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  • Wimbledon Adding Video Review System for Players to Challenge Umpire Calls

    Wimbledon Adding Video Review System for Players to Challenge Umpire Calls

    The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club announced Saturday that Wimbledon will debut new video review technology during this year’s tournament, giving players the ability to contest certain calls made by chair umpires.

    The innovation marks a significant change for the prestigious Grand Slam event, though players won’t be permitted to dispute decisions from the electronic line calling system that debuted at Wimbledon in the previous year. Instead, the video technology will focus on other judgment calls, such as determining if a ball has bounced multiple times or made contact with a player’s equipment or body.

    According to the tournament organizers’ official statement, “Players will be allowed to review specific judgement calls made by the chair umpire (such as, for example, ‘not-up’, ‘foul shot’, ‘touch’) either on a point-ending call, when a player immediately stops play, or immediately after the completion of a point (in the case of hindrance).”

    The club also confirmed that “Players will not be limited in the number of reviews they can request.”

    Six show courts will feature the new video review capability, with Centre Court and Court One among those equipped with the technology.

    The AELTC explained that “The technology will be available on Centre Court and Court One throughout the championships and on the other show courts until the conclusion of all singles matches on those courts.”

    Additionally, tournament officials will enhance the electronic line calling system with visual displays, as scoreboards across all courts will now show “out” and “fault” decisions.

    The 2025 Wimbledon Championships are scheduled to commence on June 29.

  • Two Suspects Charged After Trying to Breach UK Nuclear Submarine Base

    Two Suspects Charged After Trying to Breach UK Nuclear Submarine Base

    LONDON – Two foreign nationals are facing criminal charges following their alleged attempt to breach security at Britain’s primary nuclear submarine facility, according to Scottish authorities.

    A 34-year-old Iranian citizen and a 31-year-old Romanian national were taken into custody Thursday after trying to gain unauthorized access to the highly secure naval installation, Police Scotland announced Saturday.

    British news outlets have identified the pair as suspected intelligence operatives working for Iran.

    The incident occurs during heightened tensions, coming three weeks after the start of military operations involving the United States and Israel against Iran. Though Britain has not directly participated in strikes against Iranian territory, British military forces have intercepted Iranian missiles and unmanned aircraft in Gulf waters.

    The targeted facility, HM Naval Base Clyde, sits along Scotland’s western coastline and serves as a cornerstone of British national defense. The installation houses the nation’s fleet of nuclear-powered submarines equipped with atomic weapons, along with conventional attack submarines.

    Both defendants are scheduled to make their initial court appearance at Dumbarton Sheriff Court on March 23, according to Police Scotland officials.

  • Iran Conflict Enters Fourth Week as Trump Faces Growing Challenges

    Iran Conflict Enters Fourth Week as Trump Faces Growing Challenges

    WASHINGTON, March 21 – As military operations against Iran enter their fourth week, President Donald Trump faces mounting challenges that appear to be spiraling beyond his control. Energy costs worldwide are climbing sharply, America finds itself without key allies, and additional military personnel are being readied for deployment despite Trump’s earlier assurance that the conflict would be merely a “short excursion.”

    Taking a defensive stance, Trump criticized NATO partners as “cowards” for declining to assist in securing the Strait of Hormuz and maintained that operations were proceeding as planned. However, his Friday statement claiming the conflict “was Militarily WON” contradicted ongoing realities of Iranian resistance, including disrupted Gulf energy shipments and continued missile attacks throughout the region.

    The president, who campaigned on avoiding “stupid” military interventions abroad, now seems unable to dictate either the results or the narrative of a conflict he helped launch. The absence of a defined withdrawal plan poses risks to both his presidential record and his party’s electoral chances as Republicans work to maintain slim Congressional control in upcoming November midterm races.

    “Trump has built himself a box called the Iran war, and he can’t figure out how to get out of it,” said Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East negotiator for Republican and Democratic administrations. “That’s his biggest source of frustration.”

    A White House official disputed this assessment, pointing to the elimination of numerous Iranian leadership figures through targeted operations, the destruction of most of Iran’s naval fleet, and significant damage to its missile capabilities.

    “This has been an undisputed military success,” the official said.

    CONSTRAINTS ON PRESIDENTIAL AUTHORITY

    The boundaries of Trump’s influence – in diplomatic, military and political spheres – became starkly apparent during the past week.

    According to another White House official who requested anonymity to discuss internal matters, the president was surprised by NATO allies and other international partners’ refusal to contribute naval forces for Strait of Hormuz security operations.

    To avoid appearing diplomatically isolated, some White House advisers have recommended Trump quickly identify an “off-ramp” and establish boundaries for the military campaign’s scope, according to someone familiar with these conversations. However, it remains uncertain whether this counsel will influence Trump’s decisions.

    Some experts believe allies’ reluctance stems not only from their hesitation about joining an uncoordinated military action, but also from resentment over Trump’s dismissive treatment of traditional American partnerships since returning to office 14 months ago.

    Tensions with Israel have also emerged, with Trump claiming no advance knowledge of Israel’s attack on Iran’s South Pars gas facility, while Israeli officials maintain the strike was coordinated with American forces.

    Trump now stands at a critical juncture in Operation Epic Fury with no clear indication of his next moves, according to analysts.

    He could escalate American military action, potentially capturing Iran’s Kharg Island oil facilities or positioning ground forces along Iran’s coastline to target missile installations. Such moves would risk long-term military involvement that most Americans would likely oppose.

    Alternatively, with both nations currently rejecting diplomatic talks, Trump could declare success and attempt withdrawal, potentially alienating Gulf partners who would face a weakened but still hostile Iran – one that might continue pursuing basic nuclear capabilities and maintaining control over Gulf shipping routes. Iran has consistently denied seeking nuclear weapons.

    Reuters confirmed Friday that thousands of additional Marines and sailors are being sent to the Middle East, though no final decision has been made regarding ground deployment into Iran.

    The conflict has also revealed weakening in Trump’s previously solid control over his MAGA supporters, with notable influencers voicing opposition to the military action. While his core supporters have largely remained loyal, analysts suggest Trump’s authority could diminish in coming weeks if fuel costs continue rising and troops are deployed.

    “As the economics play themselves out,” Republican strategist Dave Wilson said, “people will start to say: ‘Why am I paying high gas prices again? … Why is the Strait of Hormuz now determining whether or not I can take a vacation next month?’”

    STRATEGIC ERRORS

    Since operations began February 28, administration officials have increasingly recognized that the conflict and its ramifications should have received more thorough advance planning, according to two sources aware of White House discussions. However, the first White House official maintained that the campaign received extensive preparation and adequate resources for potential scenarios.

    Experts identify Trump’s primary error as underestimating Iran’s response to what it views as a threat to its survival.

    Tehran has fought back using surviving missiles and armed drone fleets to compensate for military disadvantages, targeting neighboring Gulf nations and largely blocking the Strait of Hormuz, which handles twenty percent of global oil transport.

    Regardless of whether Trump and his team anticipated these risks, they have struggled to address them successfully.

    “They failed to think through the contingencies around ways in which a conflict with Iran could go sideways, where it might not go according to the plan as they laid out,” said former U.S. ambassador John Bass, who served in Afghanistan and Turkey.

    As fighting continues, Trump’s frustration with his limited narrative control has become increasingly evident. Recently, he has attacked news organizations, making unsubstantiated “treason” accusations against reporting he considers harmful to military efforts.

    “He’s finding it difficult to drive the news cycle, as he’s accustomed to, because he still can’t explain why he’s taken this country to war and what comes next,” said Brett Bruen, a former foreign policy adviser in the Obama administration who now heads the Situation Room strategic consultancy in Washington. “He seems to have lost his mojo on messaging.”

  • Deadly Factory Fire in South Korea Claims 14 Lives, Injures Dozens More

    Deadly Factory Fire in South Korea Claims 14 Lives, Injures Dozens More

    DAEJEON, South Korea — Emergency responders in South Korea pulled 14 bodies from the burned remains of an automotive parts manufacturing facility on Saturday, following a devastating blaze that also sent 59 people to area hospitals.

    According to local fire department officials, 25 individuals sustained severe injuries in the incident, though authorities have not yet determined if any victims are fighting for their lives. Emergency teams numbering more than 500, including firefighters, law enforcement, and paramedics, were called in to battle the flames and search for survivors after the fire erupted on Friday afternoon.

    Dramatic footage and images captured at the scene revealed massive plumes of dark smoke rising from the industrial complex, with some employees leaping from windows of the Anjun Industrial building to escape the inferno.

    Nam Deuk-woo, the fire department chief for the city’s Daedeok district, explained that the flames completely gutted the factory structure, which rescue teams could not initially access due to concerns about structural collapse. Recovery efforts for missing workers commenced late Friday evening after crews used robotic firefighting equipment to cool the building and engineers completed safety assessments.

    “Nine of the 14 dead were discovered in what is believed to have been a gym on the third floor, while three were found near a water tank on the second floor,” Nam stated. Officials confirmed that all previously unaccounted-for individuals have now been located.

    South Korean President Lee Jae Myung traveled to the disaster site on Saturday afternoon, where he met with families of those killed and emphasized the importance of safety protocols to prevent the weakened structure from collapsing during ongoing search efforts.

    The emergency call came in at approximately 1:18 p.m. on Friday. While Nam indicated the origin of the fire remains under investigation, the flames appeared to have moved quickly through the building, with eyewitnesses describing hearing an explosion. Emergency crews concentrated on stopping the fire from reaching neighboring buildings and securing dangerous chemical materials. Nam reported that workers removed more than 100 kilograms (220 pounds) of highly volatile chemicals from the facility.

    Injuries occurred when people jumped from the structure to flee the fire, while others were harmed by smoke inhalation, according to officials. By Saturday morning, 28 individuals remained in hospital care, with four requiring surgical procedures for fractured bones and other trauma.

    The response effort involved approximately 120 emergency vehicles and specialized equipment, including aircraft, an unmanned water cannon truck, and two robotic firefighting units designed for dangerous areas, alongside hundreds of emergency personnel.

  • New Mexico Probes Jeffrey Epstein’s Political Ties After Ranch Search

    New Mexico Probes Jeffrey Epstein’s Political Ties After Ranch Search

    STANLEY, New Mexico – Law enforcement officials have conducted their first search of Jeffrey Epstein’s New Mexico ranch, seeking evidence of potential abuse at the Old West-style property while investigators examine the convicted sex offender’s connections to influential state politicians who continued accepting his campaign contributions after his criminal conviction.

    A groundbreaking New Mexico state “truth commission” – the nation’s first of its kind – is investigating Epstein’s relationships with Democratic Party leaders, including two former governors and a state attorney general, along with institutional failures that may have enabled abuse at the ranch.

    According to a 2020 letter from New Mexico’s Attorney General’s office and recently released Department of Justice documents, Zorro Ranch served as a central location in Epstein’s alleged child sex trafficking network that operated between the U.S. Virgin Islands, New York and Florida. Epstein typically spent approximately two months annually at the property.

    Despite spending relatively modest amounts, Epstein established himself as a significant funding source in Democratic-controlled New Mexico. Campaign finance records show he contributed slightly more than $160,000 across five races from 2002 to 2014, frequently becoming the largest outside donor to campaigns, including after his 2008 sex offender conviction.

    Reuters found no evidence that Epstein received anything in exchange for his political donations.

    While Epstein’s connections to late former Governor Bill Richardson have been widely documented, the state’s former top law enforcement official, Gary King, also maintained contact with Epstein following his felony sex crime conviction, including a 2010 meeting. Unlike most U.S. politicians who severed ties with Epstein after his Florida conviction, some New Mexico officials continued their relationships.

    “Once you know what’s happened, to continue to take campaign contributions is reprehensible,” stated U.S. Congresswoman Teresa Leger Fernandez during a March 8 Zorro Ranch protest, commenting on the relationships between Epstein and Richardson and King.

    King’s campaign eventually returned a donation in 2014.

    Leger Fernandez, who represents the high plains region 30 miles south of Santa Fe, is among those questioning why federal, state and local law enforcement never investigated sexual abuse complaints at the ranch and why federal authorities instructed state investigators to abandon a child trafficking investigation in 2019, yet never searched or seized the ranch before its 2023 sale.

    King, now 71, stated he never visited Epstein’s ranch and never solicited campaign donations from the late financier after his Florida conviction.

    “I personally told Mr. Epstein that the campaign would NOT accept contributions from him as a result of his admitted criminal activities,” King, who served as New Mexico’s attorney general from 2007 to 2015, said in a statement responding to Reuters questions about campaign solicitation letters sent to Epstein found in DOJ files. King said he was unaware the letters were sent to Epstein and they appeared to be standard mailings to previous donors.

    In 1993, Epstein purchased 7,500 acres from three-time New Mexico Governor Bruce King and other members of his influential political family, according to county records. Gary King, Bruce King’s son, was among the parties involved in the sale. The younger King told Reuters that Epstein paid approximately $3.75 million for the land – fair market value at the time based on New Mexico State University research. Bruce King passed away in 2009.

    Epstein developed what became locally known as “The Victoria’s Secret Ranch” due to rumors about lingerie models visiting the property, according to three local residents who spoke to Reuters.

    As a skilled networker, Epstein brought scientists, politicians, billionaires and Hollywood celebrities to the ranch, where some made comments about “the girls,” according to emails in the Epstein files.

    In 2006, Epstein contributed $15,000 to Gary King’s campaign. King told Reuters he didn’t return that money because he wasn’t aware of any wrongdoing reports against Epstein in 2006.

    King recalled meeting Epstein only once, in 2010 at Santa Fe’s Jinja restaurant where they drank tea and Epstein offered condolences following King’s father’s death. A 2009 email to Epstein indicated all Zorro Ranch staff would attend Bruce King’s funeral service. King, who has chemistry training, said their meeting included brief discussion of Epstein’s interactions with the Santa Fe Institute, an influential scientific foundation.

    When King ran for governor in 2014, Epstein donated $35,600 to the campaign, representing the largest outside contribution, records indicate. King returned the 2014 funds to Epstein companies three days after press reports on September 9 of that year, records show. Around the same time, Epstein arranged a September 8 jet charter for King to attend a Washington campaign breakfast, according to emails in the DOJ’s Epstein files. King’s campaign paid for the flight, state records confirm.

    “If I had known of Mr. Epstein’s involvement at the time, I would have asked my staff to use another charter company to conduct the flight,” said King, who is retired from politics and now serves as president of the New Mexico Children’s Foundation charity.

    As attorney general, King said he operated a comprehensive outreach program to combat crimes against children and human trafficking, and received no information about alleged crimes by Epstein. The New Mexico Department of Justice declined to comment.

    Documents in the Epstein files reveal FBI agents visited the New Mexico ranch in February 2007, when King led New Mexico law enforcement, and questioned manager Brice Gordon about “masseuses” Epstein flew in or hired locally. Reuters was unable to contact Gordon. King said the U.S. Justice Department never informed his office of any investigation involving Epstein or his associates.

    Reuters found no evidence King had knowledge of a federal probe into Epstein at that time.

    Santa Fe Police Deputy Chief Ben Valdez stated in a statement his department had no record of any report concerning Epstein. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office, which has jurisdiction over the ranch, said it was reviewing any allegations it may have received regarding Epstein. New Mexico State Police did not respond to a request for comment.

    New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez reopened the state’s Epstein investigation in February.

    The U.S. Department of Justice and FBI declined to comment.

  • Trump Administration Delivers Written Disarmament Plan to Hamas

    Trump Administration Delivers Written Disarmament Plan to Hamas

    President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace has delivered a formal written document to Hamas detailing how the Palestinian militant organization could surrender its arsenal, according to two sources familiar with the negotiations. This marks a significant development as the administration continues pursuing its Gaza peace initiative.

    The document was delivered to Hamas representatives during negotiations held in Cairo within the past week, according to one source. The discussions included participation from Nickolay Mladenov, who serves as Trump’s Board of Peace representative for Gaza, and Aryeh Lightstone, an assistant to Trump’s special Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff.

    The Gaza peace framework, which both Israel and Hamas accepted in October, calls for Israeli military forces to pull back from the territory while reconstruction efforts begin, contingent upon Hamas relinquishing its weapons.

    Speaking on Thursday, Mladenov indicated that substantial progress was being made to provide assistance to the war-devastated region, with mediators having established a framework that could facilitate rebuilding efforts across the heavily damaged territory.

    “It is now on the table. It requires one clear choice: full decommissioning by Hamas and every armed group, with no exceptions and no carve-outs. In this season of hope, may those responsible make the right choice for the Palestinian people,” Mladenov wrote on social media platform X during the Muslim celebration of Eid al-Fitr.

    Hamas representatives could not be reached for immediate response on Saturday, during the second day of the religious holiday. The disarmament discussions had been suspended when the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran commenced on February 28.

    According to U.S. officials, the Iran-supported Hamas organization might receive amnesty as part of any agreement requiring them to surrender both heavy military equipment and smaller weapons including firearms.

    Individuals with knowledge of Hamas’s position indicate the organization would probably decline to surrender their firearms due to concerns about attacks from competing armed groups within Gaza, some of which receive Israeli support. Hamas and rival factions have conducted lethal operations against each other following the October ceasefire agreement.

    One source noted that much depends on what terms Israel finds acceptable, as Israeli leadership insists on Hamas’s total disarmament.

    Several high-ranking Hamas officials have categorically dismissed any disarmament requirements in recent months.

    Israel has given no indication of withdrawing its military personnel, who currently control approximately half of Gaza’s territory, while Hamas maintains authority over the remaining portion of the territory and its two million residents, most of whom have been displaced by two years of intense warfare.

    The source indicated that amnesty provisions and targeted Gaza investment programs were being presented as incentives for Hamas, though uncertainty remains about whether the Board of Peace would have sufficient funding available.

    Trump secured approximately $7 billion in commitments this February from various nations, including Gulf states, before those same countries faced Iranian attacks as Middle East tensions escalated.

    According to the source, only a minimal portion of those promised funds have actually been delivered, though specific amounts were not disclosed.

  • Iraqi Intelligence Officer Dies in Baghdad Drone Attack

    Iraqi Intelligence Officer Dies in Baghdad Drone Attack

    BAGHDAD – A military officer died Saturday following a drone attack carried out by what Iraqi authorities described as “outlaw groups” targeting the area around Baghdad’s National Intelligence Service headquarters.

    The National Intelligence Service confirmed the casualty in an official statement released following the March 21st incident. The attack represents the latest security challenge facing Iraqi government facilities in the capital city.

  • American Military Sends Drones, Troops to Nigeria for Anti-Terror Operations

    American Military Sends Drones, Troops to Nigeria for Anti-Terror Operations

    American military forces have established operations in Nigeria, sending several MQ-9 surveillance drones and 200 service members to support the country’s fight against Islamic extremist organizations, according to officials from both nations who spoke with Reuters.

    The American personnel are not participating in frontline combat operations with Nigerian forces, and the unmanned aircraft are being used solely for intelligence collection rather than conducting strikes, officials confirmed.

    This deployment marks America’s renewed engagement in combating Islamic State and al-Qaeda affiliated insurgencies spreading throughout West Africa, following U.S. air operations against militants in Nigeria’s northwest region in late 2025.

    The mission comes after the closure of America’s $100 million drone facility in neighboring Niger, which housed approximately 1,000 troops monitoring extremist activity across the Sahel region. That base was shuttered in 2024 when Niger’s military government demanded the departure of U.S. forces, reflecting a broader regional shift away from Western military partnerships.

    Recent violence underscores the ongoing security challenges, including a suicide bombing attack on a northeastern Nigerian garrison town this week that demonstrated how the 17-year insurgency continues to threaten urban areas.

    Extremist groups have also intensified operations in Nigeria’s northwest, along the borders with Benin and Niger, where existing criminal activity risks evolving into another stronghold for Islamic militants.

    A U.S. defense official explained that Nigeria requested the drone deployment for intelligence gathering purposes. “We see this as a shared security threat,” the official stated.

    Major General Samaila Uba, who serves as director of defense information at Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters, verified that American assets are operating from Bauchi airfield in the country’s northeast.

    “This support builds on the newly established U.S.-Nigeria intelligence fusion cell, which continues to deliver actionable intelligence to our field commanders,” Uba explained to Reuters. “Our U.S. partners remain in a strictly non-combat role, enabling operations led by Nigerian authorities.”

    Uba indicated that both countries will jointly determine how long the American deployment will continue.

    The MQ-9 aircraft, also called Reaper drones, can remain airborne at high altitudes for over 27 hours and serve dual purposes for both surveillance and strike missions.

    While neither Uba nor the American official discussed specific instances where U.S. intelligence resulted in Nigerian operations against militants, Uba noted that American forces are assisting Nigeria to “identify, track and respond to terrorist threats.”

    Reuters previously reported that aircraft operating from Ghana conducted intelligence missions over Nigeria for the U.S. military late last year.

    The United States, which has maintained a longstanding military partnership with Nigeria through training programs and weapons sales, conducted air operations in the northwest on Christmas Day, stating the action was necessary to prevent attacks on Christians in the region.

    However, Nigerian government officials and conflict analysts have disputed claims of systematic anti-Christian violence, arguing such characterizations oversimplify a multifaceted crisis.

    The perpetrators of the March 16 garrison town attack remain unidentified and under investigation, according to Uba.

    He noted that both Boko Haram militants and ISWAP, an Islamic State affiliate, continue posing significant threats while evolving their operational methods.

    “We continue to assess that these organisations will seek opportunistic targets and may attempt to demonstrate relevance through high-visibility attacks,” Uba said.

  • Middle East Conflict Creates Worst Global Energy Crisis in History

    Middle East Conflict Creates Worst Global Energy Crisis in History

    Military conflict in the Middle East has created what experts are calling the most severe global energy crisis ever recorded, forcing nations worldwide to implement drastic conservation measures while consumers face dramatically higher fuel costs.

    Since U.S. and Israeli military operations against Iran commenced on February 28, the strategic Strait of Hormuz waterway has been effectively blocked, halting the flow of approximately 20% of global oil and natural gas shipments through the Iranian coastal passage.

    Continued military exchanges between Iranian and Israeli forces have also struck critical energy facilities throughout the region, inflicting damage to natural gas fields, petroleum refineries, and shipping terminals that energy sector experts estimate will require years to fully restore.

    The International Energy Agency has declared this disruption surpasses even the 1973 Arab oil embargo in severity, which previously held the record for causing the most widespread economic harm from fuel shortages.

    “You’re not going to conserve your way around this. What it’s going to translate to is price rises high enough that people stop consuming,” explained Dan Pickering, chief investment officer for Pickering Energy Partners.

    The crisis has already eliminated approximately 400 million barrels from global markets – equivalent to four days of worldwide supply – driving price increases of roughly 50%.

    Energy products derived from oil and gas serve essential functions across modern society, powering transportation systems, heating buildings, operating industrial facilities, and manufacturing everything from plastic goods to agricultural fertilizers.

    “The breadth of what is at risk here in fuels, chemicals, LNG and fertilizer inputs is what makes this moment qualitatively different from previous episodes of Gulf tension,” noted Aditya Saraswat, senior vice president at consultancy Rystad Energy.

    Rising energy costs typically drive broader inflation, creating financial strain for both consumers and businesses. This economic pressure has become a significant political challenge for U.S. President Donald Trump as he works to maintain public support for the military campaign.

