased disease severity found in 2 cats
LOS ANGELES — A genetic mutation of the H5N1 bird flu virus — a mutation associated with increased infectiousness and disease severity — has been found in two cats, in what scientists say is another indication of the risks posed by the virus.
The fact that the cats have the mutation “is a continued example of how this virus is evolving ...Read more
Deadly storm slams Midwest, extreme risk looms in South
A massive storm system that left over a dozen people dead in the central U.S. was moving toward the Mississippi Valley and southern states on Saturday, prompting the National Weather Service to warn of “the potential for violent, long-track tornadoes.”
Residents in 20 states spanning over more than 500,000 square miles are in the path of ...Read more

'The whole pie': Trump team attempts novel legal strategy to subvert birthright citizenship
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is asking the Supreme Court to curtail a lower court’s ability to issue a national injunction, hatching a novel legal strategy in its bid to radically revise a bedrock American principle: birthright citizenship.
Instead of asking the Supreme Court to directly rule on the constitutionality of granting U....Read more

FAA issues environmental take on SpaceX request for more launches, new landing pad
ORLANDO, Fla. — If SpaceX gets its way, the Space Coast will get a lot more rocket rumbles and sonic booms as the company increases Falcon 9 launches and builds out new landing pads at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and Kennedy Space Center.
The Federal Aviation Administration released Friday a 116-page draft environment assessment for ...Read more

Zelenskyy says Russia planning 'encirclement' in border region
Kremlin forces are looking to surround Kyiv’s troops in the northeastern Ukrainian region directly bordering Kursk as negotiations move forward toward a temporary ceasefire, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.
While Russia is advancing in its Kursk region, trying to push back Ukrainian soldiers who’ve held part of the area since last summer...Read more
Ukraine allies agree to step up economic pressure on Russia
U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer said some 25 allied leaders agreed on Saturday to keep tightening restrictions on Russia’s economy in an effort to draw President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table to secure a ceasefire in its war with Ukraine.
“The effects of the sanctions on the Russian economy have been pretty profound,” Starmer ...Read more
OC judge who fatally shot his wife speaks out as potential retrial looms
LOS ANGELES — Days after the jury selected to decide his fate was unable to reach a verdict, and ahead of a potential retrial, Orange County Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Ferguson pleaded his case to television viewers — maintaining that the fatal shooting of his wife was nothing more than a tragic mishap.
The 74-year-old Ferguson, who is ...Read more

There is much more to mindfulness than the popular media hype
Mindfulness is seemingly everywhere these days. A Google search I conducted in January 2022 for the term “mindfulness” resulted in almost 3 billion hits. The practice is now routinely offered in workplaces, schools, psychologists’ offices and hospitals all across the country.
Most of the public enthusiasm for mindfulness stems ...Read more

A memorial in Yiddish, Italian and English tells the stories of Triangle Shirtwaist fire victims − testament not only to tragedy but to immigrant women’s fight to remake labor laws
The 10-story Brown Building, site of one of the deadliest workplace disasters in United States history, stands one block east of Washington Square Park in New York City. Despite three bronze plaques noting its significance, it has long been easy to pass by without further thought.
On March 25, 1911, however, thousands of New Yorkers ...Read more

How the EPA's environmental about-face could upend California's climate efforts
The Environmental Protection Agency’s plan to repeal or weaken more than two dozen regulations could deliver a direct blow to California policies on air and water quality standards, electric vehicle initiatives and efforts to curb planet-harming greenhouse gas emissions.
The changes announced this week are geared toward rolling back trillions...Read more

Squeezed from left and right, Pam Bondi is Trump's most besieged Cabinet member
WASHINGTON — Nearly six weeks into her tenure, Attorney General Pam Bondi finds herself in the unenviable position of being the sole Trump Cabinet member absorbing consistent political heat from critics on both the left — who are decrying cuts to the nation’s top law enforcement agency — and on the right — who remain furious about her ...Read more
KC-area families say looming cuts to Medicaid would hurt kids' lives: 'Instability'
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ryan Jolly’s Lenexa home doubles as a hub of care for her four children. She’s adopted three and one remains in foster care. All have brain injuries.
To call caring for her children – 14, 13, 13, and 7 – a logistical feat almost doesn’t capture the complexity of what happens daily at their residence. On a typical ...Read more

Water officials knew that opening dams to meet Trump's wishes was ill-advised. Here's why it happened anyway
When President Donald Trump called for the federal government to “maximize” water deliveries in California, commanders of the Army Corps of Engineers quickly found two dams where they could carry out that order. And even though the officials knew the water couldn’t be moved out of the Central Vally as Trump wished, they released billions ...Read more
Popular Stories
- Squeezed from left and right, Pam Bondi is Trump's most besieged Cabinet member
- Water officials knew that opening dams to meet Trump's wishes was ill-advised. Here's why it happened anyway
- A memorial in Yiddish, Italian and English tells the stories of Triangle Shirtwaist fire victims − testament not only to tragedy but to immigrant women’s fight to remake labor laws
- White House sought real-time updates on arrest of Columbia University grad student Mahmoud Khalil
- New tactics, routes arm Haitian gangs. Florida a key to illicit flow of guns and ammo