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Traverse City, Mich., hospital releases update on medical conditions of Walmart stabbing victims
Four of the 11 victims of a Saturday afternoon mass stabbing inside a Walmart store near Traverse City, Michigan, were in serious condition Sunday morning, while seven survivors of the attack were upgraded to fair condition by doctors at Munson Medical Center.
A 42-year-old male suspect is in police custody after allegedly stabbing 11 people in...Read more

Trump, Von Der Leyen see 50-50 odds of reaching trade pact
President Donald Trump expressed hope he could resolve differences with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen over their trading relationship ahead of a Friday deadline, but suggested pharmaceuticals may not be addressed in a deal.
Trump on Sunday reiterated his view that the chances are “probably 50-50 of making a deal” while...Read more

Trump and Von Der Leyen to meet with trade deal in balance
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will meet President Donald Trump on Sunday in a bid to reach a trade agreement ahead of Friday’s deadline, at which point 30% tariffs on the bloc’s exports to the U.S. are otherwise due to kick in.
The stakes for the talks, scheduled for 4:30 p.m. local time at Trump’s golf resort in ...Read more

Israel eases Gaza aid curbs, hoping to defuse hunger outcry
Israel rolled back curbs on aid distribution to Gaza over the weekend in an effort to defuse a growing international outcry over hunger convulsing the shattered Palestinian enclave.
The Israel Defense Forces on Sunday suspended some military operations against Hamas to facilitate the movement of U.N. relief convoys, and restored electricity ...Read more

Thailand, Cambodia set for talks on conflict after Trump's push
Thailand and Cambodia are set to hold talks Monday to discuss an end to their deadly border clashes after U.S. President Donald Trump warned Washington wouldn’t make a trade deal with either country while the conflict continued.
Thailand’s Acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet are scheduled to ...Read more

Serious liver disease is up among heavy drinkers, even without more drinking
LOS ANGELES — Serious liver disease is becoming more common among Americans who drink heavily, according to a new study from Keck Medicine of USC.
It's not that more people are partying with alcohol. And it's not that the drinkers are having more drinks. It's that more of the people who drink regularly are becoming sick.
Over the last two ...Read more

Former Moscow police chief reflects on Kohberger and Idaho student murder case
BOISE, Idaho — James Fry, former chief of the Moscow Police Department, never entered the crime scene.
With previous experience as an investigator, the veteran officer of decades knew it could compromise evidence at the home where four University of Idaho students were killed in November 2022. Fry was determined, he said, to do everything in ...Read more

Essayli upended US attorney's office in LA region by pushing Trump agenda. Will he stay on top?
LOS ANGELES — When Bill Essayli was appointed interim U.S. attorney for the Los Angeles region in April, many in the former state assemblyman’s Riverside County district were afraid the ambitious Republican lightning rod would be willing to attack a whole range of California policies to please the MAGA base.
They feared that, as the region�...Read more

Forensic crime labs are buckling as new technology increases demand
Across the country, state and local crime labs are drowning in evidence.
From rape kits to drug samples to vials of blood, delays in forensic testing are stalling prosecutions, stretching court calendars and forcing impossible choices about what gets tested — and what doesn’t.
Now, as the need for forensic testing grows, state and local ...Read more

Baby boomers now live next to 18-year-olds at colleges across US
On a Monday afternoon last spring at Lasell University, students wrapped up their final beginner Spanish class of the semester. Pairing up, they drilled each other on their names, favorite foods and hobbies.
It was a routine conversation for Sara Leclair and Mandy Waddell, until Leclair, a 20-year-old sophomore, asked her partner, “Cuantos a...Read more

Washington state officials rebuke Trump's tough-on-homelessness executive order
SEATTLE — President Donald Trump’s executive order issued Thursday that calls for punishing homeless people living outside, forced treatment for people with substance use and mental health issues and an end to data-proven solutions to getting people into housing has drawn near-unanimous rebuke among local officials and organizations serving ...Read more

Orban urges online campaign against Hungary's surging opposition
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said his supporters needed to ramp up a digital movement to seize momentum from the surging opposition party that’s taken a big lead in most polls.
So-called digital civic groups will aim to boost his party’s support before 2026 elections, Orban said in a speech to ethnic Hungarian supporters in Baile ...Read more
NYPD chief probed for allowing on-duty detective to care for cancer-stricken mom
NEW YORK — An unusual arrangement that allowed an NYPD detective to work for nearly a year on a special police detail assigned to her cancer-stricken mother has emerged as the trigger for an Internal Affairs investigation and may well have accelerated the retirement of Brooklyn North Chief Scott Henderson, the Daily News has learned.
...Read more

City by the Bay? More like City by the Brrr! San Francisco is having its coldest summer in decades
Time to cue that famed quote, often falsely attributed to Mark Twain: "The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco."
It's a cliche, sure. But this year it rings true. It really has been quite chilly in the City by the Bay, which is experiencing its coldest summer in decades, with no significant warm-up in sight and daytime ...Read more
'People are dying': Judge hears arguments on merits of sweeping lawsuit over health care, safety in San Diego County jails
SAN DIEGO — A federal judge is weighing whether a sweeping civil rights lawsuit alleging systemic failures in San Diego County jails should proceed to trial.
At a hearing Thursday before U.S. District Judge Anthony Battaglia, attorneys for people incarcerated in the jails described a system plagued by preventable deaths, chronic understaffing...Read more

Thousands rally in Malaysia demanding PM Anwar's resignation
Thousands of Malaysians rallied in the nation’s capital demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim over alleged unfulfilled promises and recent controversies surrounding his administration.
The protesters, numbering around 20,000 and led by opposition parties, gathered around Kuala Lumpur’s iconic independence square braving...Read more

1 injured after DIA passengers evacuated from American Airlines flight
DENVER — One person was taken to a hospital Saturday afternoon after an equipment problem on an American Airlines flight at Denver International Airport forced passengers and crew to evacuate onto the runway.
American Airlines flight 3023 was departing for Miami International Airport when there was a “maintenance issue” with an airplane ...Read more

Afghans in California reeling amid Trump administration travel ban, end of deportation protections
LOS ANGELES — Afghans who relocated to California have been reeling over the past few months and weeks as the Trump administration has moved to end deportation protections amid increasing efforts to further restrict Afghan nationals from coming to the U.S.
This week, despite efforts by an organization suing to maintain the protections, the ...Read more

Illinois landlord convicted of killing 6-year-old Palestinian American boy dies in custody, sheriff says
CHICAGO — The Plainfield man convicted of killing a Palestinian American boy in an October 2023 hate crime has died in state prison just weeks after his sentencing, the Will County sheriff’s office said Saturday.
Joseph Czuba, 73, died Thursday while in the custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections, said Kevin Hedemark, sheriff’s...Read more

Maryland heat deaths, illnesses already above 2024 rates
BALTIMORE — At least 13 people have died so far because of heat-related illnesses in Maryland during this year’s “heat season,” up from this time last year, according to a report sent to The Baltimore Sun from the Maryland Department of Health.
In 2024, there were 27 heat-related deaths across the state, according to reports from the ...Read more
Popular Stories
- Seeking the elusive path for immigrants to legally come to US: 'People are dying in line'
- Giant pandas, tiger attacks and the ugly fight to control the San Francisco Zoo
- Former Moscow police chief reflects on Kohberger and Idaho student murder case
- Serious liver disease is up among heavy drinkers, even without more drinking
- Baby boomers now live next to 18-year-olds at colleges across US