    Trump has criticized NATO member nations for insufficient backing of the U.S.-Israeli military action against Iran, publicly labeling the traditional American allies “cowards.”

    International benchmark crude oil prices have climbed more than 50% to exceed $110 per barrel since hostilities began. Middle Eastern oil varieties, which Asian economies rely on heavily, have reached record highs near $164 per barrel.

    These increases have resulted in steep transportation fuel price hikes worldwide, prompting governments to take emergency steps to preserve available supplies.

    Thailand has directed government employees to reduce energy use by canceling international travel and taking stairs rather than elevators, while Bangladesh has shuttered its universities.

    Sri Lanka has implemented fuel rationing systems, China has prohibited refined fuel exports, and the United Kingdom’s emergency energy plan includes lowered speed limits to reduce fuel consumption.

    The International Energy Agency released additional demand reduction recommendations on Friday, including remote work arrangements and limiting air travel, which has already faced severe disruptions after the conflict forced major Middle Eastern aviation hubs to close.

    Earlier this month, the IEA authorized the release of a record 400 million barrels from emergency oil reserves. However, analysts consider this measure insufficient since 400 million barrels would only offset approximately 20 days of war-related supply losses.

    JP Morgan analyst Natasha Kaneva emphasized that demand reduction represents the only viable solution when supply shortages occur.

    “The market is facing an acute shortage of products (…) that cannot be consumed simply because they are not available,” she stated.

    Prices continue climbing for all remaining available products.

    European jet fuel prices have reached record levels around $220 per barrel – costs that airlines will likely pass directly to passengers through higher ticket prices. In the United States, which imports minimal Middle Eastern oil, retail gasoline prices have increased more than one dollar per gallon since February 28 to approximately $4 per gallon.

    Natural gas prices across Europe and Asia are climbing after recent Israeli-Iranian strikes targeted Gulf region gas facilities. Consumer electricity costs could also rise substantially.

    Israeli forces attacked Iran’s South Pars gas field on Wednesday, while Iranian forces struck Qatar’s massive Ras Laffan LNG complex the following day. QatarEnergy CEO Saad al-Kaabi informed Reuters that Iranian attacks will eliminate 12.8 million tons annually of LNG production – roughly 3% of global supply – for three to five years.

    The situation poses critical risks since oil and gas products are essential for manufacturing pharmaceuticals, plastics, and fertilizers, according to Menelaos Ydreos, secretary general of the International Gas Union representing worldwide gas producers.

    “We, again, call for an immediate stop to the targeting of energy facilities and for the resumption of cargo traffic through the Strait of Hormuz as fertilisers, petrochemicals for the pharmaceutical industry, oil, grain, and gas are all critical to our existence,” he stated.

    The military conflict also threatens global food security by severely disrupting fertilizer markets, since approximately one-third of international fertilizer trade normally passes through the Strait of Hormuz and is currently blocked.

    Nitrogen-based fertilizer products like urea, considered the most crucial fertilizer type, have seen price increases of 30% to 40% since fighting began. American farmers are already reporting empty store shelves as spring planting season approaches.

    Fertilizer manufacturing facilities in India, Bangladesh and Malaysia are suspending orders, reducing production, or completely shutting down operations due to lack of raw materials.

    If the conflict continues for just a few more weeks, global food supplies will face significant disruption, warned Maximo Torero, chief economist with the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization.

    “This will affect planting. … There will be a lower supply of commodities in the world – of staple cereals, of feed, and therefore of dairy and meat,” he explained.

    Approximately half of the world’s food production depends on fertilizers, which in some nations account for up to half the cost of grain production.

  • Your Delmarva Forecast: Saturday, March 21, 2026

    Your Delmarva Forecast: Saturday, March 21, 2026

    Good morning, Delmarva! We’re kicking off this Saturday with beautiful spring weather across the peninsula. Expect mostly sunny skies today with temperatures climbing to a comfortable 62 degrees. A gentle northwest breeze at 5 to 10 mph will keep things feeling fresh and pleasant – perfect weather for any outdoor plans you might have! Tonight, we’ll see partly cloudy skies as temperatures dip down to around 43 degrees. It’ll be a nice evening for a light jacket if you’re heading out. Looking ahead to Sunday, we’re in for a warmer day with partly sunny skies and highs reaching 74 degrees – now that’s more like spring! However, keep an eye on the sky Sunday evening as showers and thunderstorms become likely Sunday night, with lows around 50 degrees. So enjoy this gorgeous Saturday, but you might want to get those outdoor activities wrapped up by Sunday evening before the weather turns more active. Have a wonderful weekend, Delmarva!
  • Middle East Conflict Continues Into Fourth Week as Trump Weighs Military Pullback

    Middle East Conflict Continues Into Fourth Week as Trump Weighs Military Pullback

    The Middle Eastern conflict has now stretched into its fourth week, with President Trump indicating the United States may begin scaling back its military involvement in the region.

    According to recent statements, the administration is exploring options to “wind down” its military operations while simultaneously addressing the ongoing energy crisis through potential policy changes regarding Iranian oil sanctions.

    The President has suggested that lifting restrictions on Iranian oil currently stranded at sea could help alleviate energy supply concerns that have emerged during the prolonged conflict.

    The conflict shows no signs of immediate resolution as it continues to impact both regional stability and global energy markets.

  • Thick Fog Blankets Region This Morning, Visibility Severely Limited

    Thick Fog Blankets Region This Morning, Visibility Severely Limited

    Weather forecasters from the National Weather Service office in Mount Holly, New Jersey have issued a dense fog advisory affecting the region beginning at 5:29 AM on Thursday, March 21st and continuing until 8:00 AM the same morning.

    The advisory warns of thick fog conditions that will significantly reduce visibility for morning commuters and anyone traveling during the early hours. The fog is expected to create hazardous driving conditions as visibility drops to dangerous levels.

    Motorists are urged to exercise extreme caution when driving during the advisory period, using low beam headlights and allowing extra time to reach their destinations safely. The dense fog conditions are forecast to gradually improve and lift by mid-morning as temperatures rise.

  • Two Killed in Russian Drone Strike as Ukraine Pushes for Peace Talks

    Two Killed in Russian Drone Strike as Ukraine Pushes for Peace Talks

    KYIV, Ukraine — Two civilians lost their lives when a Russian drone struck a residential home in Zaporizhzhia on Saturday morning, according to Ukrainian officials, as diplomatic efforts to revive peace negotiations continue.

    Regional administrator Ivan Fedorov confirmed that both a man and woman died in the attack, while two children sustained injuries when the drone targeted the private residence.

    The deadly assault occurred as Ukrainian and U.S. representatives prepared for discussions scheduled to take place in Miami later Saturday, according to Ukrainian state media reports.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced Thursday evening that he had dispatched an official delegation to America with the goal of restarting the currently suspended U.S.-facilitated peace negotiations aimed at ending Russia’s military invasion.

    The three-way discussions that include Russia have been stalled recently as global focus has shifted to the Iran conflict, despite failing to achieve significant progress on critical issues.

    White House officials have not verified any scheduled meetings with the Ukrainian representatives.

    Zelenskyy outlined that the delegation’s primary objectives in the United States include getting the trilateral negotiations back on track and securing Washington’s continued authorization for NATO allies to buy American military equipment for transfer to Ukraine.

    A top Kremlin representative suggested Friday that renewed U.S.-mediated discussions between Moscow and Kyiv could happen in the near future.

    “The pause is temporary, we hope it’s temporary regarding the continuation of the trilateral format,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated.

    Over the past year, Western European leaders have consistently criticized Russian President Vladimir Putin for stalling negotiations while attempting to leverage his larger military force to gain battlefield advantages and seize additional Ukrainian territory. Russian troops currently occupy approximately 20% of Ukraine.

    The recent Middle East crisis that started February 28 with Israeli and American military actions against Iran has shifted global focus away from Ukraine’s situation.

    Meanwhile, Russia benefits from a temporary U.S. exemption on petroleum sanctions, providing financial gains, while Ukraine faces severe budget shortfalls and continues awaiting a promised 90-billion-euro ($103 billion) European Union loan package.

  • Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Restructured Hezbollah After 2024 Defeats

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Restructured Hezbollah After 2024 Defeats

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards completely restructured Hezbollah’s military operations following the Lebanese group’s devastating losses to Israeli forces in 2024, according to sources with knowledge of the Iranian activities.

    The unprecedented reorganization by the IRGC came after Israel decimated Hezbollah’s leadership structure, including the assassination of longtime leader Hassan Nasrallah and numerous senior commanders throughout 2024.

    Two sources familiar with the Iranian operations revealed that the Revolutionary Guards deployed officers to fill command gaps and completely overhaul the Shi’ite organization that Iran originally established in 1982.

    This marked the first comprehensive restructuring in Hezbollah’s history, demonstrating Iran’s direct intervention following the severe damage inflicted during the previous conflict.

    The Iranian investment appears to have succeeded in restoring Hezbollah’s capabilities in time for the current Middle East conflict, where the group has joined the fighting alongside Tehran after attacks by the United States and Israel.

    According to the sources, IRGC personnel arrived in Lebanon to retrain fighters and supervise weapons replenishment efforts. The Iranian officers also redesigned command systems that Israeli intelligence had successfully penetrated, which had enabled the targeted killings of multiple Hezbollah leaders.

    An Israeli military representative acknowledged on March 12 that despite three years of Israeli operations against it, Hezbollah continues to pose a significant threat.

    Since joining the regional conflict on March 2, Hezbollah has launched hundreds of rockets toward Israel, triggering Israeli counterattacks that have resulted in over 1,000 Lebanese casualties. Ground fighting continues as Hezbollah militants engage Israeli forces occupying southern Lebanese territory.

    However, questions remain about Hezbollah’s performance capabilities, as its strength has not yet returned to previous peak levels, particularly if facing a comprehensive Israeli ground invasion.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated in January that Hezbollah was actively working to rearm and reconstruct its infrastructure with Iranian assistance.

    The IRGC officers assigned to assist Hezbollah’s recovery arrived shortly after the November 2024 ceasefire took effect, continuing their work despite ongoing Israeli airstrikes. One source indicated approximately 100 officers participated in the deployment.

    The restructuring eliminated traditional hierarchical command in favor of a decentralized network composed of small, independent units with limited knowledge of other operations, enhancing security and operational secrecy.

    Iranian officers also developed coordinated missile attack strategies targeting Israel that would be executed simultaneously from both Iran and Lebanon – a plan first implemented on March 11.

    A senior Lebanese security official confirmed that Iranian commanders assisted Hezbollah in rehabilitating and reorganizing its military personnel. The official believes the Iranians are helping manage the pace of current hostilities rather than selecting specific targets.

    Another informed source said the IRGC deployed officers to Lebanon in 2024 to conduct a comprehensive post-conflict assessment of Hezbollah and assumed direct oversight of its military operations.

    Two additional sources confirmed that the IRGC embedded specialized advisers with Hezbollah throughout the previous year to guide military decision-making.

    Andreas Krieg, a lecturer in security studies at King’s College London, explained that the IRGC “has basically reorganized Hezbollah as a far more flat system,” contrasting this with the political hierarchy that had developed around Nasrallah before his death.

    “That decentralized model that they’ve now implemented is also a bit more like what Hezbollah looked like in the 1980s – very small cells,” said Krieg, who has studied the organization for 15 years. He characterized this as a “mosaic defence” strategy also employed by the IRGC within Iran.

    The Iranian restructuring efforts proceeded simultaneously with attempts by Lebanon’s government and its U.S.-supported military to advance disarmament of the group, highlighting significant obstacles to achieving that goal.

    Lebanon estimates approximately 100 to 150 Iranian nationals in the country maintain government connections extending beyond standard diplomatic roles, including IRGC affiliations, according to a Lebanese official.

    The official said the government requested these individuals leave Lebanon in early March.

    The sources familiar with IRGC activities confirmed that Guards officers were among more than 150 Iranians who departed Beirut on a March 7 flight to Russia.

    IRGC personnel were among roughly 500 people killed in Israeli attacks on Lebanon during the 15 months between the 2024 ceasefire and the outbreak of renewed fighting. Approximately twelve additional IRGC members have died in Israeli strikes since the current war began, including casualties from a March 8 attack on a Beirut hotel.

    The Revolutionary Guards have maintained close involvement with Hezbollah since establishing the group in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa Valley to spread Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution and combat Israeli forces that invaded Lebanon in 1982.

    Qassem Soleimani, the senior IRGC commander killed in a 2020 U.S. drone strike, had collaborated with Nasrallah during Hezbollah’s 2006 conflict with Israel. When Israeli airstrikes killed Nasrallah in a bunker in Beirut’s southern suburbs, an Iranian general died alongside him.

  • Colorado Avalanche Become First NHL Team to Secure Playoff Spot This Season

    Colorado Avalanche Become First NHL Team to Secure Playoff Spot This Season

    Martin Necas contributed one goal and two assists as Colorado dominated the Chicago Blackhawks 4-1 on Friday night, making the Avalanche the first NHL franchise to secure a playoff position this season.

    The Avalanche received additional scoring from Brock Nelson, Nazem Kadri, and Valeri Nichushkin. Nathan MacKinnon contributed three assists while Nichushkin recorded two points, and goaltender Mackenzie Blackwood turned away 19 shots as Colorado snapped a three-game losing streak (0-2-1).

    Chicago’s only goal came from defenseman Wyatt Kaiser, ending the Blackhawks’ solid recent play after going 3-1-1 in their last five contests. Goalie Arvid Soderblom faced heavy pressure, making 45 saves in the loss.

    Colorado defenseman Brent Burns reached a milestone, appearing in his 1,565th NHL game to surpass Nicklas Lidstrom for 14th place in all-time games played.

    Hurricanes 4, Maple Leafs 3 (OT)

    Alexander Nikishin found the net just 41 seconds into the extra period, giving visiting Carolina a victory over Toronto.

    Jordan Staal, Eric Robinson, and K’Andre Miller also found the scoresheet for the Hurricanes, who extended their winning streak to two games. Seth Jarvis and Sebastian Aho each recorded two assists, while Brandon Bussi made 23 saves.

    Toronto received goals from Dakota Joshua, John Tavares, and William Nylander but suffered their second consecutive defeat. Matias Maccelli provided two assists, and Joseph Woll stopped 32 shots for the Maple Leafs.

    Capitals 2, Devils 1

    Logan Thompson delivered 30 saves as Washington extended its strong recent performance with a tight victory over visiting New Jersey.

    Ryan Leonard and Aliaksei Protas provided the offense for the Capitals, who improved to 3-0-1 over their last four outings. Jesper Bratt tallied for New Jersey while Jake Allen made 26 saves for the Devils, whose three-game victory streak came to an end.

    Allen delivered several crucial saves during the middle period to keep his team within striking distance. Washington seemed to seal the victory on Protas’ empty-net score with 1:43 remaining, but Bratt responded a minute later to give New Jersey a final opportunity that ultimately fell short.

    Ducks 4, Utah 1

    Alex Killorn recorded one goal and two assists as Anaheim rallied from behind to defeat Utah in Salt Lake City.

    Ryan Poehling added a goal and assist while Lukas Dostal stopped 29 shots for the Ducks, who have captured two of their last three games and five of nine (5-3-1). Anaheim also claimed two victories in three meetings with Utah this season.

    Dylan Guenther provided the only scoring for Utah, which had previously won two consecutive games. Vitek Vanecek made 20 saves in the defeat.

    Flames 4, Panthers 1

    Joel Farabee and Victor Olofsson scored during the second period as host Calgary used that momentum to defeat Florida.

    Matt Coronato and Morgan Frost added goals for the Flames, who have now won back-to-back games. Dustin Wolf stopped 24 shots while Blake Coleman contributed two assists.

    A.J. Greer scored for Florida, which finished 1-3-0 on their Western road swing. Daniil Tarasov made 32 saves for the Panthers.

  • Farm Groups Push for Relief in Defense Spending Package

    Farm Groups Push for Relief in Defense Spending Package

    Listen to the Morning Delmarva Farm Report Update — March 21, 2026

    DELMARVA — Agricultural groups escalated pressure on Washington this week, asking the Trump administration to include farm relief in a defense spending package for military operations involving Iran. The request comes as producers nationwide face mounting economic pressures, with operating costs continuing to squeeze margins.

    Meanwhile, USDA officials are reminding farmers to document any weather-related damage from recent storms. Sandy Chalmers, Wisconsin’s Farm Service Agency Director, says producer reports are essential for disaster declaration requests, even as farmers focus on immediate recovery work.

    Markets

    It was a losing week across the board. Soybeans led Friday’s decline on profit-taking and technical selling. May soybeans closed at $11.61.25, down 7.25 cents. May corn settled at $4.65.5, falling 4.25 cents. May Chicago wheat finished at $5.48.75, losing 3.5 cents.

    Cattle markets bucked the trend with April live cattle climbing 77 cents to $234.05 per hundredweight.

    Forecast

    Expect a nice Saturday with sunny skies and highs reaching 61°F. Northwest winds 5-10 mph. Sunday turns partly sunny and warmer with highs near 69°F before showers and thunderstorms become likely Sunday night.

    Rain showers likely Monday with highs only reaching 54°F and northeast winds 10-15 mph. Clearing returns Tuesday with sunny skies and highs near 48°F.

    This article is based on the Delmarva Farm Report Update Morning Edition, March 21, 2026. Hosted by Tom Bradley.

  • Romanian Fashion Show Features Models with Down Syndrome on World Down Syndrome Day

    Romanian Fashion Show Features Models with Down Syndrome on World Down Syndrome Day

    BUCHAREST, Romania — A special runway show in Romania’s capital city featured numerous models with Down syndrome who took to the catwalk in celebration of World Down Syndrome Day.

    The annual observance focuses on celebrating individuals with Down syndrome while advocating for equal rights and opportunities, as well as increasing public understanding and awareness.

    The fashion event highlighted the talents and abilities of the participating models as they confidently walked the runway in Bucharest.

  • FSIS Seeks to Extend Data Collection on Imported Food Product Disposal

    FSIS Seeks to Extend Data Collection on Imported Food Product Disposal

    The Food Safety and Inspection Service has announced plans to extend its data collection program focused on the voluntary disposal of imported meat, poultry, and egg products.

    Following requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 and guidelines from the Office of Management and Budget, FSIS stated it will seek renewal of its existing information collection system without any modifications to current procedures.

    The federal agency’s current authorization to gather this data is set to end on July 31, 2026.

  • Naples Prepares for America’s Cup Amid Environmental Cleanup Controversy

    Naples Prepares for America’s Cup Amid Environmental Cleanup Controversy

    The polluted waterfront of Bagnoli on Naples’ western edge presents a stark contrast to the glamorous sailing competition it will host next year, as corroded industrial remnants overlook shores contaminated by generations of heavy manufacturing.

    Construction crews are currently working around the clock to prepare for the America’s Cup, with dredging operations deepening the harbor floor for racing vessels, demolition teams dismantling an aging wharf, and workers establishing what officials describe as temporary facilities for the advanced carbon-fiber sailing craft.

    Italy’s selection to host the prestigious sailing competition has ignited a heated debate about whether the event will serve as a catalyst for genuine environmental restoration of the Bagnoli coastline, or merely provide cover for concealing decades of industrial contamination.

    Local officials argue the regatta represents a crucial opportunity to accelerate the rehabilitation of one of Italy’s most environmentally damaged coastal areas, which previously accommodated a polluting steel production facility, concrete manufacturing plant, and asbestos operation.

    “I see the America’s Cup as a chance to speed up the environmental cleanup that was already planned, particularly offshore, where work wasn’t supposed to start until 2031,” said Enza Amato, the centre-left head of Naples City Council.

    “For me, the most important thing is the chance to improve the water quality sooner and make the sea usable again,” Amato added.

    However, numerous local residents, community advocates, and small business proprietors view the current construction efforts with skepticism, seeing familiar patterns of ambitious commitments made under the banner of development without assurance of lasting benefits.

    Rather than delivering the long-awaited public shoreline and recreational space promised for this Mediterranean coastal section, opponents worry the America’s Cup could cement a future dominated by exclusive marinas, concrete structures, and supposedly “temporary” facilities that become permanent fixtures.

    “The issue is not whether we host the America’s Cup or not. The issue is doing it properly,” former Naples Mayor Antonio Bassolino told Reuters. “Naples needs a large beach, because we don’t have one and here is the only place for us to create one.”

    Adding to these concerns is Naples’ track record from hosting the America’s Cup previously in 2013, when a protective barrier constructed to shield the racing yachts was supposed to be removed following the competition but remains in place today due to prohibitive removal costs, according to municipal officials.

    Opponents argue city leadership favors temporary solutions because Italian regulations allow them to bypass comprehensive environmental impact studies that can require months or years to complete.

    “Unfortunately in Naples, temporary projects have the habit of becoming permanent,” Bassolino said.

    Italy’s competitive hopes for next year center on Luna Rossa, the sailing team sponsored by Prada executive Patrizio Bertelli, as they seek to earn the right to challenge defending America’s Cup champions New Zealand.

    The more pressing concern currently involves onshore construction activities, particularly addressing a coastal waste site containing approximately one million cubic meters of industrial refuse left behind when the final factories shuttered in 1992.

    Original remediation proposals called for complete removal of the contaminated material to ensure long-term safety for future generations in Bagnoli, an area situated in a volcanically active region experiencing hundreds of seismic events annually.

    Instead, authorities have chosen to extract only a small portion of the industrial slag while covering the remainder with extensive protective membrane barriers to contain the pollution before constructing team facilities and workshops.

    “The cleanup is a sham,” said Ines Clemente, a Bagnoli bar owner who has organised a petition against the works. “It’s just covering everything up and sweeping it under a rug.”

    Despite not completely emptying the contaminated site, workers are removing surface layers of waste material and extracting thousands of tons of polluted sediment and debris from the ocean floor to establish a level foundation for the marina.

    Much of this contaminated material travels through Bagnoli via truck convoys, disrupting what was once an elegant resort community before industrial development transformed it during the mid-1900s.

    Clemente reports her establishment is now constantly covered in dust particles, while street closures and heavy vehicle traffic have deterred customers from visiting.

    “In the evening I find my bar empty,” she said. “I’m constantly cleaning the shelves and tables, but people feel uncomfortable. It’s as if they can taste the dust.”

    Earlier this month, community demonstrators confronted riot police during protests where neighborhood organizations displayed signs reading “Stop the work of shame” and “Naples is not for sale.”

    During a recent visit to Italy, Grant Dalton, chief executive of America’s Cup Partnership, praised the construction progress at Bagnoli, noting that similar projects might require years to complete in other locations. While acknowledging the community opposition, he emphasized the goal of revitalizing the deteriorated neighborhood and making it central to the competition.

    While Clemente remains hopeful her business will rebound after redevelopment concludes, fellow Bagnoli resident Paola Minieri fears she may lose her family home due to the project.

    Through a municipal improvement initiative that predates the America’s Cup agreement, her residence has been designated for demolition as part of area upgrades.

    Minieri’s family has resided in Borgo Coroglio, a collection of historic waterfront dwellings next to the planned America’s Cup harbor, for over a century. City officials have declared the neighborhood must be cleared for the “public good” but have not revealed specific plans for future development, beyond confirming new housing units will be constructed.

    Such prime beachfront property, offering panoramic views of Ischia and Procida islands, would command substantial market prices.

    “Just because we’re poor doesn’t mean we should have to leave and make way for the rich,” said Minieri, a clothes saleswoman. “We agree with the cleanup, we agree with the America’s Cup, we are not the people who say ‘no’. But this place must first and foremost be for local people.”

    Residing in Bagnoli has exacted a heavy toll on many community members.

    Minieri reported that 10 relatives in her extended family have succumbed to asbestos-related cancers that area physicians attribute to exposure to pollutants from the former industrial facilities.

    “Maybe we should have left before, but we didn’t. Now that something good is finally happening, they want to send us packing,” she said.

    City council leader Amato indicated no final determination has been reached regarding the residential displacement. “It is a very delicate situation,” she said.

  • Russian Drone Strike Leaves Nearly 1 Million Without Electricity in Northern Ukraine

    Russian Drone Strike Leaves Nearly 1 Million Without Electricity in Northern Ukraine

    KYIV, Ukraine – A Russian drone assault on Saturday knocked out electricity across most of Ukraine’s Chernihiv region in the country’s north, according to regional governor Viacheslav Chaus.

    Chaus reported that crews were working to restore power following the infrastructure damage. The affected region sits along Ukraine’s borders with Russia and Belarus and was home to nearly one million people before the war began.

    The regional capital city, which shares the same name as the region, lost all electrical service, city officials confirmed.

    Since the conflict started, Russia has launched an extensive campaign targeting Ukraine’s power grid and energy infrastructure, resulting in frequent blackouts lasting several hours that affect communities nationwide.

  • Putin Reaffirms Support for Iran During New Year Greetings

    Putin Reaffirms Support for Iran During New Year Greetings

    Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered New Year greetings to Iranian leadership on Saturday, emphasizing Moscow’s unwavering commitment to its partnership with Tehran, according to Kremlin officials.

    Putin extended his Nowruz congratulations to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei and President Masoud Pezeshkian, marking the Iranian new year celebration.

    “Vladimir Putin wished the Iranian people to overcome the harsh trials with dignity and stressed that in this difficult time Moscow remains a loyal friend and reliable partner of Tehran,” the Kremlin said.

    However, questions remain about the actual depth of Russian assistance. Iranian sources have indicated they’ve received minimal concrete help from Moscow during what some consider Iran’s most significant crisis since the 1979 revolution that overthrew the U.S.-supported Shah.

    Moscow has characterized recent U.S. and Israeli military actions against Iran as destabilizing forces that have pushed the Middle East toward chaos and created a significant global energy crisis. Putin has also denounced the assassination of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, calling it a “cynical” killing.

    Reports emerged that Russia offered the United States a potential intelligence-sharing agreement, proposing to halt information exchanges with Iran in return for Washington ending intelligence support to Ukraine regarding Russian operations. U.S. officials rejected this proposal, while the Kremlin has labeled these reports as false.

    The loss of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro as an ally has affected Russia’s regional partnerships, though Moscow has gained economically from elevated oil prices resulting from Middle Eastern conflicts involving its strategic partner Iran.

    Despite their partnership agreement, Russia and Iran’s alliance lacks mutual defense provisions. Moscow has consistently opposed Iranian nuclear weapons development, expressing concerns that such weapons could spark widespread nuclear proliferation throughout the Middle East.

  • Houston Rockets End Atlanta Hawks’ 11-Game Winning Streak with Dominant Victory

    Houston Rockets End Atlanta Hawks’ 11-Game Winning Streak with Dominant Victory

    The Houston Rockets brought the Atlanta Hawks’ impressive 11-game winning streak to a halt with a dominant 117-95 victory on Friday night, led by Kevin Durant’s 25-point performance in just three quarters of action.

    Durant shot an efficient 9 of 15 from the field while also contributing six assists to help Houston overwhelm the visiting Hawks. Jabari Smith Jr. provided strong support with 23 points and nine rebounds as the Rockets controlled the game from start to finish.

    The turning point came during the third quarter when Houston unleashed a barrage from three-point range, connecting on 6 of 11 attempts from beyond the arc. This hot shooting transformed an eight-point halftime advantage into a commanding 101-76 lead, capped off by back-to-back three-pointers from Durant and Reed Sheppard late in the period.

    Sheppard, who earned a starting role in place of struggling Tari Eason, contributed 14 points and knocked down four three-pointers. Despite coming off the bench, Eason still managed to record a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds.

    Atlanta’s offense was led by Nickeil Alexander-Walker’s 21 points, while CJ McCollum chipped in 17 points. Bench player Zaccharie Risacher added 16 points before fouling out in the final quarter. The Rockets built their lead to as large as 34 points before both teams cleared their benches.

    Pistons 115, Warriors 101

    Detroit continued their surprising success without injured All-Star Cade Cunningham, who has been diagnosed with a collapsed lung, as they dominated Golden State at home. Jalen Duren powered the Pistons with 23 points and six rebounds in the convincing victory.

    Daniss Jenkins stepped up admirably in Cunningham’s absence, recording 22 points, eight assists and seven rebounds as the starter. Six different Pistons players reached double figures in scoring, while Ausar Thompson anchored the defense with seven steals.

    The struggling Warriors, who have now lost seven of their last eight contests, were paced by Brandin Podziemski’s 15 points. Gary Payton II and De’Anthony Melton each contributed 14 points, and Gui Santos added 13. Stephen Curry remained sidelined with a knee injury.

    Knicks 93, Nets 92

    Jalen Brunson delivered clutch baskets in the final moments to help New York escape with a narrow victory over Brooklyn despite some late-game struggles. Brunson finished with 17 points while Towns dominated with 26 points and 15 rebounds to lead the Knicks.

    OG Anunoby contributed 16 points as New York managed to overcome a season-high 22 turnovers and poor shooting that saw them connect on just 40.8% of their field goal attempts, including a dismal 8-for-29 from three-point territory.

    Brooklyn received strong bench production from Josh Minott’s 22 points and 17 from Ziaire Williams, but the Nets extended their losing streak to six games and have now dropped 16 of their last 18 contests.

    Celtics 117, Grizzlies 112

    Jaylen Brown’s 30-point effort led Boston to their fourth consecutive victory over host Memphis. Luke Garza provided crucial support with a season-best 22 points, including 11 in the decisive fourth quarter, while Payton Pritchard added 19 points.

    Derrick White scored 14 points for the Celtics, and despite struggling with his shot at 3-of-15, Jayson Tatum managed 13 points and nine rebounds. Neemias Queta recorded a double-double with 12 points and 11 rebounds.

    Memphis received a career-high 23 points from rookie Tyler Burton off the bench, but the Grizzlies suffered their ninth defeat in the past 10 games.

    Trail Blazers 108, Timberwolves 104

    Jerami Grant’s efficient 26-point performance on 10-of-16 shooting helped Portland secure a road victory over Minnesota. Deni Avdija added 25 points and eight rebounds as the Trail Blazers extended their winning streak to three games.

    Donovan Clingan recorded a double-double with 21 points and 12 rebounds for Portland. Minnesota was led by Julius Randle’s 19 points, while Rudy Gobert posted 18 points and 15 rebounds, and Ayo Dosunmu contributed 17 points and 10 rebounds. The Timberwolves fell short of completing a season sweep of Portland, with All-Star Anthony Edwards missing his third straight game due to a knee injury.

    Nuggets 121, Raptors 115

    Jamal Murray erupted for 12 of his 31 points in the fourth quarter to lead Denver’s comeback victory over Toronto. Nikola Jokic nearly recorded a triple-double with 22 points, nine assists and eight rebounds as the Nuggets rallied at home.

    Tim Hardaway Jr. was red-hot from three-point range, connecting on 7-of-10 attempts to finish with 23 points, while Aaron Gordon added 16 points. The victory moved Denver into fifth place in the Western Conference and extended their winning streak against Toronto to six games.

    Toronto’s three-game winning streak came to an end despite strong performances from Jakob Poeltl (23 points, 11 rebounds), Brandon Ingram (19 points), and RJ Barrett (18 points). Scottie Barnes and Immanuel Quickley each contributed 15 points as the Raptors remained in fifth place in the Eastern Conference.

  • Hawaii Battles Worst Flooding in Two Decades as More Rain Approaches

    Hawaii Battles Worst Flooding in Two Decades as More Rain Approaches

    HONOLULU — The Hawaiian islands are grappling with their most devastating flood disaster in more than two decades after torrential rainfall pounded ground already soaked from previous winter storms, state officials announced Friday as they cautioned residents to prepare for additional precipitation over the weekend.

    Dirty floodwaters engulfed large areas of Oahu’s North Shore, the internationally famous big-wave surfing destination. The rushing waters swept away houses and vehicles, forcing authorities to issue evacuation notices for 5,500 residents living north of Honolulu. Emergency officials expressed concern that a dam constructed 120 years ago might collapse.

    Governor Josh Green estimated the disaster’s financial impact could exceed $1 billion when accounting for destruction to aviation facilities, educational institutions, transportation infrastructure, residential properties, and a medical facility in Kula on Maui.

    “This is going to have a very serious consequence for us as a state,” Green stated during a press briefing.

    The majority of Hawaii remained under flood advisories, while the National Weather Service issued flash flood warnings specifically for Haleiwa and Waialua communities in northern Oahu.

    Green reported that his chief of staff contacted federal officials and secured promises of assistance from Washington. No fatalities occurred and everyone was accounted for, though approximately 10 individuals required hospital treatment for hypothermia, he noted.

    Search and rescue teams deployed aircraft and watercraft to locate stranded residents, but their operations faced interference from civilian drone operators attempting to photograph the flooding, explained Ian Scheuring, a Honolulu city representative.

    Military National Guard units and Honolulu Fire Department helicopters evacuated 72 youth and adults who were participating in a spring vacation camp at Our Lady of Kea’au retreat center on Oahu’s western coastline, according to municipal and camp authorities. While the facility sits on elevated terrain, officials decided against leaving the group there, the mayor explained.

    Green characterized the flooding as Hawaii’s most severe since 2004 when Manoa valley floods submerged residences and a University of Hawaii library facility.

    Potentially hundreds of dwellings sustained damage Friday, though officials have not completed comprehensive damage evaluations, Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi reported. Approximately 5,500 people received evacuation orders.

    “There’s no question that the damage done thus far has been catastrophic,” he stated.

    Authorities attributed much of the destruction to the enormous volume of precipitation that fell rapidly on already waterlogged terrain. Sections of Oahu recorded 8 to 12 inches of rainfall during overnight hours. Kaala mountain, the island’s tallest point, measured nearly 16 inches over 24 hours, the National Weather Service reported.

    Additional precipitation loomed ahead: Blangiardi announced forecasters predicted 6 to 8 inches would fall across Oahu during the following two to three days.

    Weather patterns called “Kona lows,” winter storm systems characterized by southerly or southwesterly winds carrying moisture-rich air masses, caused the recent deluges. Climate scientists indicate that heavy rainfall events in Hawaii have become more intense and frequent due to human-caused global warming.

    Emergency managers maintained close surveillance of the Wahiawa dam, which has posed risks for decades, describing it as facing “imminent failure.”

    Dam water levels dropped by late Friday, though conditions could deteriorate with additional rainfall. Between Thursday night and Friday, the dam rose from 79 feet to 84 feet, reaching within 6 feet of its maximum capacity, authorities reported.

    While preparing to relocate to a friend’s residence on higher elevation, Waialua resident Kathleen Pahinui shared her concerns about the deteriorating dam during every rainstorm.

    “Just pray for us,” she requested. “We understand there’s more rain coming.”

    State engineers classified the Wahiawa dam as having “high hazard potential,” warning that structural failure “will result in probable loss of human life.”

    The earthen structure was constructed in 1906 to support sugar cultivation for the Waialua Agricultural Company, which later became part of Dole Food Company. Engineers rebuilt the dam following its 1921 collapse.

    State regulators have issued four deficiency notices to Dole regarding the dam since 2009 and imposed a $20,000 penalty five years ago for delayed safety improvements, according to official records.

    Subsequently, Dole offered to transfer ownership of the dam, reservoir and irrigation system to the state in return for the state’s commitment to repair the spillway and maintain safety standards.

    Lawmakers approved legislation in 2023 authorizing the dam’s acquisition, allocating $5 million for purchasing the spillway and $21 million for repairs and expansion to meet safety requirements. However, the ownership transfer remains incomplete, with a state board scheduled to vote on the acquisition next week.

    “The dam continues to operate as designed with no indications of damage,” Dole stated in an email response.

    Hawaii regulates 132 dams statewide, most constructed as irrigation infrastructure for the historical sugar cane industry, according to a 2019 infrastructure assessment by the American Society of Civil Engineers.

  • Iran Launches Ballistic Missiles at US-UK Military Base in Indian Ocean

    Iran Launches Ballistic Missiles at US-UK Military Base in Indian Ocean

    Iranian military forces launched two intermediate-range ballistic missiles on Saturday aimed at the Diego Garcia military installation in the Indian Ocean, which houses both American and British personnel, according to Iran’s semi-official Mehr news agency.

    Earlier reporting from The Wall Street Journal confirmed that Iran had deployed the ballistic missiles in the direction of the strategic base, though the projectiles failed to make contact with the facility.

    According to Mehr’s coverage, the missile strike represented a “significant step … that shows that the range of Iran’s missiles is beyond what the enemy previously imagined.”

  • Murray’s Fourth-Quarter Heroics Power Nuggets Past Raptors 121-115

    Murray’s Fourth-Quarter Heroics Power Nuggets Past Raptors 121-115

    Denver guard Jamal Murray delivered when it mattered most, pouring in a dozen fourth-quarter points as part of his game-high 31-point performance to lead the Nuggets past Toronto 121-115 in a thrilling comeback victory Friday evening at home.

    The win moved Denver (43-28) into fifth place in the Western Conference standings, marking their sixth consecutive victory over the Raptors and fourth win in their last six contests overall.

    Star center Nikola Jokic contributed a well-rounded effort with 22 points, nine assists and eight rebounds, while Tim Hardaway Jr. caught fire from beyond the arc, connecting on seven of ten three-point attempts for 23 points. Aaron Gordon added 16 points for the Nuggets, with Bruce Brown chipping in 12 and Christian Braun contributing 11.

    Toronto (39-30) received strong performances from Jakob Poeltl, who recorded a double-double with 23 points and 11 rebounds, while Brandon Ingram tallied 19 points and RJ Barrett scored 18. Scottie Barnes and Immanuel Quickley each finished with 15 points, and Ja’Kobe Walter added 14 for the Raptors, whose three-game winning streak came to an end while remaining in fifth place in the Western Conference.

    Facing a nine-point deficit entering the final period, Denver stormed back with a 13-2 surge to open the fourth quarter, taking a 98-96 advantage before Quickley answered with five consecutive points for Toronto. The Nuggets then seized control with a decisive 9-0 run, featuring two three-pointers from Hardaway and another from Gordon, establishing a 107-101 lead with five minutes remaining.

    The Raptors battled back as Ingram connected on a jumper and a three-pointer to trim their deficit to just one point, setting up a dramatic finish.

    With 1:45 left on the clock, Gordon converted a layup while being fouled but missed the ensuing free throw. However, Jokic secured the offensive rebound and was fouled himself, sinking both attempts to extend Denver’s advantage to 115-110.

    The tension continued as Barnes scored on a putback, Murray missed a jumper, and Poeltl completed a three-point play to knot the score at 115 with 59.6 seconds remaining.

    In the closing moments, Jokic hit a crucial 10-foot jumper, Gordon blocked Barnes’ shot attempt, and Murray sealed the victory by making two free throws with 12.3 seconds left for a four-point cushion. Jokic fouled Poeltl on the other end, but the Toronto center missed both free throw attempts before Gordon added one final free throw to close out the win.

    Toronto had built momentum in the third quarter, making all 15 of their two-point field goal attempts while outscoring Denver 41-28 in the period. The Raptors led by as many as 11 points late in the third quarter before the Nuggets cut the deficit to five, though Toronto finished the period strong to take a 94-85 lead into the final frame.

  • Anaheim Rallies Past Utah 4-1, Claims Season Series Victory

    Anaheim Rallies Past Utah 4-1, Claims Season Series Victory

    The Anaheim Ducks mounted an impressive comeback Friday night, erasing an early deficit to beat the Utah Mammoth 4-1 and claim the season series between the two teams.

    Alex Killorn powered the Ducks’ offensive attack with one goal and two assists, while Ryan Poehling contributed a goal and an assist in the victory. Goaltender Lukas Dostal was stellar between the pipes, turning away 29 shots for Anaheim (38-27-4, 80 points).

    The win marks the second victory in three games for the Ducks, who have now captured five of their past nine contests. Anaheim also secured a 2-1 advantage over Utah in their three-game season series.

    Utah (36-28-6, 78 points) entered the contest riding high after shutting out the Vegas Golden Knights 4-0 on Thursday. Dylan Guenther provided the Mammoth’s only scoring, while Vitek Vanecek stopped 19 shots in the losing effort.

    The Mammoth struck first when Guenther found the back of the net just 1:48 into the opening frame. Sean Durzi delivered a perfect cross-ice feed, setting up Guenther for a one-knee slap shot that beat Dostal.

    Utah dominated the early action, outshooting Anaheim 14-5 in the first period. The Ducks didn’t register their initial shot attempt until 11:53 had elapsed.

    Poehling brought the visitors level at 13:37 of the first period, capitalizing on a penalty kill breakaway opportunity with a precise wrist shot that found its mark.

    The Ducks seized control in the middle frame when Killorn connected on a snap shot at 9:09, giving Anaheim a 2-1 advantage they would not relinquish.

    Cutter Gauthier sealed the victory with an empty-net tally with 1:36 remaining in regulation. Mikael Granlund added the final exclamation point, converting a Poehling setup into the vacant net with 55 seconds left on the clock.

  • Russian Officials Use Creative Excuses to Block Telegram Messaging App Protests

    Russian Officials Use Creative Excuses to Block Telegram Messaging App Protests

    Russian government officials have employed creative justifications to shut down planned demonstrations against internet restrictions and the blocking of Telegram, the nation’s second-most popular messaging platform.

    Local administrators cited everything from tree maintenance needs to snow clearing operations and lingering COVID-19 protocols to prevent rallies in nearly a dozen regions across Russia in recent weeks.

    Their efforts largely succeeded. Aware of the harsh response to dissent following the invasion of Ukraine four years ago, protest organizers chose not to risk unauthorized gatherings, even for non-war related causes. Some pursued legal challenges to government denials of permits, while others shifted to smaller indoor meetings.

    However, opposition continues to simmer across various political groups regarding restrictions on Russia’s second-most used messaging service, contributing to mounting public frustration over numerous national problems.

    “Clearly the situation has changed, the laws have become stricter, but the protest hasn’t gone anywhere,” said Alexander Sustov, a legislator in Russia’s far eastern Primorye region where a pro-Telegram rally was blocked last month.

    “Discontent remains. And any ban only fuels that discontent,” he said.

    The Telegram restrictions represent Russia’s newest effort to bring internet communications under state oversight. Government censors have blocked thousands of websites and platforms, along with numerous virtual private networks that help users bypass restrictions. Extensive mobile internet shutdowns often leave only government-approved sites accessible.

    Among Russian users, only WhatsApp surpasses Telegram in popularity, though it too faces severe limitations. Government agencies regularly use Telegram for official communications, as do pro-Kremlin commentators and military bloggers with massive followings.

    Officials are promoting MAX, a government-supported messaging platform that critics describe as a surveillance mechanism.

    Military bloggers have criticized the Telegram restrictions, contending the app serves as essential communication infrastructure for Russian forces in Ukraine and activists organizing fundraising efforts for Moscow’s military.

    Initially, the government pledged not to limit Telegram access for battlefield use, but the Kremlin later sent mixed signals.

    During an International Women’s Day meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a servicewoman labeled Telegram “an adversarial communications tool” and endorsed his statement that “the use of communications systems that are not ours, not under our control, poses a danger to personnel” in combat.

    Unverified media accounts suggest complete blocking of the application may occur in coming weeks. Telegram recorded 93.6 million monthly Russian users in December 2025, representing 76% of the population according to monitoring organization Mediascope.

    The Telegram blocking has mobilized diverse political factions, including war supporters and general Kremlin backers.

    The broad dissatisfaction and absence of clear justification for the restrictions has made “people feel like they can afford to protest here,” explained political analyst Abbas Gallyamov.

    Last month, Other Russia members, an ultranationalist, pro-war organization, secured the entrance to Roskomnadzor’s Moscow headquarters with bicycle cables and displayed a sign reading: “Give us an internet without supervision, (and) Russia without Roskom-disgrace.”

    In December, the group displayed a banner at the agency’s St. Petersburg location stating, “Roskomnadzor, ban this banner.”

    All participants faced arrest, with the Moscow demonstrators receiving criminal charges.

    Communist Party regional offices, typically Kremlin-supportive, attempted to coordinate rallies in multiple locations. Altai region officials in Siberia rejected their request, claiming assertions of internet restrictions were “at odds with reality.” Southern Krasnodar has approved a late March rally on the city’s periphery.

    Communist Party members successfully conducted pickets in northern cities Naryan-Mar and Syktyvkar, carrying signs declaring “It is not up to officials to decide what we read” and “The internet is not a prison.”

    These represented rare exceptions, as authorities elsewhere denied rally permits or canceled them last-minute.

    Perm organizers in the Ural Mountains secured approval for a March 15 demonstration, but received notice two hours beforehand of a “potential emergency situation” making the site unsuitable for gatherings.

    Some attendees still appeared. Viktor Gilin, 80, displayed a banner reading, “Vladimir Putin! I demand that you bring back freedom of thought and speech — the internet!” He faced immediate detention and fines.

    In Siberian Novosibirsk, authorities detained 16 individuals this month at a planned pro-Telegram gathering site. Despite not requiring authorization for protests at that location, participants found the area cordoned off for an alleged “tree inspection,” activist Roman Malozyomov reported.

    Malozyomov and fellow activists, journalists and bystanders were held briefly before release. He immediately proceeded to Lenin Square for a solo demonstration with a sign expressing his desire to “stay connected,” featuring a crossed-out Roskomnadzor logo.

    This week, activists in several regions submitted requests for March 29 rally authorization. Some faced immediate rejection.

    Public demonstrations have become uncommon since violent suppression of anti-war protests in 2022, with political prosecutions surging and dissent-restricting legislation expanding.

    Smaller protests have persisted in some areas, including unauthorized ones. Military wives demonstrated at the Kremlin and Defense Ministry in 2024, while over 1,000 people assembled that year in Bashkortostan to oppose a local activist’s imprisonment, leading to widespread arrests.

    Siberian farmers protested this month against what they consider unnecessary cattle culling. In northern Komi, woodworking plant employees rallied for overdue wages.

    Hundreds participated in an authorized October rally in Vladivostok opposing increased vehicle registration costs, marking one of the Pacific coast city’s largest gatherings in years.

    In Siberian Tomsk, activist Anton Isakov recently organized approved demonstrations against blocking the popular gaming platform Roblox and another addressing animal cruelty.

    When authorities permit protests, participants readily appear due to numerous issues “that people want to speak out about,” he explained. His attempts to secure pro-Telegram rally permits have been unsuccessful.

    Malozyomov, the Novosibirsk activist, noted that small, authorized rallies addressing issues like high utility costs often receive approval because “the authorities are trying to give people an opportunity to vent, so that the tension doesn’t build up.”

    Some are pursuing alternatives to rallies.

    Konstantin Larionov in Kaluga, southwest of Moscow, and 41 others filed legal action against Roskomnadzor and government officials last year, claiming Telegram and WhatsApp restrictions violate free speech and privacy rights.

    Larionov encouraged others to join through court email petitions, expanding the plaintiff count to 105. He found it encouraging to see people “from different parts of the country” willing to participate.

    The court ruled in favor of authorities. Larionov appealed unsuccessfully but intends to pursue the case to the Supreme Court.

    He acknowledges diminished protest capabilities in Russia but believes continued efforts remain important.

    “We are, maybe, retreating a little bit, but we’re not giving up,” he said.

    Analyst Gallyamov characterizes the Telegram protests as signaling popular discontent rather than “fighting the regime.”

    However, “it is another crack in the foundation” of Putin’s rule, he said.

  • Romanian Fashion Show Features Models with Down Syndrome for World Awareness Day

    Romanian Fashion Show Features Models with Down Syndrome for World Awareness Day

    BUCHAREST, Romania — A special runway show in Romania’s capital city featured dozens of young models with Down syndrome wearing custom-designed outfits to commemorate World Down Syndrome Day and celebrate what organizers called “atypical beauty.”

    The SEEN Anonymous Seamstresses Gala took place Wednesday at Bucharest’s Romexpo center, bringing together clothing designers from throughout Romania who crafted garments “with great kindness, care and creativity” specifically for youth with Down syndrome and other intellectual disabilities.

    According to Georgeta Bucur, president of Down Plus Association Bucharest who organized the event, 50 volunteer seamstresses each designed and created an outfit for a young person they had never previously encountered.

    “The costumes were created without anyone trying them on,” she explained. “But the most important thing is that the people gathered together again. This event is really special … it’s the most beautiful thing that could happen.”

    Nineteen-year-old Antonia Voicu, dressed in a voluminous green netted gown and crowned with red roses, described taking the stage as fulfilling a longtime dream.

    “I feel like I’m always fashionable, and I like to strike a pose, so I like to do like this,” she explained before walking the runway. “I’m not nervous at all.”

    Diana Negres, Antonia’s caretaker, described the fashion show as “a big step” for Antonia, who had long fantasized about “being a star” performing on stage. “This event gives her exactly this,” Negres said. “This is her first time, we did no preparation at all, so everything will be spontaneous.”

    Seamstress and event organizer Cristina Bucur explained that her inspiration for the fashion show stemmed from having a child with a disability.

    “I wanted the other children to see what it’s like to wear a costume during a fashion show, what it’s like to be cheered on stage,” she said. “They enjoy it enormously because they see that someone looks at them, that someone does something for them.”

    Statistics from the Romania Down Syndrome Federation indicate approximately 12,000 people in Romania have Down syndrome, while more than 6 million people worldwide live with the condition. Romanian data from 2022 showed one person with Down syndrome is born per every 847 births in the Eastern European nation.

    Nine-year-old Marusika Burlaca, wearing a pink pearl-studded dress with styled hair, shared her excitement about the experience.

    “On stage, us children go on a parade, and today I’m dressed in a nice dress and try to do some modeling,” she said.

    Event organizer Larisa Bucur noted that while participants sometimes experience nervousness due to emotions, they genuinely enjoy being the focus of attention.

    “We know that they want to be in the spotlight. I think it’s a very good opportunity for them,” she said. “Maybe they get a bit nervous at times, it’s the emotions, but they really like to be the center of attention.”

    World Down Syndrome Day aims to celebrate the lives of individuals with Down syndrome while ensuring they receive equal rights and opportunities, and to increase public awareness. The United Nations General Assembly officially designated March 21 as the day of observance in 2011.

    This year’s focus addresses combating loneliness, which the World Down Syndrome Day website notes affects people with Down syndrome disproportionately.

    “Everyone feels lonely sometimes,” the organization states. “But for many people with Down syndrome and other intellectual disabilities, loneliness is a more common and painful experience.”

  • US Migrants Trapped in West African Nation After Secret Deportation Deal

    US Migrants Trapped in West African Nation After Secret Deportation Deal

    A young East African refugee thought he was finally safe when a California immigration judge granted him protection after 13 months in detention. Despite his asylum denial, the court ruled he couldn’t be sent home due to safety concerns.

    “He told me: ‘Welcome to the U.S.,” the 28-year-old told The Associated Press, sharing his legal paperwork. “You are now protected by the U.S. law, so you can leave the center, work and stay in this country.”

    Instead of freedom, the man found himself shackled aboard a charter flight bound for Equatorial Guinea, a West African oil-rich dictatorship that made a covert agreement with the Trump administration to accept deported migrants. The nation now serves as a holding station for people who cannot legally be returned to their homelands.

    The refugee, who asked to remain unnamed due to safety fears, said he escaped his birth country after facing violence and imprisonment based on his ethnicity.

    He joins 28 others sent to Equatorial Guinea, which Senator Jeanne Shaheen, the leading Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has labeled “one of the most corrupt governments in the world.”

    Seven African countries have made similar arrangements with the United States to accept third-country deportees, creating what legal advocates describe as a workaround to American protection laws. Most of those sent away had received court orders preventing their return home, according to their attorneys.

    The Associated Press previously spoke with a Moroccan gay asylum-seeker who was flown to Cameroon and eventually felt pressured to return to Morocco, where homosexuality is criminalized.

    During a telephone conversation, the 28-year-old described how Equatorial Guinea officials push him to leave despite filing an asylum request there, which AP reviewed.

    “They told us there is no any asylum or any protection in this country for us,” he explained. “So the best option is to leave the country as soon as possible.”

    However, he said going back to a nation torn by ethnic violence was “not an option.”

    America is sending people to other nations “to circumvent laws that forbid sending a person to a country where their life or freedom would be threatened,” explained Meredyth Yoon, litigation director at Asian Americans Advancing Justice, who has assisted deportees in Equatorial Guinea.

    Yoon confirmed key details of the asylum-seeker’s story.

    “Once deported, these individuals face impossible alternatives: indefinite detention without access to counsel, or forced deportation to the very countries they fled from,” she stated.

    The 29 deportees originated from Ethiopia, Eritrea, Mauritania, Angola, Congo, Chad, Georgia, Ghana and Nigeria, according to a visiting attorney who requested anonymity given the country’s poor human rights situation. Officials prevented him from meeting most detainees.

    The refugee said his deportation occurred in January. Previously, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents tried forcing him to sign papers claiming he wanted voluntary return to his homeland. He said they seemed shocked he could read the document, quoting one officer as saying: “I never knew Black people could read and write.”

    After refusing to sign, he was moved to Arizona, where he spent five months in a windowless room with several others. Sanitation was poor and medical care was “very difficult” to obtain.

    “One guy in my room became crazy and started shouting and hitting himself because he wanted to go home,” he recalled.

    A judge rejected his asylum petition but approved protection under American law and the U.N. Convention Against Torture, which blocks return home while permitting transfer to a supposedly safe third nation.

    “All the people told me that we are going back to Africa,” he remembered. “I needed to speak with my lawyer, but these ICE officers started using force, they started beating me.”

    Following moves through California, Texas and Louisiana, he was handcuffed and transported to an airport during overnight hours.

    The aircraft was operated by Omni Air International, a charter company, carrying others in similar situations, he said.

    Upon landing, he learned their destination was Equatorial Guinea.

    A Department of Homeland Security representative denied his allegations, stating ICE officers “did NOT beat, coerce, or use racial slurs” against him, calling him “an illegal alien” who “was processed as an expedited removal and was removed to Equatorial Guinea.”

    “All of these illegal aliens deported to Equatorial Guinea received due process and had a final order of removal,” they added.

    The man and fellow deportees are held in Malabo, the former capital city.

    “It’s an old closed hotel and there are no other customers,” he described. “Most of us were sick because of the food. I was hospitalized for two days. There is also malaria here, two guys were hospitalized with that.”

    Yoon said 17 detainees have been forced back to their origin countries after being told no alternatives exist, since Equatorial Guinea lacks asylum procedures.

    “Everyone who I’ve talked to since they left is not in a good situation,” she noted. “Many of them are in hiding.”

    One deportee returned to Mauritania still attempted requesting asylum from the prime minister’s office, according to documents reviewed by AP. The visiting lawyer forwarded copies to the United Nations refugee agency.

    However, on Christmas Day, Equatorial Guinea authorities restrained him and placed him on an outbound flight.

    “He alerted (authorities) to the fact that he had applied for asylum, and we contacted the U.S. Embassy in Malabo about his case but didn’t receive a response,” Yoon said.

    The UN refugee agency declined commenting on specific cases. Larissa Schlotterbeck, regional head of external engagement, said Equatorial Guinea is developing asylum procedures and UNHCR is assisting with identifying people needing protection meanwhile.

    The Trump administration allocated at least $40 million for deporting roughly 300 migrants to nations other than their homelands, based on a February Senate Foreign Relations Committee Democratic staff analysis. Other African partners include South Sudan, Rwanda, Uganda, Eswatini, Ghana and Cameroon.

    Equatorial Guinea obtained $7.5 million, Senator Shaheen revealed.

    In correspondence to Secretary of State Marco Rubio obtained by AP, Shaheen called the “highly unusual payment” concerning regarding taxpayer money usage, noting it surpassed American foreign aid to Equatorial Guinea during the previous eight years.

    Last year, the State Department granted temporary sanctions relief allowing Teodorin Obiang, son of Equatorial Guinea’s president and the nation’s vice president, to visit America. Obiang met with Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau.

    Neither the State Department nor Equatorial Guinea officials responded to comment requests.

    The 28-year-old asylum-seeker remains trapped in uncertainty. He considers this the most difficult aspect of his experience.

    “Before, we were immigrants with hope,” he said. “But here, there is no more hope.”

  • Middle East Conflict Disrupts Global Helium Supply, Threatening Tech Industry

    Middle East Conflict Disrupts Global Helium Supply, Threatening Tech Industry

    LONDON (AP) — Recent Iranian strikes against Qatar’s natural gas production facilities have created a significant threat to worldwide technology manufacturing, as the disrupted helium output could impact everything from computer chip production to medical equipment operations.

    While most people recognize helium as the substance that lifts party balloons, this gas serves critical functions in semiconductor manufacturing, rocket launches, and medical imaging equipment.

    According to the U.S. Geological Survey, Qatar provides approximately one-third of global helium supplies, but the country was forced to suspend operations when conflict began three weeks ago. Following the most recent Iranian attacks on energy infrastructure, Qatar’s government-owned gas corporation announced helium shipments would decrease by 14%.

    Understanding helium’s industrial significance:

    Helium emerges as a secondary product during natural gas extraction through a process called cryogenic distillation. Qatar, which controls the planet’s largest individual natural gas reserve, generates roughly 30% of worldwide helium according to U.S. Geological Survey data.

    The nation’s helium comes from the Ras Laffan complex, recognized as the globe’s most extensive liquefied natural gas operation. However, the state-controlled energy firm QatarGas stopped LNG production and related materials on March 2 following Iranian drone strikes, then announced force majeure two days afterward, indicating contractual obligations cannot be met due to uncontrollable circumstances.

    Following additional Iranian bombardments on Wednesday and Thursday that targeted Ras Laffan again, QatarGas documented widespread destruction requiring years of reconstruction and reducing yearly helium shipments by 14%.

    “It makes the story worse,” said Phil Kornbluth, president of Kornbluth Helium Consulting. “Your best case scenario would be you’re back producing some helium in six weeks or something like that. As it looks right now, that’s highly unlikely.”

    Market prices for helium have increased twofold since the crisis began and will likely climb higher, Kornbluth explained.

    However, immediate market trading represents only approximately 2% of total transactions during typical periods, he noted. Helium operates as a specialty commodity primarily distributed through extended agreements.

    Nevertheless, contract costs “could go up a lot,” Kornbluth stated. “There’s lots of room for price increase if this is an extended outage.”

    Kornbluth explained the supply shortage hasn’t materialized yet, since helium shipments that should have been loaded when fighting started in early March would require additional weeks to reach Asian destinations.

    “Nobody’s run out of helium yet. But it’s a few weeks out when the shortage really hits.”

    Helium plays a vital role in semiconductor production, including advanced processors used in artificial intelligence systems manufactured at Asian facilities.

    The gas excels at heat conduction and transfer, making it perfect for quick cooling applications.

    Semiconductor manufacturers utilize helium to reduce temperatures of wafers — silicon disks containing microscopic electronic pathways. The gas is employed during etching procedures, when deposited materials are removed from wafers to create transistor formations, explained Jacob Feldgoise, an analyst at Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology.

    Throughout the etching procedure, “you really want to maintain a constant temperature over the wafer. And in order to do that, you need to be able to draw heat away from the wafer that’s being processed,” Feldgoise said. “Helium is an excellent thermal conductor. And so chip fabs will blow helium over the back of the wafer in order to speed heat removal and keep heat removal consistent.”

    Current semiconductor production methods lack any practical alternative to helium for wafer cooling, according to Jong-hwan Lee, a professor of semiconductor devices at South Korea’s Sangmyung University.

    Healthcare facilities depend on helium to cool superconducting magnets that operate magnetic resonance imaging equipment.

    Space companies utilize helium to clean rocket fuel storage systems, with demand projected to increase due to more frequent missions by organizations like SpaceX and Blue Origin.

    Helium’s molecular characteristics create storage and transportation challenges.

    As a gas, helium’s microscopic particles easily escape storage systems by seeping through even tiny openings.

    Qatar’s energy company typically freezes helium into liquid state and stores it in specialized insulated vessels for shipment through the Strait of Hormuz. These custom containers maintain helium for 35 to 48 days. Beyond that timeframe, they begin heating up, causing helium to return to gas form and escape through safety release mechanisms.

    Approximately 200 of these vessels remain trapped in the Middle East, Kornbluth reported. Each container costs roughly $1 million, so additional units aren’t readily available elsewhere.

    “It’s going to take a fair amount of time to get these containers out of Qatar and to get them somewhere else where they might be able to be filled with helium,” he explained.

    “So this initial period when you lose Qatar supply and have to rejig the supply chain and reposition containers, that’s going to be the worst part of the shortage most likely.”

    Only a limited number of nations manufacture helium.

    The United States leads production, generating 81 million cubic meters annually. Qatar, Algeria and Russia represent other major suppliers, though Russian materials are prohibited under United States and European Union sanctions.

    USGS calculations show the United States possesses 8.5 billion cubic meters of extractable helium in underground formations, while other countries hold 31.3 billion cubic meters.

    The conflict emphasizes the extensive international supply networks supporting South Korea’s semiconductor sector, which has experienced increased worldwide demand for its processors during the AI expansion.

    Fitch Ratings released a report this week indicating the country — headquarters to Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, the planet’s largest memory chip manufacturers — faces particular supply shortage risks because it imports approximately 65% of its helium from Qatar.

    Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix probably maintain several months of stock, but they must urgently secure alternative sources, Lee emphasized, as the conflict could continue and potentially interrupt additional material supplies beyond helium.

    Helium ranks among 14 semiconductor supply chain components the Seoul government monitors due to significant war-related vulnerability.

    “Even disruptions affecting just a handful of materials could destabilize the entire semiconductor manufacturing process as each stage of production depends on the previous one,” Lee stated.

    Nevertheless, a complete helium emergency remains unlikely, specialists indicated. During shortages, Kornbluth said the helium sector prioritizes distribution based on necessity, placing essential industries like chipmaking and healthcare first in line.

    Since helium represents a minor portion of overall semiconductor production expenses, manufacturing facilities likely “would be willing to pay a higher price” to obtain supplies, Feldgoise noted.

    Samsung and SK Hynix refused to answer questions regarding inventory levels or diversification strategies. The Korea Semiconductor Industry Association confirmed short-term supplies remain adequate and companies have been expanding their supply sources.

    Major chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company also stated it does not “anticipate any significant impact at this time” but will continue monitoring developments.

  • Trump Suggests Military Pullback While Deploying More Troops to Middle East

    Trump Suggests Military Pullback While Deploying More Troops to Middle East

    President Donald Trump suggested Friday he may be ready to reduce American military involvement in the Middle East, posting this message at the same time his administration is deploying three additional amphibious assault vessels and approximately 2,500 more Marines to the area.

    The president’s Friday social media statement came after Iran issued warnings about targeting tourist and recreational locations globally, amid another day of aerial bombardments and missile exchanges across the region.

    These contradictory signals from Washington emerged following another surge in petroleum costs that sent U.S. markets tumbling, prompting the Trump administration to announce it would temporarily suspend sanctions on Iranian crude oil already aboard vessels in an effort to control rising fuel costs.

    The conflict, now in its third week, continues to escalate without any indication of resolution, as Israel reported Iran launched additional missiles early Saturday morning, while Saudi Arabia announced it intercepted 20 unmanned aircraft within just hours in its eastern provinces where critical oil infrastructure is located.

    These latest strikes occurred one day after Israeli warplanes targeted locations in Tehran during Iran’s celebration of Nowruz, the Persian New Year, a traditionally joyous occasion now overshadowed by warfare.

    American and Israeli officials have provided varying explanations for the military campaign, ranging from hopes of sparking internal rebellion against Iran’s government to destroying its nuclear and missile capabilities. No evidence of such an uprising has emerged publicly, and no conclusion to the hostilities appears imminent.

    Trump wrote on social media: “We are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts in the Middle East.”

    This statement appeared to contradict his administration’s decision to increase military assets in the region while requesting an additional $200 billion from Congress for war funding.

    According to an official who spoke with The Associated Press, the United States is sending three more amphibious assault vessels along with roughly 2,500 additional Marines to the Middle East. Two other U.S. officials verified the ship deployments without specifying their destinations. All three sources requested anonymity when discussing classified military movements.

    Earlier this week, the U.S. redirected another group of amphibious assault ships carrying an additional 2,500 Marines from Pacific operations to the Middle East. These forces will supplement more than 50,000 American troops already stationed in the region.

    While Trump has stated he has no intention of deploying ground forces into Iran, he has also maintained that all military options remain available.

    Iranian military spokesman Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi issued a warning Friday that “parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations” worldwide would not be secure for the country’s adversaries. This threat has raised fresh concerns that Tehran might return to using militant attacks outside the Middle East as a strategy to apply pressure.

    Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei commended Iranians’ resilience during wartime in a written message broadcast on Iranian television for Nowruz. Khamenei has not appeared publicly since assuming the supreme leadership role after Israeli attacks killed his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and allegedly injured him.

    With limited information emerging from Iran, the extent of damage to its weapons, nuclear, or energy infrastructure from intensive U.S. and Israeli bombardments that started February 28 remains unclear, as does the question of who is actually governing the country. However, Iran’s counterattacks continue to disrupt oil supplies and drive up food and fuel costs well beyond the Middle East.

    Israeli military forces announced early Saturday they had begun a series of strikes against Iran-backed Hezbollah fighters in southern Beirut neighborhoods.

    Residents observed smoke rising, fires erupting, and heard powerful explosions throughout parts of central Beirut, following renewed Israeli military evacuation orders for seven districts.

    Israeli operations against Hezbollah forces in Lebanon have resulted in more than 1,000 deaths and displaced over 1 million people, according to Lebanese government statistics.

    Casualties in Iran during the war have exceeded 1,300 people. In Israel, Iranian missiles have killed 15 individuals, with four additional deaths in the occupied West Bank. At least 13 U.S. service members have lost their lives.

    Brent crude oil, the global benchmark, has climbed dramatically during the fighting and was trading around $106 per barrel, up from approximately $70 before the conflict began.

    The recently announced U.S. sanctions suspension covers Iranian oil loaded onto ships as of Friday and will expire April 19.

    This measure does not increase production output, which is a key driver of the price increases. Iran has successfully circumvented U.S. sanctions for years, indicating that much of its exported oil already reaches international buyers.

    In seeking methods to increase global oil availability during the Iran conflict, the Trump administration previously suspended sanctions on specific Russian oil shipments for 30 days, which opponents criticized as benefiting Moscow while providing only minimal market relief.

  • Iran Executes Three Young Men Including Teen Wrestler, Rights Groups Fear More Deaths

    Iran Executes Three Young Men Including Teen Wrestler, Rights Groups Fear More Deaths

    Iranian officials carried out the executions of three young men this week, including a 19-year-old wrestling champion, sparking concerns among international human rights organizations that authorities may be launching a broader campaign of state killings targeting protesters.

    The deaths of these three individuals mark the initial executions from the tens of thousands of people detained during Iranian security forces’ January suppression of widespread demonstrations. Human rights advocates warn that more than 100 additional protesters may be facing potential death sentences.

    Saleh Mohammadi, the teenage wrestler, was executed alongside Mehdi Qasemi and Saeed Davoudi early Thursday morning in the city of Qom, located south of Tehran, according to Iranian state media reports. The trio had received death sentences under charges of “moharabeh,” translated as “waging war against God,” for their alleged involvement in the deaths of two police officers during demonstrations in their city.

    Amnesty International condemned the convictions, stating the three men and others detained during the protests were subjected to “grossly unfair trials” where authorities used confessions obtained through torture.

    According to Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, who directs the Oslo-based Iran Human Rights organization, the executions were “intended to instill fear in society and deter new protests” during the ongoing U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran.

    Amiry-Moghaddam expressed concern that numerous additional “executions of protesters and political prisoners may be imminent.”

    His organization has verified at least 27 death sentences handed down to individuals arrested during the demonstrations. An additional 100 people face charges carrying potential death penalties, while Iranian state television has broadcast hundreds of coerced confessions to capital crimes, according to Amiry-Moghaddam.

    The nationwide demonstrations that started in late December reached their peak during January’s first week, triggering the most lethal government response since the Islamic Republic’s establishment in 1979.

    Determining an accurate casualty count has proven difficult due to government-imposed internet restrictions. The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists New Agency, which maintains contacts throughout Iran, confirmed more than 7,000 deaths while investigating thousands of additional cases. The organization reported over 50,000 arrests within just six weeks. Iranian officials acknowledged more than 3,000 fatalities.

    During the protest movement’s height, Iranian leadership indicated that rapid trials and executions would follow.

    U.S. President Donald Trump had suggested military intervention might be necessary to halt the violent crackdown. However, he later announced that he had learned execution plans were suspended, indicating military action was no longer being considered.

    One month afterward, Israel and the United States began an intensive aerial bombing campaign against Iran, striking military facilities and targeting senior political and security officials. The security agencies believed responsible for the protester crackdown are also being attacked.

    Even during wartime, Iranian authorities have maintained their suppression of dissent. Officials report dozens of additional detentions since the war commenced on February 28, including some who participated in January’s protests.

    Due to Iran’s internet shutdown, limited information is available about Thursday’s executed men. Amiry-Moghaddam noted that Davoudi was born March 20, 2004, meaning his execution occurred one day before his 22nd birthday. Qasemi’s age remains unknown.

    Mohammadi had distinguished himself in wrestling, an extremely popular sport throughout Iran. He earned a bronze medal in 2024 at an international youth freestyle wrestling competition held in Krasnoyarsk, Russia.

    His Instagram profile featured photographs and videos from competitions and training sessions, accompanied by motivational messages about perseverance. His final post in late December showed him exercising at a gym with the caption: “We endured beyond our imagination. Back again #bodybuilding #training #wrestling.”

    “He was full of energy,” recalled Shiva Amelirad, an Iranian educator now living in Toronto who had spoken with Mohammadi in 2022 during his high school years.

    Amelirad explained that Mohammadi had joined anti-government demonstrations that erupted earlier that year following Mahsa Amini’s death in police custody after her detention for improper headscarf wearing. Those protests also faced severe government suppression.

    She said Mohammadi shared that exercise and eating ice cream were his only methods “to forget all this catastrophe that we are facing.”

    “He always tried to show that he was happy,” Amelirad remembered.

    Multiple human rights organizations report that Mohammadi, Qasemi and Davoudi were arrested in Qom on January 15. The details surrounding their arrests remain unclear, and it’s unknown whether they were previously acquainted.

    They faced charges in connection with a police officer’s killing on January 8 and received convictions in early February, according to both Amnesty and Iran Human Rights.

    While detained, Mohammadi suffered beatings and had one hand broken, Amnesty reported in a February 19 public letter to Iran’s judiciary criticizing the prosecution of numerous arrested demonstrators. Amnesty stated that Mohammadi rejected the charges and withdrew his confessions in court, claiming they were obtained through torture.

    “Authorities have systematically subjected those arrested in connection to the protests to enforced disappearance, incommunicado detention, torture to extract forced ‘confessions,’” Amnesty stated in their letter.

    Mizan, the Iranian judiciary’s official news outlet, confirmed Thursday’s executions of the three men, broadcasting footage of them wearing prison clothing in court. The agency claimed they had admitted to killing two police officers using “knives and swords,” and displayed video purporting to show them recreating the killings for court officials.

    Amiry-Moghaddam from Iran Human Rights said the Islamic Republic is fighting for survival “and is well aware that the main threat to its existence comes not from external actors, but from the Iranian people demanding fundamental change.”

  • UN Secretary-General Working with Trump’s Gaza Peace Board, Report Says

    UN Secretary-General Working with Trump’s Gaza Peace Board, Report Says

    The United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has expressed his support for President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace initiative aimed at funding and implementing basic reconstruction efforts in Gaza, according to a Politico report published Saturday.

    In an interview with the publication, Guterres indicated his organization is actively working alongside the board’s framework. “There is an objective there that was defined, approved by the Security Council, and we are cooperating actively with structures created by the Board of Peace,” Guterres stated.

    However, the UN leader emphasized that he believes the board’s role should remain limited to Gaza’s rebuilding efforts. “This is not the effective way to address the dramatic problems that we have now. We need to be clear about international law, to be clear about the values of the Charter of the United Nations. That is essential in any peace initiative,” he explained.

    During the interview, Guterres also addressed regional tensions, urging Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. He proposed that the United Nations could play a role in safeguarding the crucial waterway and contribute to reducing ongoing attacks in the area.

    The Secretary-General revealed he has not had direct communication with President Trump since the conflict began, though he has maintained contact with other members of the administration.

  • Israeli Forces Strike Iran, Lebanon as US Deploys Marines to Middle East

    Israeli Forces Strike Iran, Lebanon as US Deploys Marines to Middle East

    Israeli forces launched military strikes against Iran and Lebanon on Saturday while the United States announced plans to deploy thousands of additional Marines to the Middle East, as President Donald Trump criticized NATO partners for their unwillingness to assist in reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

    The death toll has exceeded 2,000 since U.S. and Israeli forces began their offensive against Iran on February 28, with growing American concerns about the conflict’s potential expansion as it continues into its fourth week.

    Saturday’s Israeli operations targeted Hezbollah positions in Lebanon’s capital city, marking an escalation in airstrikes against the Iranian-supported group. This represents the most significant expansion of the Iranian conflict since Hezbollah began attacking Israel on March 2 in solidarity with Tehran.

    Israeli military officials confirmed they also conducted fresh strikes against Iranian targets Saturday, including locations within Tehran itself.

    Critical energy facilities throughout Iran and neighboring Gulf nations have come under attack, causing oil prices to spike 50% since hostilities began and raising fears of worldwide economic disruption.

    United Airlines responded to the crisis by announcing a 5% reduction in scheduled flights for the second and third quarters, anticipating continued elevated fuel costs.

    The strategically important Strait of Hormuz, which handles approximately one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas shipments, has remained largely inaccessible to commercial vessels since the U.S.-Israeli military campaign commenced.

    President Trump criticized American allies as “cowards” on Friday for refusing to participate in efforts to reopen the waterway while combat operations continue.

    Multiple allied nations, who were not briefed prior to the conflict’s start, have committed to joining “appropriate efforts” to restore safe maritime passage through the strait. However, Germany and France have insisted that fighting must cease first. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz indicated he would discuss the situation with Trump over the weekend.

    Iran has signaled willingness to permit Japanese-affiliated ships to transit the Strait of Hormuz, according to Kyodo News reports Saturday, citing Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi. Japan relies on the strait for approximately 90% of its oil imports.

    In an attempt to boost supply and reduce prices, the Trump administration announced a 30-day sanctions waiver allowing the sale of 140 million barrels of Iranian oil currently held on tankers due to the conflict. The administration had previously implemented similar relief measures for sanctioned Russian oil.

    Before Saturday’s attacks, Israeli military personnel issued evacuation orders for seven neighborhoods in southern Beirut suburbs. Lebanese casualties have surpassed 1,000 deaths, with more than one million people displaced by Israeli strikes.

    Friday saw Israeli forces execute two major bombing campaigns against Tehran and central Iran, while Israel endured several rounds of Iranian missile attacks, according to Israeli military reports.

    As Muslims throughout the region began Eid al-Fitr celebrations marking Ramadan’s end Friday evening, and Iranians observed Nowruz, their traditional New Year, Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei released a defiant statement.

    Khamenei, who has remained out of public view since an Israeli attack killed his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, on the conflict’s opening day, declared that Iranians had responded with “unity and resistance” and “dealt a disorienting blow to the enemy.”

    A U.S. intelligence official, speaking anonymously, suggested Khamenei’s written statement raises concerns about his wellbeing, noting his father traditionally delivered New Year messages via video.

    Three U.S. officials informed Reuters Friday that 2,500 Marines, accompanied by the amphibious assault vessel Boxer and supporting warships, would be dispatched to the region, though their specific mission remains undisclosed.

    A recent Reuters/Ipsos survey revealed nearly two-thirds of Americans expect Trump to authorize troops for large-scale ground combat, with only 7% supporting such action.

    Two officials confirmed no final decision has been made regarding ground troop deployment into Iran. Sources previously told Reuters that potential targets might include Iran’s coastline or the Kharg Island oil export facility.

    When questioned Thursday about troop deployment plans, Trump stated he was “not putting troops anywhere,” adding, “If I were, I certainly wouldn’t tell you.”

    Trump indicated the United States was approaching its military objectives, which include weakening Iran’s armed forces and preventing nuclear weapons development, and suggested the possibility of reducing military operations.

  • Medical Experts Push for More Women to Embrace Weight Training

    Medical Experts Push for More Women to Embrace Weight Training

    When Elisabeth Bradley started college, she became motivated to begin strength training after following a woman’s fitness journey on social media, watching her progress one barbell at a time.

    However, Bradley discovered she was the sole female in San Diego State University’s weight room.

    “I felt like I stuck out a lot, and I just thought, ‘OK, I’m gonna look dumb,’” she says. Feeling overwhelmed by a space filled with grunting, muscular men, she relocated to the cardio section, reflecting the experience of numerous women who steer clear of free weights and strength equipment for different reasons.

    As evidence grows regarding resistance training benefits, professionals believe several changes are needed in gym environments to attract more women.

    Michelle Segar, a behavioral scientist at the University of Michigan who researches exercise patterns, explained that creating more welcoming environments and improving women’s familiarity with weights would encourage greater participation. Increased representation would then help more women stick with their routines.

    The National Institutes of Health advises everyone — both men and women — to engage in resistance training a minimum of twice weekly. This encompasses various activities requiring physical force, including weight machines, resistance bands, or bodyweight movements like pushups and squats.

    Research has shown resistance training helps prevent cardiovascular disease, enhances long-term mobility and reduces blood pressure, according to Brad Schoenfeld, an exercise science professor at Lehman College in New York City. Some studies indicate women may gain even greater benefits than men from weight training since it helps prevent osteoporosis and age-related muscle deterioration, conditions women face higher risks for developing, he explained.

    “The bottom line is, resistance training is a cure for all sorts of issues,” Schoenfeld said.

    Daisy Arauza, a 30-year-old mother of two from Menifee, California, currently does Pilates and cardio workouts at home using videos and online guides, and wants to purchase a gym membership to help with strength building and weight management.

    However, she struggles with confidence issues and doesn’t feel knowledgeable enough about weights and proper gym behavior.

    “I have a lot of self-consciousness because of how my body looks right now. When you think of the gym, you think about people that are already more fit. And so it feels like I have to make myself fit into this mold before I can feel comfortable being in a gym setting working out in front of other people,” she said.

    A persistent stigma still exists around women lifting weights, Bradley noted. After years of being told that thinness is the ideal goal, some incorrectly assume strength training will create a bulky appearance.

    Schoenfeld explained that most women shouldn’t worry about developing excessive muscle mass because gaining significant amounts is difficult for anyone — particularly women, who possess lower levels of testosterone, the muscle-building hormone. If someone dislikes their results, reducing training intensity is simple, he noted: “It’s very, very easy to lose muscle.”

    Several months following her disappointing first experience, Bradley discussed her strength-training aspirations with a male weightlifter from her dormitory, who taught her bodybuilding fundamentals. This encouragement motivated her to establish Girl Gains, a female weightlifting organization that now operates dozens of chapters at universities nationwide.

    “Other things get shoved down our throats, like Pilates and cardio and yoga, but they complement each other,” Bradley said. “Being stronger in the gym is going to help you progress in Pilates. Having muscle is going to help make you a faster, better runner.”

    Women beginning strength training should receive empowering and realistic guidance, supporters emphasize.

    While complementary introductory sessions can be helpful, superficial instruction from trainers in revealing clothing won’t be effective, Segar warned.

    “Most women have tried to achieve the perfect body for decades, and it only leads to a sense of failure,” she said. Rather than concentrating on how exercise makes them feel, they’re worrying about others’ perceptions.

    Women who discover community in weight rooms collaborate on personal goals, becoming stronger and challenging themselves, Bradley observed. “One of the things we always say is, ‘The gains look good on you.’”

    Some women discover they can concentrate better on their workouts without men present.

    At the women-only Goddess Gym in Peterborough, England, Charlie Sturgeon reported feeling happier than she did in co-ed facilities where she experienced “some quite weird experiences where people would just stare, pull faces, make comments. And here, with being women only, it just feels like there’s a sense of community.”

    Some fitness centers attempt to accommodate women better by providing on-site childcare services.

    Michelle Kozak of Phoenix, who has two young children, terminated her membership when her gym discontinued child care services.

    She also feels uncomfortable with intense gym culture.

    “I don’t want to make the gym my entire personality,” she said. “I just want to have some time to prioritize being healthy.”

  • Israeli Military Targets Hezbollah Civilian Services in Expanded Campaign

    Israeli Military Targets Hezbollah Civilian Services in Expanded Campaign

    BEIRUT (AP) — Twelve healthcare workers died instantly when an Israeli airstrike hit a medical facility in southern Lebanon, with one person critically injured and four others trapped beneath debris for hours.

    The March 13 attack on the village of Burj Qalaouiyah facility represents one of the most devastating single incidents since the current Israel-Hezbollah conflict erupted on March 2. The targeted medical center operated under Hezbollah’s healthcare division, the Islamic Health Society, which has now lost 24 staff members during the past two weeks of fighting.

    Israeli forces have expanded their strategy beyond attacking Hezbollah’s military capabilities, now systematically targeting the organization’s civilian operations in what appears to be an effort to diminish the Iran-supported group’s influence and erode its popular support base.

    The militant organization functions both as an armed faction and political entity, with its healthcare and community service programs serving as key pillars of its public backing throughout the years.

    Beyond medical facilities, Israeli airstrikes have eliminated more than twelve locations belonging to Hezbollah’s banking operation, al-Qard al-Hasan. Additional bombardments have severely damaged the organization’s Al-Manar television headquarters and Al-Nour radio broadcasting centers.

    The military campaign has also focused on the group’s Amana fuel stations and Sajjad discount retail outlets, where economically disadvantaged residents purchase heavily subsidized goods.

    Wednesday’s Israeli airstrike on a residential building in central Beirut resulted in the deaths of Mohammed Sherri, who directed political programming for Hezbollah’s Al-Manar television network, and his spouse.

    Israeli officials claim Hezbollah operates military functions within healthcare facilities and assert that al-Qard al-Hasan — formally registered as a charitable organization providing no-interest loans — funds the group’s armed operations. Lebanon’s Health Ministry rejects Israeli allegations regarding military use of Hezbollah medical facilities.

    “This represents a distinct conflict that will not conclude through ceasefire agreements,” stated Hilal Khashan, a political science professor at American University of Beirut. “This conflict will persist until Israel accomplishes its complete goal — eliminating Hezbollah not merely as a military force, but ultimately removing Hezbollah entirely from Lebanon’s political arena.”

    Hezbollah faces mounting domestic and international demands to surrender its weapons and recognizes this current confrontation as pivotal. Fierce fighting along Lebanon’s southern frontier between Hezbollah militants and advancing Israeli forces has resulted in numerous Lebanese fighter casualties.

    During Monday’s visit to the northern battlefront, Israeli army commander Gen. Eyal Zamir declared that Hezbollah now engages in “a conflict for its survival and faces severe consequences for joining this confrontation.” He emphasized that Israeli military pressure will continue to “escalate further.”

    “This constitutes an existential struggle. It is neither limited nor straightforward,” Hezbollah leader Naim Kassem declared during a weekend televised address. Kassem pledged his organization would continue fighting indefinitely and never capitulate.

    Israeli authorities maintain that Lebanon has failed to disarm the organization according to the Lebanese government’s own commitments, therefore Israel will complete this objective independently.

    Contrasting with earlier Israeli conflicts, the current situation occurs while the Lebanese government has declared Hezbollah’s military operations unlawful and officials have arrested multiple group members for unauthorized weapons possession.

    Similar to past conflicts, Hezbollah faces domestic criticism from Lebanese opponents who hold the Iran-backed organization responsible for initiating this war through rocket attacks on Israel. Hezbollah launched these rockets in retaliation for the assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, occurring less than 48 hours after U.S. and Israeli operations against Iran commenced, sparking regional warfare.

    Israel responded with extensive aerial bombardment campaigns across Lebanese territories, resulting in over 1,000 fatalities and displacing more than one million residents from southern and eastern Lebanon, as well as Beirut’s southern neighborhoods.

    “Hezbollah executed a self-destructive action that will not alter the situation,” commented legislator Samy Gemayel, who leads the nationalist Kataeb Party, adding that Tehran exploits Lebanon “as a launching pad to protect Iran.”

    The previous 34-day Israel-Hezbollah war in 2006 concluded without a clear victor. A 14-month conflict beginning in October 2023 — when Hezbollah fired rockets supporting Palestinians following the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led assault on southern Israel — eliminated much of Hezbollah’s political and military leadership and significantly weakened but did not destroy the organization.

    Following airstrikes against Hezbollah facilities even in central Beirut, local residents demonstrated and compelled the group to shut down an al-Qard al-Hasan branch in the capital’s center. Yielding to public pressure, employees removed the financial institution’s signage and dismantled automated teller machines, ending its presence in central Beirut.

    Amnesty International has declared that al-Qard al-Hasan branches do not constitute legitimate military objectives under international humanitarian law and that these strikes warrant investigation as potential war crimes.

    “The Israeli military appears to operate under the assumption that designating something as Hezbollah-connected, whether healthcare personnel, residences in border communities, or financial institutions, makes it a valid target. This approach is incorrect,” said Heba Morayef, regional director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty International.

    Mahmoud Karaki from Hezbollah’s Islamic Health Society reported that during the most recent 2024 conflict, his organization lost 153 members in Israeli attacks. However, he promised the group would maintain its operations as it has during previous wars.

    “By attacking us, they target the support system for civilians and their resilience in areas under assault,” Karaki stated.

    The Israeli military’s Arabic spokesperson has alleged that Hezbollah uses ambulances for weapons and fighter transportation, accusations the paramedic organization firmly denies.

    Hezbollah and Iranian representatives have indicated that any cessation of U.S.-Israeli operations against Iran must also include ending Israeli attacks in Lebanon.

    Senior Hezbollah official Mahmoud Qamati informed Lebanon’s Al-Jadeed television Monday that “Iran will not abandon Lebanon or the resistance, nor will it permit Lebanon to remain defenseless,” adding that “Lebanon will participate in this victory and will not be abandoned.”

    When asked whether Tehran could accept a ceasefire halting strikes on Iran while continuing in Lebanon, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi responded: “I doubt that.”

    “We reject ceasefire concepts; we support ending the war completely. And concluding the war means precisely that — terminating warfare on all battlegrounds,” Araghchi told Al Jazeera English, adding this encompasses Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, Iran and “additional regional nations.”

  • Trump Weighs Military Pullback While Sending More Forces to Middle East

    Trump Weighs Military Pullback While Sending More Forces to Middle East

    While the United States dispatches additional warships and Marines to the Middle East, President Donald Trump announced his administration is exploring the possibility of reducing military operations in the region, despite Iran’s threats to target tourist destinations globally.

    These conflicting signals from Washington emerged as rising oil costs sent U.S. stock markets tumbling, leading the Trump administration to announce it would remove sanctions on Iranian oil currently aboard vessels in an effort to combat skyrocketing fuel costs.

    Combat operations continue to escalate without any indication of slowing down.

    Israeli forces reported that Iran maintained its missile attacks against Israeli territory early Saturday morning, while Saudi officials confirmed they intercepted 20 drone attacks within just two hours in the kingdom’s eastern provinces, where critical oil infrastructure is located. Saudi defense officials reported no casualties or infrastructure damage from the attacks.

    Casualty figures have climbed beyond 1,300 fatalities in Iran, over 1,000 deaths in Lebanon, 15 Israeli casualties, and 13 American service members killed in the region. The conflict has forced millions of Lebanese and Iranian civilians from their homes.

    Recent developments include:

    Israeli defense forces announced early Saturday they were conducting operations against targets in Tehran.

    This announcement followed the military’s earlier statement that it had launched a series of strikes against Hezbollah installations throughout Beirut’s southern suburbs in Lebanon.

    Earlier that day, Israeli forces issued fresh evacuation orders for seven Beirut suburban neighborhoods, causing some residents to discharge firearms as warning signals for families who had returned home to evacuate once again.

    Initial reports indicated no immediate casualties from these operations.

    United Airlines’ chief executive told company staff the airline is bracing for oil prices to remain near $100 per barrel through the end of 2025.

    In a Friday message to United personnel, CEO Scott Kirby explained that jet fuel costs, which have more than doubled over the past three weeks, would result in $11 billion in annual expenses for the carrier if current price levels persist.

    Brent crude oil has fluctuated dramatically from approximately $70 per barrel before the Iranian conflict began to peaks of $119.50 this week.

    Regarding United’s contingency planning, Kirby stated, “I think there’s a good chance it won’t be that bad, but … there isn’t much downside for us to preparing for that outcome.”

  • Federal Court Demands Voice of America Restoration Amid Trump Administration Appeal

    Federal Court Demands Voice of America Restoration Amid Trump Administration Appeal

    A federal judge issued a forceful ruling this week demanding the restoration of Voice of America operations after the Trump administration significantly reduced the international news service over the past year.

    However, the likelihood of full implementation remains uncertain as the government has already moved to challenge the decision.

    On Thursday, federal officials filed an appeal against U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth’s Tuesday directive requiring hundreds of VOA staff members on paid leave to return to their positions. Judge Lamberth determined on March 7 that Kari Lake, Trump’s appointee to lead the parent U.S. Agency for Global Media, lacked proper authorization to strip VOA down to minimal operations.

    The international broadcasting service began during World War II, delivering news programming to nations without independent press traditions. Prior to Trump’s recent return to office, VOA transmitted content in 49 languages to approximately 362 million listeners worldwide.

    The current administration argued that government-funded news operations, including Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, represented excessive government spending and sought programming that would better support the administration’s agenda. With dramatically reduced personnel, VOA now only serves Iran, Afghanistan, China, North Korea, and Kurdish-speaking regions.

    In his ruling, Judge Lamberth stated that Lake had “repeatedly thumbed her nose” at legal requirements governing VOA’s operations.

    Current VOA director Michael Abramowitz noted that lawmakers from both political parties recognize the importance of robust international broadcasting and have allocated sufficient funding for proper operations. “It is time for all parties to come together and work to rebuild and strengthen the agency,” he stated.

    Quick resolution appears unlikely. White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly declared that “President Trump was elected to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse across the administration, including the Voice of America — and efforts to improve efficiency at USAGM have been a tremendous success. This will not be the final say on the matter.”

    Patsy Widakuswara, who serves as VOA’s White House bureau chief and participated in the legal challenge, explained that “restoring the physical infrastructure is going to take a lot of money and some time but it can be done. What is more difficult is recovering from the trauma that our newsroom has gone through.”

    Former VOA director David Ensor, who led the organization from 2010 to 2014, questioned whether the administration seeks genuine journalism or a propaganda outlet. “We don’t know — maybe no one does at the moment — what the future holds,” he remarked.

    Recent administrative actions provide insight into the direction, despite congressional mandates for VOA to maintain objectivity and balance. This week brought news that Christopher Wallace, a Newsmax executive with 15 years of Fox News Channel experience, would become VOA’s new deputy director. Abramowitz learned of his new deputy’s appointment only when it was publicly announced.

    Widakuswara declined to speculate about Wallace’s appointment’s implications. “I’m not going to pass judgment before seeing his work,” she said.

    While Judge Lamberth directed more than 1,000 furloughed employees to resume work, many may have secured other employment or retired during their year-long absence. The judge also acknowledged his lack of authority to reinstate hundreds of terminated independent contractors.

    Steve Herman, formerly VOA’s White House bureau chief and national correspondent, now serves as executive director of the Jordan Center for Journalism Advocacy and Innovation at the University of Mississippi. Despite the court victory, he doubts the Trump administration will oversee a return to previous operations.

    “I’m a bit of a pessimist,” Herman admitted. “I think it’s going to be very difficult.”

    Beyond opposing VOA’s restoration, Trump typically resists acknowledging setbacks. Last week, the White House nominated Sarah Rogers, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, to head the U.S. Agency for Global Media, potentially increasing administrative control. Senate confirmation is required for her appointment.

    “Is Marco Rubio’s State Department going to allow objective journalism in 49 languages?” Herman questioned. “I don’t think so. I would want that to happen, but that’s a fairy tale.”

    February’s budget legislation allocated $200 million for VOA operations. Though this represents approximately 25% less than previous funding levels, it demonstrates bipartisan congressional support, according to Kate Neeper, VOA’s director of strategy and performance evaluation. Neeper joined Widakuswara as a plaintiff in the restoration lawsuit and has assisted colleagues with various challenges during the past year, including immigration matters.

    “There is a lot of enthusiasm for going back to work,” she observed. “People are eager to show up on Monday.”

    Ensor recalled the significant demand for VOA content in Iran during his tenure as an example of the organization’s impact. Research indicated that 25% to 33% of Iranian households accessed VOA programming weekly, primarily through satellite television. Though authorities occasionally seized satellite equipment, Iranians typically found quick replacements.

    “I believe in Voice of America as a news organization and as a voice of America,” Ensor concluded. “It was important, and it can be again.”

  • Kentucky Survives March Madness Thriller with Incredible Buzzer-Beater

    Kentucky Survives March Madness Thriller with Incredible Buzzer-Beater

    Kentucky’s March Madness hopes appeared finished until Otega Oweh launched a miraculous 35-foot shot that banked in at the final buzzer, sending the Wildcats’ first-round matchup with Santa Clara into overtime on Friday in St. Louis.

    The seventh-seeded Wildcats then controlled the extra period, outpacing the 10th-seeded Broncos 16-11 in overtime to claim an 89-84 victory in Midwest Region play.

    Santa Clara seemed to have sealed the win when Allen Graves connected on a three-pointer from the right side with just 2.4 seconds remaining. However, Oweh caught the inbound pass and launched his desperation heave just in time to extend the game. During overtime, he converted all four of his free throw attempts to help Kentucky pull away.

    Oweh recorded career-best numbers with 35 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, while Mouhamed Dioubate contributed 17 points and eight rebounds for Kentucky (22-13). The Wildcats shot 50.8% in a back-and-forth contest that saw the lead change hands 20 times with 12 ties.

    Elijah Mahi topped Santa Clara (26-9) with 20 points in the program’s first NCAA Tournament appearance in three decades. Graves finished with 17 points and seven rebounds for the Broncos.

    No. 2 Iowa State 108, No. 15 Tennessee State 74

    The Cyclones controlled the final 38 minutes, crushing the Tigers in St. Louis despite losing All-American forward Justin Jefferson to a knee injury.

    Iowa State will face No. 7 Kentucky in Sunday’s second round. Coach T.J. Otzelberger reported that X-rays came back negative and Jefferson will undergo another evaluation Saturday to determine his availability against the Wildcats.

    Freshman Killyan Toure posted 25 points, 11 rebounds and six assists, Nate Heise contributed 22 points and Milan Momcilovic added 17 for Iowa State, which created 16 turnovers. Aaron Nkrumah paced Tennessee State (23-10) with 21 points, while Antoine Lorick III added 20 points and eight rebounds.

    No. 3 Virginia 82, No. 14 Wright State 73

    Jacari White tallied a season-high 26 points and scored the decisive floater with 4:07 remaining as the Cavaliers weathered a strong challenge from the Raiders in Philadelphia.

    White connected on 6 of 8 three-point attempts, Sam Lewis scored 12 points, Malik Thomas contributed 11 and Thijs De Ridder added 10 for Virginia (30-5), which used a crucial 11-0 surge late to pull away and earn its first NCAA Tournament victory since capturing the 2019 national title.

    Michael Imariagbe recorded 19 points and 10 rebounds for Wright State (23-12). Solomon Callaghan contributed 18 points and teamed with Imariagbe to hit 9 of 15 three-pointers. The Raiders made 13 shots from beyond the arc, the most Virginia has surrendered all season.

    No. 4 Alabama 90, No. 13 Hofstra 70

    Labaron Philon Jr. dominated the second half with 21 of his game-high 29 points as the Crimson Tide overcame an early 10-point deficit to defeat the Pride in first-round action in Tampa, Florida.

    Philon, who wore a bandage on his injured chin during the second half, shot 10 of 18 and grabbed eight rebounds, seven assists, and three steals. Alabama (24-9) played without second-leading scorer Aden Holloway, who received a suspension for first-degree felony marijuana possession, but Aiden Sherrill responded with 15 points and 15 rebounds.

    Taylor Bol Bowen contributed 15 points while Amari Allen and Latrell Wrightsell each scored 11 points.

    Hofstra (24-11) established a 28-18 advantage hoping to continue its seven-game winning streak, but Alabama rallied to hold a 37-35 halftime lead. Preston Edmead led the Pride with 24 points, four rebounds and four assists. Cruz Davis contributed 14 points and six assists while German Plotnikov scored 12 points.

    No. 5 Texas Tech 91, No. 12 Akron 71

    Jaylen Petty scored 24 points to lead five Red Raiders in double figures as they pulled away late for a victory over the 12th-seeded Zips in Tampa, Florida.

    Petty made 9 of 14 shots, leading an exceptional shooting display that saw No. 5 Texas Tech (23-10) connect on a season-best 64.2% of its attempts to end a three-game losing streak and capture its NCAA Tournament opener for the sixth time in seven tries. The Red Raiders will meet Alabama on Sunday.

    Amani Lyles (26 points) and Shammah Scott (20 points) were the only Akron players to reach double figures for the Zips (29-6), who saw their 10-game winning streak end and fell to 0-8 in NCAA Tournament play. The Zips entered ranked 21st nationally in three-point shooting at 37.9%, but managed just 5 of 19 from long distance (26.3%).

    No. 6 Tennessee 78, No. 11 Miami (OH) 56

    Ja’Kobi Gillespie scored 22 of his 29 points in the opening half and J.P. Estrella added 14 points and 10 rebounds as the Volunteers ended the remarkable season for the RedHawks in Philadelphia.

    Felix Okpara contributed 12 points and five rebounds for Tennessee (23-11), which advanced to Sunday’s second round against No. 3 Virginia. Gillespie shot 8 of 12 in the first half, including 5 of 6 from three-point range, and finished with a game-high nine assists.

    Peter Suder scored 27 as Miami’s only double-figure scorer for the RedHawks (32-2), who lost two of their final three games after establishing school and Mid-American Conference records with a 31-0 regular season. The RedHawks entered leading the nation in field goal percentage at 52.2%, but the Volunteers held them to a season-low 35.2% (19 of 54).

    West Region

    No. 1 Arizona 92, No. 16 Long Island 58

    The Wildcats used an unusual three-point explosion in the opening half to overpower the underdog Sharks and cruise to an easy first-round victory in San Diego.

    Arizona (33-2) entered the postseason averaging 5.9 three-pointers per game, but Tommy Lloyd’s squad surpassed that mark before the final media timeout of the first half by hitting 6 of 9 from long range. Brayden Burries connected on four first-half three-pointers en route to a game-high 18 points. Koa Peat added 15 points while Ivan Kharchenkov posted 14 points and a game-high 10 rebounds.

    Long Island (24-11) also shot well from deep, with Mason Porter-Brown (15 points) and Jamal Fuller (11 points) combining for five three-pointers by halftime, and six of the team’s eight for the game. However, the Sharks’ inability to stop Arizona inside proved decisive. The Wildcats scored 50 points in the paint, including 22 second-chance points. Arizona’s size advantage showed on the boards, 52-31, with 16 offensive rebounds.

    No. 9 Utah State 86, No. 8 Villanova 76

    MJ Collins Jr. scored seven of his 20 points in the final three minutes as the Aggies outscored the Wildcats 15-3 down the stretch to rally for the first-round victory in San Diego.

    Mason Falslev, the Mountain West Player of the Year, delivered 22 points, seven rebounds and four assists for Utah State (29-6), which will meet top-seeded Arizona on Sunday. Adlan Elamin added 13 points and seven rebounds while Drake Allen contributed 11 points, six assists and three steals.

    Bryce Lindsay led all scorers with 25 points for Villanova (24-9), which built a 10-point lead early in the second half. Duke Brennan and Tyler Perkins each added 15 points. The Wildcats held their final lead, 73-71, with 6:04 remaining on Lindsay’s sixth and final three-pointer.

    Utah State answered with a 9-0 run highlighted by two Collins layups, then he delivered a breakaway dunk that made it 84-74 with 1:13 left.

  • Emergency Utility Work Forces Road Closure in Northeast New Castle County

    Emergency Utility Work Forces Road Closure in Northeast New Castle County

    A section of Carpenters Bridge Road in northeast New Castle County remains shut down to traffic as crews work on emergency utility repairs.

    The Delaware Department of Transportation reports the road closure is in effect at the intersection with Ash Branch Drive and Sweeping Mist Circle. Officials have not provided details about the nature of the utility emergency or an estimated timeline for reopening the roadway.

    Motorists are advised to seek alternate routes while the repair work continues. DelDOT continues to monitor the situation and will provide updates as they become available.

  • Video Shows Justin Timberlake’s DUI Arrest in the Hamptons

    Video Shows Justin Timberlake’s DUI Arrest in the Hamptons

    Newly released police footage shows pop star Justin Timberlake having difficulty completing sobriety tests during his drunk driving arrest last June in New York’s exclusive Hamptons area.

    The eight hours of video, made public Friday, captures Timberlake’s traffic stop by Sag Harbor police after officers say he failed to stop at a stop sign, drifted from his lane, and exited his BMW with the smell of alcohol on his breath.

    During the roadside tests, Timberlake comments to officers, “these are like really hard tests.”

    The former NSYNC member and current solo artist informed officers he had drunk one martini and was driving behind friends to their destination in the wealthy coastal community, located roughly 100 miles east of New York City.

    In an awkward exchange captured on camera, an officer inquires about Timberlake’s reason for visiting the area. “I’m on a world tour,” Timberlake responds.

    “Doing what?” the officer questions.

    “Hard to explain,” Timberlake answers.

    After hesitating, he clarifies: “World tour. I’m Justin Timberlake.”

    The officer eventually replies: “You are Justin Timberlake? Do you have a license with you?”

    The footage shows Timberlake attempting to walk in a straight line and balance on one foot as requested by officers. He appears confused by the directions at times and expresses his anxiety to the officers, saying his heart rate has increased.

    “I’m a little nervous,” Timberlake admits during the encounter.

    While seated in the patrol car, he questions: “Why are you arresting me?”

    At the police facility, when informed he would spend the night in custody, Timberlake responds, “I’m going to be here all night? You guys are wild, man.”

    He requests that officers leave the cell light on before they secure the door.

    Sag Harbor Police released the footage after reaching an agreement with Timberlake’s legal team to provide a censored version. Multiple news organizations, including The Associated Press, had formally requested access to the recordings.

    Timberlake’s attorneys had initially filed a lawsuit to prevent the video’s release, claiming it would “devastate” his privacy by exposing “intimate, highly personal, and sensitive details.” They argued the footage would cause “severe and irreparable harm” to his public image through “public ridicule and harassment.”

    However, in a joint court document filed Friday, Timberlake’s lawyers conceded the video “does not constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy under” New York’s freedom of information statutes and consented to its publication.

    Representatives for Timberlake did not respond to requests for comment Friday.

    Village officials, through their attorney Vincent Toomey, expressed satisfaction that the dispute was settled while allowing them to follow state transparency laws.

    “From the beginning of this matter, after Mr. Timberlake’s arrest, the Village has attempted to comply with the mandates of the Freedom of Information Law,” their statement explained. “As would be true in any case involving records or video footage from our Police Department, such material is reviewed and redacted to address public and officer safety concerns as well as personal privacy considerations.”

    In September 2024, Timberlake entered a guilty plea to impaired driving charges.

    As part of his plea agreement, which reduced his original misdemeanor charge to a non-criminal traffic offense, the Tennessee-born entertainer agreed to record a public service message warning about the dangers of drunk driving.

    His sentence included a $500 fine, 25 hours of community service, and a 90-day driver’s license suspension.

  • Salisbury University Women’s Tennis Team Extends Win Streak to Nine Games

    Salisbury University Women’s Tennis Team Extends Win Streak to Nine Games

    The Salisbury University women’s tennis squad continued their impressive winning streak on Friday, defeating Pacific University 6-1 at the Holce Tennis Courts in Forest Grove, Oregon.

    The victory marked the Sea Gulls’ ninth consecutive win and capped off a flawless road trip through the Pacific Northwest. Salisbury went undefeated in four matches during their week-long journey through Washington state and Oregon.

    The commanding performance against the Pacific Boxers demonstrated the team’s continued dominance as they maintain their perfect record on the extended road swing.

  • Salisbury University Tennis Completes Perfect Week with Narrow Victory Over Pacific

    Salisbury University Tennis Completes Perfect Week with Narrow Victory Over Pacific

    Salisbury University’s men’s tennis team capped off a flawless week-long trip to the Pacific Northwest with another edge-of-your-seat victory, defeating Pacific University’s Boxers by a narrow 4-3 margin on Friday morning.

    The Sea Gulls battled it out at the Holce Tennis Courts in Forest Grove, Oregon, pushing their winning streak to seven consecutive matches. The hard-fought victory marked another close call for Salisbury, which once again demonstrated its ability to perform under pressure when facing tough competition.

    The spring break road trip proved to be a complete success for the Sea Gulls, who managed to stay unbeaten throughout their time competing on the West Coast. Friday’s match against Pacific required Salisbury to dig deep, as the team had to grind out another tight result to maintain their perfect record for the week.

  • Salisbury University Swimmers Show Strong Performance at NCAA Championships

    Salisbury University Swimmers Show Strong Performance at NCAA Championships

    INDIANAPOLIS – Salisbury University’s women’s swimming squad, currently ranked 20th nationally, delivered solid performances during Friday’s third day of competition at the 2026 NCAA Division III Swimming & Diving Championships held at the IU Natatorium.

    The Sea Gulls maintained their competitive edge throughout the day’s events, posting noteworthy times as the championship meet progressed in Indianapolis.

  • Havana Denies U.S. Embassy Diesel Request Amid Ongoing Fuel Tensions

    Havana Denies U.S. Embassy Diesel Request Amid Ongoing Fuel Tensions

    WASHINGTON – Cuban authorities have turned down a request from the United States Embassy in Havana seeking permission to bring in diesel fuel for power generators, this while the Trump administration maintains its ongoing fuel embargo against the Caribbean nation, according to two U.S. officials with knowledge of the situation.

    The rejection comes as the State Department considers cutting personnel at its Havana diplomatic mission due to diesel shortages. Such a reduction would likely prompt Washington to demand corresponding staff cuts at Cuba’s embassy in the nation’s capital, the officials said, speaking anonymously due to the delicate nature of the discussions.

    The Washington Post initially broke the story of Cuba’s refusal.

    The island nation has faced severe petroleum shortages since the United States moved against Venezuela’s leadership, cutting off vital oil deliveries from that country. President Trump subsequently warned other nations against selling or providing oil to Cuba, threatening them with tariffs.

    Cuban authorities are now depending on domestic natural gas, solar energy, and locally produced oil to operate power plants, though these sources fall short of meeting the country’s energy needs.

    This diesel dispute unfolds as Trump pushes for significant governmental changes under Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel’s leadership.

    The president has indicated that Cuban officials would be wise to avoid the same outcome as former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, who faced removal and arrest during a U.S. military intervention in January. Venezuela had served as Cuba’s primary ally and oil supplier through heavily discounted petroleum deals.

    Embassy staffing cuts aren’t expected in the immediate future, as American officials believe current diesel reserves will sustain operations for approximately one more month, according to one source.

    Last week, Díaz-Canel acknowledged that Cuba has engaged in discussions with Washington. This represented the first official confirmation from the Caribbean nation regarding widely rumored talks with the Trump administration during its ongoing pressure campaign.

    Relief organizations started flying humanitarian supplies to Cuba on Friday, delivering solar panels, food supplies, and medical equipment.

    The island is preparing to receive a Russian oil delivery later this month, marking its first petroleum shipment in three months.

    Both Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have identified the island as the next location where America can extend its regional influence.

    The Associated Press previously reported that the Trump administration seeks Díaz-Canel’s departure while continuing diplomatic negotiations with Cuban leadership. Officials have not specified who they would prefer to see assume power.

  • Iran Launches Missiles at Diego Garcia Base, Fails to Strike Target

    Iran Launches Missiles at Diego Garcia Base, Fails to Strike Target

    Iranian forces launched a pair of ballistic missiles targeting the Diego Garcia military installation but failed to strike the joint U.S.-British base located in the Indian Ocean, according to a Friday report from the Wall Street Journal citing several American officials.

    According to the newspaper’s sources, one of the intermediate-range missiles experienced a malfunction while airborne, and a U.S. naval vessel deployed an SM-3 defensive missile against the second projectile, though officials could not confirm whether the defensive action was successful. The Wall Street Journal did not provide details about the timing of the missile attack.

    Neither the White House nor representatives from the British embassy in Washington or the U.K. Ministry of Defence provided immediate responses when Reuters sought comment on the reported incident.

  • Georgia Mother Charged with Murder After Taking Abortion Medication

    Georgia Mother Charged with Murder After Taking Abortion Medication

    A mother of two from Georgia is facing murder charges after she took abortion medication at home and delivered a baby who died shortly after birth, according to police records and court documents.

    Alexia Moore, 31, was taken into custody earlier this month by Camden County authorities near the Florida border following the December 30 incident.

    Georgia prohibits nearly all pregnancy terminations after six weeks of gestation. Following the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision that overturned Roe v. Wade and eliminated federal abortion protections, numerous states have implemented similar restrictions.

    Although some states have pursued legal action against women who obtained abortions, murder charges like those filed against Moore are uncommon. State prosecutors will determine whether to proceed with the case.

    According to police documentation, Moore, who has two young children, consumed misoprostol medication at her residence before being transported to Southeast Georgia Health System Camden Campus on December 30 due to intense pain.

    Medical personnel were told about her pregnancy status and that she had consumed 200 mg of misoprostol prior to her emergency room visit. A friend later informed investigators that Moore used the medication because she did not wish to have another child.

    During her hospital stay, the 31-year-old delivered a premature female infant whom officers noted had “major health issues.” Authorities also reported that Moore had consumed illegal oxycodone, an opioid substance.

    The infant lived for approximately one hour. While the police documentation did not specify the gestational age, the Washington Post reported Moore was 22 to 24 weeks pregnant.

    Attempts to contact Moore’s legal representation were unsuccessful.

    Dana Sussman, senior vice president at Pregnancy Justice advocacy organization, stated the Georgia case lacks legal foundation and should face strong defense arguments.

    “Georgia’s abortion law does not contemplate murder charges for someone who has an abortion, and self-managing an abortion is not a criminal act in Georgia. Charging Ms. Moore with murder is cruel and unjust,” Sussman said in a statement.

    States that have banned or limited abortion access have primarily focused enforcement efforts on medical providers, including physicians who remotely prescribe abortion medications and distribute them via mail services.

    Additionally, several Republican-controlled states including Texas and Florida are challenging federal regulations that have expanded access to abortion medications, including a 2023 rule permitting mail distribution.

  • Israel Launches Fresh Airstrikes on Hezbollah Positions in Beirut

    Israel Launches Fresh Airstrikes on Hezbollah Positions in Beirut

    Israeli forces launched fresh airstrikes targeting Hezbollah positions in Lebanon’s capital during the early morning hours Saturday, military officials confirmed.

    Before conducting the strikes, Israeli authorities issued evacuation orders for residents in seven neighborhoods located in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

    No casualties were immediately reported following the attacks.

    The latest military action comes as Israel has intensified its aerial campaign against Lebanese targets during the third week of ongoing hostilities with the Iran-supported militant organization.

    The current conflict between Israel and Hezbollah has emerged as the most lethal escalation stemming from the broader U.S.-Israeli confrontation with Iran, beginning when the Lebanese militant faction launched attacks against Israel in solidarity with Tehran on March 2. The violence has resulted in more than 1,000 deaths across Lebanon and forced over one million people from their homes.

  • Paris Olympic Boxing Champion Lin Yu-ting Gets Green Light to Return to Competition

    Paris Olympic Boxing Champion Lin Yu-ting Gets Green Light to Return to Competition

    Paris Olympic gold medalist Lin Yu-ting will be allowed to compete internationally again following World Boxing’s completion of a sex-eligibility review, paving the way for her participation in this month’s Asian Boxing Championships in Mongolia.

    World Boxing announced the decision on Friday following an appeals process launched by the Chinese Taipei Boxing Association (CTBA), bringing an end to months of doubt that prevented Lin from participating in multiple high-level competitions since the governing organization introduced new eligibility rules last summer.

    While the organization kept test results confidential, it confirmed the appeal followed established protocols and that Lin qualifies to compete in women’s divisions at World Boxing sanctioned events.

    “We recognize that this has been a difficult period for the boxer and the CTBA and appreciate the way they have approached the appeal process and their acknowledgement of World Boxing’s requirement to ensure that its eligibility policy, which is designed to deliver safety and sporting integrity, has been correctly implemented and followed,” stated World Boxing secretary general Tom Dielen.

    Lin’s eligibility status became controversial during the 2024 Paris Olympics, where she and Algeria’s Imane Khelif captured gold medals while facing widespread false information and political controversy regarding gender standards, despite both athletes being permitted to compete under IOC regulations at that time.

    After assuming control as the sport’s Olympic-level governing organization, World Boxing has established a one-time genetic testing mandate for female category competitors. The policy aims to detect Y chromosome genetic material while providing additional evaluation procedures for complicated situations.

    The Asian Championships are scheduled for March 29 through April 10, and Lin’s participation brings added prominence to a competition now positioned at the heart of boxing’s developing eligibility discussions.

  • Salisbury University Swimmers Make History with First-Ever Top All-American Honor

    Salisbury University Swimmers Make History with First-Ever Top All-American Honor

    INDIANAPOLIS – Salisbury University’s nationally-ranked men’s swimming program reached a historic milestone Friday at the NCAA Division III Swimming & Diving Championships.

    The Sea Gulls’ 200-yard medley relay squad became the first athletes in program history to earn First-Team All-American status during competition at the IU Natatorium on the championship’s third day.

    The achievement marks another significant moment for Salisbury’s 18th-ranked men’s swimming program, which continues to build its reputation on the national stage.

    The historic performance adds to the university’s growing legacy in collegiate swimming competition at the Division III level.

  • Iranian Americans Mark Nowruz Spring Festival Amid Ongoing Conflict

    The Persian New Year celebration of Nowruz traditionally brings joy as communities welcome spring and new beginnings. This year, however, Iranian Americans are finding themselves torn between honoring their cultural traditions and processing the weight of current events.

    Nowruz marks the spring equinox and symbolizes renewal and rebirth in Persian culture. Families typically gather around elaborate table displays called haft sin, featuring seven symbolic items that represent hopes for the coming year.

    For Iranian diaspora communities nationwide, the 2024 celebration carries additional emotional complexity as they navigate their cultural observances while staying connected to developments in their ancestral homeland.

    The traditional festivities, which span multiple days, typically feature vibrant colors, family gatherings, and expressions of optimism for the future. This year’s observances reflect the community’s resilience as they maintain their cultural identity while processing current global circumstances.

  • March Madness Brackets Shattered as Perfect Picks Nearly Extinct

    March Madness Brackets Shattered as Perfect Picks Nearly Extinct

    March Madness has lived up to its name as the hopes for perfect tournament brackets have crumbled for nearly everyone who dreamed of predicting all 63 games correctly. When the second day of competition reached its halfway point, ESPN tracked fewer than 1,500 flawless brackets still standing among millions of entries. The women’s tournament proved equally unpredictable, with roughly two-thirds of ESPN’s women’s bracket challenge participants watching their perfect streaks end within hours of the action beginning. Kalshi’s billion-dollar bracket competition started Day 2 with just 83 unblemished entries remaining. The mathematical probability of correctly predicting every tournament outcome stands at an astronomical one in 120 billion.

    In one of the tournament’s most heart-stopping moments, Santa Clara and Kentucky delivered a spectacular finish that will be remembered long after March ends. Despite ultimately falling to the Wildcats 89-84 in overtime, the Broncos nearly pulled off an upset in their first NCAA Tournament appearance in three decades. With just 2.4 seconds remaining in regulation, Santa Clara connected on a three-pointer to grab a 73-70 advantage. However, Kentucky’s Otega Oweh answered immediately with his own three-point shot from near his team’s bench, banking it in at the buzzer to force overtime. “A tough one to swallow” was how the devastating loss was described for Santa Clara, whose last tournament appearance came during Steve Nash’s playing days 30 years ago.

    President Donald Trump has taken action to protect one of college football’s most cherished traditions by signing an executive order that prohibits College Football Playoff games from conflicting with the Army-Navy game broadcast. The directive instructs the commerce secretary and Federal Communications Commission chairman to work with playoff organizers, the NCAA, and television partners to guarantee the historic military rivalry maintains its exclusive viewing window on the second Saturday of December. Trump’s order anticipates potential playoff expansion that could push the postseason schedule earlier, noting that the current 12-team format’s opening weekend has already followed the Army-Navy contest for two consecutive years.

    History was made in St. Louis when Purdue’s Braden Smith surpassed a legendary NCAA record during his team’s tournament opener against Queens. With 12 minutes and 11 seconds left in the first half, Smith recorded his second assist of the game and 1,077th of his career, breaking former Duke standout Bobby Hurley’s Division I career assist mark. The All-American guard had already established himself as the only player in NCAA history to accumulate at least 1,500 points, 1,000 assists, and 500 rebounds in a career. Smith joins Southern’s Avery Johnson as one of only two players to record 300 or more assists in multiple seasons, earning second-team Associated Press All-American honors this year.

    Otega Oweh’s heroics continued beyond his regulation buzzer-beater as he led Kentucky to victory in the extra period. After Allen Graves connected on a three-pointer from the right wing to put Santa Clara ahead 73-70 with 2.4 seconds remaining, Oweh caught the inbound pass and launched his shot from near midcourt just before time expired, watching it bank home for the tie. The dramatic shot capped a career-best 35-point performance for Oweh, propelling the seventh-seeded Wildcats past the 10th-seeded Broncos. Kentucky advances to face second-seeded Iowa State, who dominated 15th-seeded Tennessee State 108-74 in their Midwest Region matchup.

    The Cleveland Guardians will receive financial relief as Major League Baseball’s investigation continues into gambling allegations involving pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz. Both players were initially placed on paid administrative leave last summer – Ortiz on July 3 and Clase on July 28 – and continued receiving their salaries despite not pitching for the rest of the season. Following their federal indictments on November 9, the organization will no longer be required to pay their salaries while the legal proceedings unfold. A trial date has been set for May 4, though delays are possible. Clase is scheduled to earn $6 million in 2026, the final guaranteed year of his five-year, $20 million contract, while Ortiz makes approximately the league minimum of $780,000.

    Portugal will be without their legendary captain Cristiano Ronaldo for upcoming international friendlies due to a hamstring injury. The 41-year-old superstar has been sidelined since February 28, when he left the field injured during an Al-Nassr match in the Saudi Pro League. National team manager Roberto Martínez excluded the five-time Ballon d’Or recipient from the squad for matches against Mexico in Mexico City on March 28 and the United States in Atlanta on April 1.

    The WNBA and its players’ association have achieved a significant milestone by signing a term sheet for their new collective bargaining agreement. The groundbreaking seven-year deal, pending player ratification and Board of Governors approval, will take effect this season and extend through 2032. Officials are calling the agreement a transformational landmark in the league’s labor relations.

    March Madness created a cross-country family adventure for High Point’s coaching staff as assistant Katie Clayman juggled supporting both her husband and her team. Coach Chelsea Banbury had no concerns about Clayman missing the Panthers’ final practice before their tournament debut, understanding the importance of family during the busy March schedule. Clayman watched her husband’s team upset fifth-seeded Wisconsin in Portland, Oregon on Thursday before embarking on a challenging journey back to Nashville for the 15th-seeded Panthers’ Saturday night showdown against second-seeded Vanderbilt. Despite the lack of direct flights and travel complications, Banbury maintained communication with Clayman about necessary game film preparation for Saturday’s shootaround.

    A federal wrongful death lawsuit has been filed against a Costa Rican resort following the tragic death of former New York Yankees player Brett Gardner’s son. The Gardner family initiated legal action Friday in Philadelphia federal court, alleging negligence by the owners and operators of the Arenas Del Mar resort. Fourteen-year-old Miller Gardner died in March 2025 from what has been determined to be carbon monoxide poisoning during the family’s stay at the resort. The defendants had not responded to requests for comment as of Friday.

  • Key Moments in Breonna Taylor Case Since 2020 Fatal Police Shooting

    Key Moments in Breonna Taylor Case Since 2020 Fatal Police Shooting

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A chronological review of significant developments following Breonna Taylor’s death, a Black woman fatally shot by Louisville police officers in her residence:

    — March 13, 2020: Taylor dies when officers execute a drug-related search warrant at her apartment.

    — March 13, hours afterward: Authorities announce Kenneth Walker’s detention for injuring an officer during a shootout; Taylor remains unnamed during the press briefing, referenced only as “an unresponsive woman who was later pronounced dead.”

    — March-April 2020: Media coverage of the incident remains minimal as coronavirus concerns dominate national attention.

    — April 27, 2020: Taylor’s relatives initiate a wrongful death claim against the police department and city officials, disputing the official account.

    — May 22, 2020: Officials announce the dismissal of attempted murder accusations against Walker, who fired at officers inside his girlfriend’s residence.

    — May 28, 2020: Walker’s distressed emergency call becomes public, occurring three days following George Floyd’s death by Minneapolis police, triggering major demonstrations in Louisville.

    — May 29, 2020: Mayor Greg Fischer halts Louisville police’s no-knock warrant procedures.

    — June 1, 2020: Fischer dismisses Police Chief Steve Conrad following officers’ failure to activate body cameras during the fatal shooting of barbecue vendor David McAtee amid Louisville demonstrations.

    — June 11, 2020: Louisville Metro Council unanimously approves “Breonna’s Law,” prohibiting no-knock warrant usage.

    — June 23, 2020: Officer Brett Hankison, among three officers who discharged weapons during Taylor’s death, loses his job for “blindly” shooting into Taylor’s residence.

    — Sept. 15, 2020: Municipal authorities reveal a civil agreement granting Taylor’s relatives $12 million plus commitments for police department changes.

    — Sept. 23, 2020: A Kentucky grand jury charges Hankison for firing into adjacent units, though no officers face charges directly related to Taylor’s death.

    — April 26, 2021: Attorney General Merrick Garland reveals a Justice Department investigation into Louisville policing practices regarding Taylor’s death.

    — March 3, 2022: Former Kentucky detective Brett Hankison receives acquittal on state charges for endangering residents when he fired into Taylor’s residence during the failed drug operation that caused Taylor’s death.

    — Dec. 12, 2022: Walker resolves two legal actions against Louisville. Municipal officials agree to pay $2 million to settle Walker’s federal and state court cases.

    — March 8, 2023: The U.S. Justice Department determines Louisville police demonstrated systematic constitutional violations and discrimination against Black residents following an inquiry triggered by Taylor’s death.

    — Nov. 16, 2023: Jury members cannot reach consensus on federal civil rights accusations against Hankison, who faced charges in the police operation that killed Taylor. The judge declares a mistrial.

    — Dec. 13, 2023: Federal attorneys inform a judge of their intention to pursue a second trial against Hankison.

    — Aug. 23, 2024: A federal judge dismisses serious charges against two former Louisville officers, Joshua Jaynes and Kyle Meany, accused of creating false warrant information that brought police to Taylor’s residence before the fatal shooting.

    — Oct. 1, 2024: Federal attorneys file fresh charges against Jaynes and Meany.

    — Nov. 2, 2024: A federal jury finds Hankison guilty of excessive force against Taylor during the failed 2020 drug operation that resulted in her death. This marks the initial conviction of a Louisville officer involved in the deadly operation.

    — Dec. 12, 2024: The Justice Department and Louisville reach a deal to overhaul the city’s police department following an investigation sparked by Taylor’s death.

    — May 21, 2025: The Department of Justice, operating under President Donald Trump’s administration, acts to terminate the police reform deal with Louisville, along with a Minneapolis settlement and investigative conclusions regarding six additional police departments that President Joe Biden’s administration had charged with civil rights violations.

    — July 21, 2025: A federal judge imposes a 33-month prison term on Hankison, rejecting a Department of Justice recommendation for no incarceration.

    — Aug. 20, 2025: A federal judge dismisses serious charges in the updated indictment against Jaynes and Meany.

    — Nov. 17, 2025: The Department of Justice contends before the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that Hankison should receive no prison sentence.

    — Dec. 31, 2025: A federal judge rejects the proposed Louisville police reform deal with the Department of Justice.

    — March 20, 2026: The Department of Justice submits a request to drop the criminal prosecution against Jaynes and Meany.

  • Military Buildup Continues in Middle East Despite Trump’s Wind-Down Comments

    Military Buildup Continues in Middle East Despite Trump’s Wind-Down Comments

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — As Middle Eastern conflict enters its third week, Iran issued fresh warnings Friday about expanding retaliation against recreational and tourist locations globally, while Washington announced additional naval vessels and Marines heading to the region.

    Later that day, President Donald Trump posted on social media that his administration was contemplating a “wind-down” of military activities in the area. His statement followed another oil price surge that sent U.S. markets tumbling.

    These contradictory signals emerged as the conflict shows no indication of slowing.

    Iranian forces launched fresh strikes against Israeli targets and energy infrastructure in nearby Gulf nations, coinciding with one of Islam’s most sacred observances. Iranians simultaneously marked Nowruz, their traditional New Year celebration, while Israeli bombing campaigns hit Tehran.

    Limited intelligence from Iran makes it difficult to assess damage to the nation’s weapons facilities, nuclear installations, or energy infrastructure from sustained American and Israeli bombardments that commenced February 28. Questions also remain about Iran’s current leadership structure. However, Iranian attacks continue disrupting oil distribution and driving up food and fuel costs worldwide.

    Washington and Tel Aviv have provided varying justifications for military action, ranging from encouraging internal Iranian revolt to dismantling the country’s nuclear and missile capabilities. No evidence of popular uprising has emerged, and no conclusion to hostilities appears imminent.

    Trump stated in his social media message: “We are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts in the Middle East.”

    This statement contradicted his administration’s decision to strengthen regional military presence and seek an additional $200 billion in congressional war funding.

    Pentagon officials confirmed to The Associated Press that three additional amphibious assault vessels carrying approximately 2,500 Marines are deploying to the Middle East. Two additional officials verified ship movements without specifying destinations. All sources requested anonymity due to operational sensitivity.

    Earlier this week, the military redirected another amphibious group with 2,500 Marines from Pacific operations to Middle Eastern waters. These forces will supplement over 50,000 American military personnel already stationed regionally.

    While Trump has ruled out ground invasion of Iran, he maintains that all military options remain available.

    Iranian Revolutionary Guard spokesman Gen. Ali Mohammad Naeini told state media Friday that missile production continues despite Israeli claims of destroying manufacturing capacity. Iranian television later reported Naeini’s death in an airstrike.

    Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei issued a written Nowruz statement praising Iranian resilience during wartime. He characterized American and Israeli attacks as based on false assumptions that eliminating top Iranian officials would trigger governmental collapse.

    Khamenei has remained out of public view since assuming supreme leadership after Israeli strikes killed his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and reportedly injured him. Airstrikes have also eliminated Iran’s Supreme National Security Council head and numerous other senior officials.

    Iran’s chief military spokesman, Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi, declared that “parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations” worldwide would become unsafe for enemy nations. This threat raises concerns about Iran returning to international militant tactics as leverage.

    NATO commander Gen. Alexus Grynkewich announced the alliance relocated several hundred Iraqi-based personnel to Europe. These advisors had been working with Iraqi defense officials before Iranian attacks targeted British, French, and Italian military installations.

    Since Israel bombed Iran’s massive South Pars offshore gas field, Iranian attacks on Gulf neighbors have intensified while maintaining shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, through which twenty percent of global oil and essential goods transit.

    Early Friday, two Iranian drone waves struck a Kuwaiti oil refinery, igniting fires. The Mina Al-Ahmadi facility processes approximately 730,000 barrels daily, ranking among the Middle East’s largest refineries.

    Brent crude oil, the international benchmark, has climbed to around $108 per barrel during fighting, up from roughly $70 before hostilities began.

    Trump’s social media post provided unclear guidance on strait security, suggesting other nations using the waterway should patrol it, though this wouldn’t be necessary once Iran’s threat “is eradicated.”

    The president previously criticized NATO allies as “cowards” for not directly participating in waterway security operations.

    British officials announced Friday they agreed to allow American forces to use UK bases for operations preventing Iranian shipping attacks in the strait.

    Powerful explosions rocked Dubai as air defense systems intercepted incoming fire over the city, where many observed Eid al-Fitr, marking Ramadan’s conclusion.

    Jerusalem experienced loud explosions after Israeli military warned of approaching Iranian missiles. Military officials reported missile debris struck Jerusalem’s Old City perimeter, near sites sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

    Iranian casualties have exceeded 1,300 during the conflict. Israeli operations against Iran-backed Hezbollah forces in Lebanon have displaced over one million people, with Lebanese authorities reporting more than 1,000 deaths. In Israel, Iranian missiles have killed 15 civilians, while four others died in the occupied West Bank. American military deaths total at least 13.

  • Tropical Cyclone Narelle Targets Australia’s Northern Territory

    Tropical Cyclone Narelle Targets Australia’s Northern Territory

    SYDNEY, March 21 – Australia’s Northern Territory is preparing for the arrival of Tropical Cyclone Narelle on Saturday, following the storm’s destructive passage through the country’s northeastern coastline a day earlier, which left communities dealing with damaging winds, torrential rainfall and widespread electrical outages.

    The weather system, currently classified as a Category 2 cyclone as it travels westward across the Gulf of Carpentaria, is projected to strike the territory’s isolated eastern regions during the late Saturday hours, according to Australia’s meteorological service.

    “Narelle is forecast to strengthen during Saturday as it tracks quickly westwards,” officials from the weather bureau stated, predicting devastating wind speeds reaching 185 kilometers per hour (115 miles per hour).

    The previous day saw Narelle strike Queensland state as a powerful Category 4 storm – just one level below maximum intensity – making landfall approximately 550 kilometers (340 miles) north of Cairns, the primary access point for visitors to the renowned Great Barrier Reef. Meteorologists subsequently reduced the storm’s classification as it progressed over land.

    This latest cyclone follows Tropical Cyclone Fina’s impact on the Northern Territory last November and brings back difficult recollections of the devastating Cyclone Tracy, which destroyed most of Darwin, the region’s capital city, on Christmas Day in 1974. That historic storm claimed 66 lives and remains among Australia’s most catastrophic natural disasters.

  • Mexican Retail Giant Femsa Reduces Staff at Digital Payment Division Spin

    Mexican Retail Giant Femsa Reduces Staff at Digital Payment Division Spin

    MEXICO CITY – Mexican retail and beverage conglomerate Femsa announced Friday that it is reducing its workforce at Spin, the company’s financial technology subsidiary that operates a digital payment application introduced in 2021.

    While Femsa declined to specify how many jobs are being eliminated, a company representative explained that the workforce reduction is part of a strategic restructuring designed to concentrate more resources on its Oxxo convenience store operations.

    “This process has primarily focused on support functions, without impacting operations for our customers,” the company said in a statement.

    Earlier Friday, Bloomberg had reported that several hundred jobs were cut at Spin as part of broader workforce reductions affecting multiple business units within the corporate group.

    Mexico has seen significant growth in financial technology firms providing digital payment solutions in recent years. Femsa, widely recognized for its extensive network of Oxxo retail locations, has worked to integrate digital financial services with its traditional cash-heavy retail operations, where customers frequently handle bill payments and money transfers.

    During its most recent quarterly earnings announcement, Femsa revealed plans to postpone pursuing a banking license until its consumer lending services show stronger performance. The company also indicated it would discontinue seeking external partnerships for its Premia customer rewards program, which operates through the Spin platform.

  • Pentagon Makes Palantir AI System Official Military Program Nationwide

    Pentagon Makes Palantir AI System Official Military Program Nationwide

    The U.S. Defense Department will officially integrate Palantir’s Maven artificial intelligence platform across all military branches, according to an internal Pentagon memo obtained by Reuters.

    Deputy Defense Secretary Steve Feinberg announced in a March 9 letter to top Pentagon officials and military commanders that the Maven Smart System will become a formal program of record. Feinberg stated that implementing this AI technology will equip military personnel “with the latest tools necessary to detect, deter, and dominate our adversaries in all domains.”

    The transition is scheduled to take effect before the fiscal year concludes in September, according to the previously unreported correspondence.

    Maven serves as a command-and-control software that processes battlefield intelligence and pinpoints targets. The system currently functions as the military’s primary AI platform and has supported thousands of targeted operations against Iran during the past three weeks.

    Making Maven an official program will expedite its implementation throughout all military services while ensuring consistent, long-term funding, Feinberg explained in the memo.

    The directive requires transferring Maven’s oversight from the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency to the Pentagon’s Chief Digital Artificial Intelligence Office within 30 days. The Army will handle future Palantir contracts, the letter specified.

    “It is imperative that we invest now and with focus to deepen the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) across the Joint Force and establish AI-enabled decision-making as the cornerstone of our strategy,” Feinberg stated in the memo.

    Neither Palantir nor the Pentagon provided immediate responses to requests for comment.

    This development represents a major victory for Palantir, which has secured an increasing number of government contracts, including a potential $10 billion Army agreement announced last summer. These contracts have contributed to doubling the company’s stock value over the past year, pushing its market capitalization to approximately $360 billion.

    The Maven system can quickly process vast quantities of information from satellites, unmanned aircraft, radar systems, sensors and intelligence briefings. It uses artificial intelligence to automatically detect potential threats or targets, including enemy vehicles, structures and ammunition supplies.

    At a recent Palantir conference, Pentagon AI office director Cameron Stanley showcased how the Maven platform could support weapons targeting in Middle Eastern operations, displaying heat map images from the system.

    “When we started this, it literally took hours to do what you just saw,” Stanley commented during the demonstration, which was recorded in a company YouTube video published last week.

    United Nations expert groups have cautioned that AI-powered weapons targeting without human oversight creates ethical, legal and security concerns, as artificial intelligence can inherit unintended biases from its training data.

    Palantir maintains that its technology does not make lethal choices and that humans retain full responsibility for target selection and approval.

    The company created its AI system for the Pentagon’s Project Maven, which started as a drone image analysis program in 2017. In 2024, the Defense Department granted Palantir a contract valued at up to $480 million. That same year, Palantir Chief Technology Officer Shyam Sankar informed the House Armed Services Committee that Maven served “tens of thousands” of users and requested additional congressional funding. By May 2025, the Pentagon raised the contract limit to $1.3 billion.

    A potential challenge for expanded Maven deployment involves the software’s incorporation of Anthropic’s Claude AI technology, as Reuters previously reported. The Pentagon recently classified Anthropic as a supply chain risk following ongoing disputes about AI safety protocols.

  • United Airlines Slashes Flight Schedule Due to Rising Fuel Costs

    United Airlines Slashes Flight Schedule Due to Rising Fuel Costs

    United Airlines announced Friday it will eliminate roughly 5% of its scheduled flights over the next few months as aviation fuel costs skyrocket amid ongoing Middle East tensions, according to CEO Scott Kirby.

    In a message distributed to company staff and published on United’s corporate website, Kirby warned of significant financial impact from the fuel price increases. “If prices stayed at this level, it would mean an extra $11 billion in annual expense just for jet fuel,” Kirby stated. His projections are based on oil reaching $175 per barrel and remaining elevated until late 2027 before dropping back to $100 per barrel.

    The airline plans to reinstate its complete flight schedule by autumn, according to Kirby’s announcement.

    United’s capacity reductions will primarily target slower travel periods, with approximately three percentage points of flights being eliminated during the second and third quarters. The carrier has also suspended operations to Ben Gurion International Airport in Israel and Dubai International Airport in the UAE, representing roughly one percentage point of total capacity.

    An additional one percentage point reduction will affect service to Chicago O’Hare International Airport, following the Federal Aviation Administration’s directive to reduce summer flight operations at that hub.

  • Goldey-Beacom Golf Team Finishes Runner-Up at Pennsylvania Tournament

    Goldey-Beacom Golf Team Finishes Runner-Up at Pennsylvania Tournament

    The Goldey-Beacom Lightning men’s golf team delivered a strong performance at the Jefferson Invitational tournament held in Norristown, Pennsylvania, earning a runner-up finish among the competing schools.

    The Lightning carded a combined team score of 607 over the course of the tournament, placing them in second position overall. Saint Thomas Aquinas College captured the tournament championship with a winning score of 588, while Millersville University rounded out the top three with a team total of 608.

    The solid showing continues the competitive season for Goldey-Beacom’s golf program as they compete against regional collegiate opponents.

  • Goldey-Beacom Women’s Tennis Drops Season Opener 5-2 at West Chester

    Goldey-Beacom Women’s Tennis Drops Season Opener 5-2 at West Chester

    The Goldey-Beacom women’s tennis team began their spring campaign on a challenging note, suffering a 5-2 defeat to West Chester University on the road in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

    The Lightning faced additional obstacles in the season opener, taking the court with only five healthy players available for competition. Despite the limited roster, Goldey-Beacom managed to secure two points in the loss.

    The match marked the start of spring play for the Lightning’s tennis program as they look to build momentum despite the early setback and roster challenges.

  • Delaware Blue Hens Tennis Dominates Richmond in 4-1 Victory

    Delaware Blue Hens Tennis Dominates Richmond in 4-1 Victory

    NEWARK, Del. – The University of Delaware men’s tennis squad delivered a dominant performance Friday morning, securing a decisive 4-1 victory over Richmond at their home courts.

    The Blue Hens showcased their strength across the lineup, winning four of the five matches to earn the impressive triumph. The morning competition saw Delaware control most of the action against their visiting opponents.

    The convincing win adds another strong result to Delaware’s season as they continue their campaign on the tennis courts in Newark.

  • Delaware Softball’s Luzon Delivers Home Run Despite Team’s Defeat to Missouri State

    Delaware Softball’s Luzon Delivers Home Run Despite Team’s Defeat to Missouri State

    University of Delaware softball standout Kristen Luzon provided a highlight with a home run blast, though it wasn’t enough to prevent the Blue Hens from falling to Missouri State in their recent matchup.

    Despite Luzon’s powerful swing that cleared the fence, Delaware was unable to generate enough offense to overcome their opponents from Missouri State. The loss adds to the team’s record as they continue their season.

    Luzon’s home run served as the primary offensive highlight for the Blue Hens in the contest, showcasing the kind of power hitting that has made her a key contributor to the Delaware softball program.

  • International Aid Convoy Delivers 20 Tons of Supplies to Crisis-Hit Cuba

    International Aid Convoy Delivers 20 Tons of Supplies to Crisis-Hit Cuba

    HAVANA — International solidarity efforts reached Cuba Friday as approximately 650 representatives from 33 nations and 120 organizations delivered roughly 20 tons of emergency humanitarian supplies to the island nation struggling through a devastating energy shortage.

    The delegates participating in the “Our America Convoy to Cuba” touched down via aircraft from Italy, France, Spain, the United States, and multiple Latin American nations, with additional participants expected to dock Saturday aboard a three-ship flotilla departing from Mexico, according to organizers.

    An advance team of activists had already reached Havana Wednesday, distributing donated supplies directly to medical facilities.

    This international relief effort unfolds against a backdrop of escalating U.S.-Cuba tensions, with both governments confirming ongoing diplomatic discussions following President Donald Trump’s implementation of an oil embargo. Trump recently declared he anticipated having the “honor” of “taking Cuba in some form,” stating: “I can do anything I want.”

    The donated materials include solar energy equipment, food supplies, and cancer treatment medications for the island, which has experienced widespread disruptions since Trump’s January energy embargo intensified an ongoing five-year economic downturn as his administration pushes for governmental restructuring.

    “In the end, we are dozens and dozens of delegates, and we represent millions of people in this convoy,” declared David Adler, an American citizen serving as coordinator for Progressive International, among the caravan’s organizing groups. “We cannot allow this collective punishment. We cannot normalize it.”

    Cuban Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernández de Cossío responded Friday to speculation regarding potential governmental changes or possible removal of Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel through the current bilateral negotiations.

    “The Cuban political system is not up for negotiation, nor is the president, nor the position of any official in Cuba, subject to negotiation with the United States or with the government of any other country,” Fernández de Cossío stated.

    He emphasized numerous areas of mutual interest where Washington dialogue remains feasible, citing historical precedent.

    Manolo de los Santos, representing The People’s Forum — another organizing entity — characterized traveling to Cuba currently as both “defying the U.S. blockade” and preventing “another Gaza in the Americas.”

    Multiple experts and regional officials, including Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, have cautioned about potential humanitarian catastrophe in Cuba.

    Adler noted overlapping support between the Gaza-bound flotilla and the Cuba mission. Beyond social advocates, the Cuban effort encompasses labor organizations, notable personalities, and political movements, including Mexico’s Morena party, Brazil’s Workers’ Party, and Uruguay’s Broad Front.

    Prominent participants include British Parliament member Jeremy Corbyn; Colombian Senator Clara López; former Spanish political leader Pablo Iglesias; American labor organizer Chris Smalls; and Brazilian humanitarian worker Thiago Ávila.

    Following weeks where Cuba received assistance solely from Mexico, which provided food and sanitary supplies through three separate shipments, international activists and officials began forming support networks and gathering donations.

    Díaz-Canel conveyed appreciation through social media platforms.

    “They bring shipments of aid to combat the attempt to suffocate us. Welcome once again to the compassion of the people. Solidarity always returns to those who practice it with no other interest than human well-being,” the president stated.

    Brazil separately announced plans to ship 20,000 tons of food items, mainly rice, beans, and milk powder. Chilean legislators also delivered aid Thursday, while China confirmed through its embassy that a vessel loaded with 60,000 tons of rice had departed for Cuba.

  • Actor Noah Wyle Champions California Tax Breaks to Revive U.S. Film Production

    Actor Noah Wyle Champions California Tax Breaks to Revive U.S. Film Production

    BURBANK, Calif. — Actor Noah Wyle appeared before California lawmakers Friday to advocate for entertainment industry tax incentives, citing his Emmy Award-winning HBO Max series “The Pitt” as evidence that domestic film and television production can flourish with proper support.

    The 54-year-old star, who serves as executive producer and occasional director of the medical drama, addressed a hearing led by California Senator Adam Schiff at Burbank City Hall. Wyle emphasized that his show represents a successful example of keeping production in Hollywood during an era when many projects have relocated to regions offering better financial incentives.

    “I was asked to participate in today’s hearing to tell a success story,” Wyle stated. “I’m happy to report we’ll commence shooting season three this summer, and that a rising tide has indeed lifted all boats.”

    Wyle credited California’s production tax credit program with making it financially feasible to film “The Pitt” at Warner Bros. studios in Burbank. According to the actor, the show’s inaugural season generated approximately 600 production positions and contributed $125 million to California’s economy.

    “That is proof of concept,” he declared. “That is replicable. And it is vital to the strength of our industry and to our city to support these incentives.”

    The series, which depicts a fictional Pittsburgh hospital, earned Wyle an Emmy for outstanding lead actor in a drama series. His return to medical television comes after his memorable 15-year run on NBC’s “ER” from 1994 to 2009.

    During his testimony, Wyle shared personal struggles from the intervening years when work opportunities required extensive travel away from home.

    “I’ll speak from personal experience and say that I haven’t slept in my own bed in 15 years while I’ve been working as an actor. Since the end of ‘ER,’” Wyle revealed. “It’s hard on families, and I can speak to that. It is hard to fracture your industry that way.”

    Congressional representatives at the hearing discussed efforts to establish federal production tax incentives similar to those implemented by individual states.

    Representative Laura Friedman, whose congressional district encompasses Burbank and its major studios, defended the entertainment industry against criticism of receiving preferential treatment.

    “We give tax credits to many industries. Hollywood is not asking for special treatment,” Friedman explained. “This is something that is standard across the United States for industries that we have determined that we care about.”

    Matthew Loeb, who leads the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees representing behind-the-scenes workers, expressed disappointment over Marvel’s recent decision to relocate its production operations from Georgia to England. However, he noted that the project-based nature of film production makes it easier for the industry to return compared to other sectors.

    The proposed merger between Paramount and Warner Bros. emerged as a significant concern throughout the hearing, with speakers worried about potential job losses and reduced production activity.

    “This merger could define whether Los Angeles remains the entertainment capital of the world or becomes an afterthought,” Friedman warned.

    While Paramount executives have pledged to produce 15 major films annually for each studio, attendees expressed skepticism about where those productions would actually be filmed.

    “The big missing piece is that there is no commitment about where they’re going to shoot 30 films,” Loeb observed.

    Speakers highlighted the broader economic impact of entertainment production on supporting businesses, from hospitality workers to equipment suppliers to catering services.

    “All those livelihoods are tied to a production shop setting up in their community,” Schiff noted.

    Representative Sydney Kamlager-Dove shared an anecdote illustrating widespread community interest in entertainment industry recovery.

    “After my acupuncturist took the needles out of my back, she said, ‘Can you do anything to help bring back entertainment jobs?’” Kamlager-Dove recounted.

  • Chicago Transit Authority Sues Federal Government Over Frozen $2B Rail Project

    Chicago Transit Authority Sues Federal Government Over Frozen $2B Rail Project

    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Chicago’s public transit system has taken legal action against the federal government, demanding the restoration of $2 billion in rail expansion funds that were suspended by the Trump administration in the fall.

    The federal lawsuit, submitted Friday to U.S. District Court in Chicago, alleges the administration made an arbitrary decision to freeze transit construction funding as part of efforts to eliminate race and gender-based contracting requirements, which officials claim violate constitutional principles. The legal action names both the U.S. Department of Transportation and Federal Transportation Authority as defendants.

    Federal transportation officials defended their position, stating they are working to eliminate what they called a “discriminatory” and “illegal” contracting system.

    The Chicago legal challenge follows a similar lawsuit filed by New York City officials just days earlier, seeking to recover $60 million in suspended federal transit funding.

    The funding freeze has particularly impacted a major 5.3-mile expansion of Chicago’s Red Line elevated rail system, which would add four stations and provide transit access to 100,000 additional residents in underserved and predominantly Black communities. The federal money was also supporting ongoing North Side improvements, including replacing rails that were more than a century old and constructing four new accessible stations.

    “We are fully committed to the success of these projects, and we will take every step necessary to ensure that they move forward,” CTA Acting President Nora Leerhsen said in a statement. “The Red Line extension is a historic investment into the far South Side of Chicago that will transform public transit and create new economic opportunity for the communities it will serve.”

    According to the lawsuit, the Trump administration implemented new regulations in September eliminating race and gender-based contracting preferences, but only applied these changes retroactively to grants in Chicago and New York. Grant funding was suspended on October 3, 2025, with the CTA submitting requested documentation several weeks afterward.

    Transportation officials requested additional records in December, but after the CTA’s response, no further contact has occurred, according to the legal filing, which describes the government’s behavior as “unlawful many times over.”

    The lawsuit argues the funding suspension unfairly punishes the CTA for adhering to regulations that were in effect at the time, while failing to “explain why grants to the hundreds of other projects nationwide” operating under identical rules continued receiving uninterrupted funding.

    The Transportation Department stated in an email that it will continue opposing “discriminatory, illegal, and wasteful contracting practices.”

    “The American people don’t care what race or gender construction workers, pipefitters, or electricians are,” the department said. “They just want these important projects built quickly and efficiently.”

  • Former Terror Chief Faces FBI Probe After Resigning Over Iran Conflict

    Former Terror Chief Faces FBI Probe After Resigning Over Iran Conflict

    A former high-ranking counterterrorism official who quit his position this week over his opposition to military action in Iran is now defending himself against federal leak allegations.

    Joe Kent, who previously led the National Counterterrorism Center, publicly rejected claims Friday that he improperly disclosed classified materials to unauthorized parties.

    According to the Associated Press, federal investigators are examining whether Kent shared sensitive information inappropriately. A source with knowledge of the situation indicated the probe began before Kent submitted his resignation on Tuesday, though further specifics remain unavailable.

    Speaking during an appearance on SiriusXM’s “The Megyn Kelly Show,” Kent dismissed the accusations. “As for the leak allegations, I’m not concerned because I know I did nothing wrong,” Kent stated. He indicated his belief that he’s facing scrutiny due to his public criticism.

    “I am concerned because we’ve all seen the FBI and the full weight of the government come down on individuals who speak out,” Kent added.

    The Department of Justice has launched multiple investigations targeting individuals viewed as political opponents of President Donald Trump, including former FBI Director James Comey, though securing convictions has proven challenging for prosecutors.

    Kent announced his departure from the government’s top counterterrorism position Tuesday, stating he “cannot in good conscience” back the Trump administration’s military campaign against Iran.

    In a social media post on X, Kent wrote: “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.”

    President Trump subsequently criticized Kent to reporters, saying he had always considered the official “weak on security.” Trump added that if administration members don’t view Iran as dangerous, “we don’t want those people.” Additional Trump officials, including CIA Director John Ratcliffe, have worked to separate themselves from Kent and his conclusions about the conflict.

  • Georgia Court: Counties Can Reject Election Board Nominees from Political Parties

    Georgia Court: Counties Can Reject Election Board Nominees from Political Parties

    ATLANTA (AP) — County commissioners in Georgia’s most populous county won the right to turn down political party nominees for election board positions, according to a Friday ruling from a state appeals court that may reduce Republican challenges to election oversight in areas with Democratic majorities.

    The Georgia Court of Appeals determined that although Fulton County’s elected officials must select two county election board members from candidates submitted by the local Republican Party, county commissioners retain the authority to decline those nominations and request alternative options.

    Last year, the Democratic-controlled Fulton County Commission rejected Republican candidates Julie Adams and Jason Frazier, claiming their conduct rendered them unfit for service. Following a lawsuit from the county’s Republican Party, a lower court judge commanded commissioners to approve Adams and Frazier, later holding the board in contempt when they declined. Friday’s decision eliminates the county’s obligation to pay a daily contempt penalty of $10,000 that had been suspended during the appeal process.

    Writing for the unanimous three-judge panel, Presiding Judge Anne Barnes stated that while commissioners must select from Republican nominees, they “were acting within their own lawful and discretionary authority when they declined to seat” the party’s selections. Barnes indicated the remedy would be for Republicans to provide new candidates.

    The state Supreme Court could hear a Republican appeal, though justices aren’t required to accept the case. Legal counsel for the county Republican Party hasn’t yet responded to inquiries about potential further appeals.

    Fulton County’s five-member election board consists of a chairperson chosen by commissioners plus two nominees from both the Republican and Democratic county parties, who must then receive commissioner approval. Candidates must reside in Fulton County, maintain voter registration, and cannot currently hold office or be running for public positions.

    Adams has held her election board position since February 2024. She declined to certify primary election outcomes last year and filed an unsuccessful lawsuit against the election board seeking authorization for county officials to reject election certifications. Frazier has formally contested the voting eligibility of thousands of Fulton County residents. Both individuals play significant roles in a Republican movement that continues questioning Donald Trump’s 2020 Georgia defeat and advocating for election procedure modifications.

    While Adams’ term ended in June, she continues serving until either she or a successor receives appointment to her position. The second Republican seat remains unfilled.

    Frazier argued the decision grants excessive power to Democratic commissioners to compel Republicans to nominate candidates favored by Democrats.

    “If this holds, the Dems on the Fulton County Board of Commissioners can essentially pick their Dem Board of Elections Members, The Chair AND THE REPUBLICANS!!!!!!!!!” Frazier posted on social media.

    Fulton County Commissioner Dana Barrett, a Democrat who highlights her opposition to seating Adams and Frazier in her current campaign for Georgia secretary of state, celebrated the decision against appointing the “MAGA extremists.”

    “The contempt charges, the fines, the threats of jail time — all overturned by today’s ruling,” Barrett stated. “This is a huge win for Georgia voters and a win for free, fair, and secure elections.”

    Since most Georgia election boards follow Fulton County’s appointment structure, Friday’s decision could enable county commissions statewide to reject political party nominees they oppose. In metropolitan Atlanta, this might allow Democratic county commissioners to turn away Republican activists who claim Democratic counties mismanage elections, while potentially reducing Democratic representation on election boards in Republican-controlled areas.

    A 2018 state Supreme Court decision had previously limited parties’ ability to automatically secure election board placements.

    During 2024, Cherokee County, a heavily Republican Atlanta suburb, initially considered appointing just one Democrat to its five-member election board. After rejecting that approach, commissioners selected a Democrat unfamiliar to county Democratic Party leadership rather than the party’s official nominee.

  • I-495 Speed Limit Drops to 55 MPH as Rain Creates Hazardous Conditions

    I-495 Speed Limit Drops to 55 MPH as Rain Creates Hazardous Conditions

    Motorists traveling on Interstate 495 will need to slow down as transportation authorities have implemented a temporary speed reduction due to current weather conditions.

    The Delaware Department of Transportation has lowered the speed limit to 55 miles per hour on I-495 as rain creates potentially dangerous driving conditions for commuters and travelers.

    The speed restriction is a safety precaution designed to reduce the risk of accidents on wet roadways, where vehicles require longer stopping distances and traction can be compromised.

    Drivers are advised to exercise additional caution, maintain safe following distances, and adjust their speed according to road conditions while the temporary limit remains in effect.

  • Major Investment Fund Records First Monthly Decline in Three Years

    Major Investment Fund Records First Monthly Decline in Three Years

    Investment giant Blackstone saw its primary private credit fund experience its first monthly decline in over three years during February, according to data published on the fund’s website Friday. This development comes as investors express mounting concerns about liquidity challenges within the private credit industry.

    The fund, known as BCRED, recorded a 0.4% decline in February, marking its first loss since September 2022 when it dropped 1.3%. For comparison, the Morningstar LSTA index tracking publicly traded leveraged loans has fallen 0.37% during the past three months.

    The private credit sector has drawn increased scrutiny recently due to deteriorating credit quality stemming from heavy investments in vulnerable industries like software, combined with limited transparency in operations.

    Blackstone’s massive $82 billion fund permits investors to withdraw portions of their investments each quarter. During the first quarter of this year, the fund experienced unusually high withdrawal requests totaling $3.7 billion, significantly above normal levels.

    The world’s largest alternative asset management company has seen its stock price tumble more than 28% year-to-date.

    According to earlier Financial Times reporting, BCRED reduced valuations on a “select” group of loans during February, with customer service software company Medallia identified as one of the affected firms in a letter sent to financial advisers.

    “BCRED continues to deliver strong performance for its investors, with a 9.5% annualized total return since inception for Class I shares, a 360 bps premium to leveraged loans,” Blackstone stated, emphasizing that the fund has exceeded leveraged loan market performance by 100 basis points this year.

    Anxiety about private credit fund stability has impacted Wall Street operations, with several major banks restricting lending to the sector while funds simultaneously limit investor withdrawals.

    JPMorgan Chase reduced valuations on specific loans to private credit entities earlier this month, a decision that will curtail future lending to these funds.

    Financial services leaders Morgan Stanley and asset management firm BlackRock joined other companies in restricting withdrawals from their funds following increased redemption demands.

  • Jury Holds Elon Musk Liable for Defrauding Twitter Investors in $44B Deal

    Jury Holds Elon Musk Liable for Defrauding Twitter Investors in $44B Deal

    SAN FRANCISCO, March 20 – A federal jury has determined that Elon Musk committed fraud against Twitter shareholders by attempting to manipulate the social media platform’s stock value during his 2022 acquisition efforts, according to Bloomberg News reporting on Friday.

    The jury concluded that Musk tried to artificially lower Twitter’s share price so he could either renegotiate the terms of his $44 billion purchase agreement or withdraw from the deal entirely. The amount of financial damages will be decided at a later date.

    Neither Musk’s legal team nor attorneys representing the shareholders responded immediately to requests for comment following the verdict.

    The San Francisco federal court decision follows a highly publicized trial where Musk, currently the world’s wealthiest individual, faced accusations of making misleading statements about Twitter’s bot problem. Shareholders alleged he falsely claimed the platform had significantly underreported the number of fake and spam accounts operating on the service.

    Despite the legal challenges, Musk proceeded with the Twitter acquisition in October 2022, subsequently rebranding the platform as X. He later integrated the company into SpaceX, his aerospace and rocket manufacturing business.

    The civil proceedings started on March 2, with jury deliberations commencing this past Tuesday.

    Musk has consistently chosen to fight shareholder lawsuits in court instead of reaching settlements. His legal battles have included a 2023 San Francisco trial regarding alleged fraud against Tesla investors, who claimed financial harm after his 2018 tweet falsely stating he had “funding secured” to take Tesla private. He also faced Delaware litigation concerning his $139 billion Tesla compensation package. Musk prevailed in both previous cases.

    In this most recent lawsuit, Twitter shareholders took issue with Musk’s public questioning of the company’s bot disclosure on three separate occasions after signing the April 2022 purchase agreement. He suggested the platform might have 20% or more bot accounts, far exceeding Twitter’s reported 5% figure.

    Shareholders pointed to several instances, including a May 17, 2022 tweet where Musk declared his acquisition “cannot go forward” until Twitter’s CEO could verify that bot accounts represented less than 5% of users.

    “He trashed the company. Trashed the executives. And tanked the stock,” stated Mark Molumphy, the shareholders’ attorney, during Tuesday’s closing arguments.

    Musk’s lawyer, Michael Lifrak, argued that his client’s bot concerns were legitimate and that publicly addressing these issues did not constitute fraudulent intent or behavior.

    The legal action represents investors who say they sold Twitter stock at artificially reduced prices between May 13 and October 4, 2022, due to Musk’s statements.

    Additionally, Musk is currently negotiating a potential settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission regarding allegations that he delayed disclosing his initial Twitter stock purchases in 2022, allowing him to continue buying shares at lower prices before the market became aware of his investment strategy.

    In February, SpaceX acquired Musk’s artificial intelligence venture xAI, which had incorporated X, creating what was then valued as the world’s most valuable private company at approximately $1.25 trillion.

  • UMES Hawks Secure Second Consecutive NEC Win with 7-4 Victory Over Coppin State

    UMES Hawks Secure Second Consecutive NEC Win with 7-4 Victory Over Coppin State

    The University of Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks baseball squad captured their second consecutive Northeast Conference victory Wednesday, defeating Coppin State 7-4 in a hard-fought contest.

    The Hawks received outstanding pitching performances from relievers Morales and Spencer, who combined to throw three innings without allowing a run during critical moments of the game. Their stellar work on the mound proved instrumental in preserving the victory for UMES.

    The win marks another successful outing for the Hawks in conference play, building momentum as they continue their NEC campaign. The team’s ability to grind out victories in competitive games demonstrates their resilience and determination this season.

    With this latest triumph, UMES continues to establish itself as a formidable opponent in Northeast Conference baseball, showing the depth of their pitching staff and their capacity to execute when games are on the line.

  • Downed Power Lines Force Carpenter Bridge Road Closure

    Downed Power Lines Force Carpenter Bridge Road Closure

    Delaware transportation officials have closed a portion of Carpenter Bridge Road after electrical wires came down across the roadway.

    The affected area spans from DE-12 to Roseville Road, blocking vehicle access in both directions until utility crews can safely remove the downed lines.

    Motorists are advised to seek alternate routes while crews work to clear the hazard and restore normal traffic flow to the area.

  • UD Blue Hens Make History with First-Ever Conference USA Baseball Win

    UD Blue Hens Make History with First-Ever Conference USA Baseball Win

    NEWARK, Del. – The University of Delaware’s baseball squad made program history Friday evening, capturing their inaugural Conference USA win with a narrow 5-4 triumph over Dallas Baptist at Bob Hannah Stadium.

    The milestone victory marks a significant achievement for the Fightin’ Blue Hens as they compete in their new conference affiliation. The close contest showcased the team’s ability to perform under pressure in crucial conference play.

    The one-run margin of victory demonstrates the competitive nature of Conference USA baseball, with Delaware proving they can hold their own against established conference opponents. This historic win sets a positive tone for the Blue Hens’ future in their new athletic conference.

  • Federal Jury Finds Elon Musk Defrauded Twitter Shareholders in 2022 Deal

    Federal Jury Finds Elon Musk Defrauded Twitter Shareholders in 2022 Deal

    A federal jury has determined that Elon Musk deliberately deceived Twitter shareholders during his controversial acquisition of the social media company in 2022, according to a Bloomberg News report released Friday.

    The San Francisco federal court jury reached its verdict on Friday, determining that Musk purposefully provided false information to Twitter investors by claiming the platform had excessive fake user accounts while attempting to withdraw from his original $44 billion purchase agreement, the report stated.

    The jury’s decision centers on Musk’s public statements criticizing Twitter before ultimately completing his acquisition of the company, which he subsequently rebranded as X.

  • Ex-Yankees Player Files Lawsuit Over Son’s Death at Costa Rica Resort

    Ex-Yankees Player Files Lawsuit Over Son’s Death at Costa Rica Resort

    A federal wrongful death lawsuit was filed on Friday targeting a Costa Rican resort and its operators following the tragic carbon monoxide poisoning death of former New York Yankees player Brett Gardner’s 14-year-old son.

    The legal action, filed in Philadelphia federal court, centers on the March 2025 death of Miller Gardner at the Arenas Del Mar Beachfront & Rainforest Resort located on Manuel Antonio beach in Costa Rica’s Central Pacific region. Brett Gardner and other family members have brought negligence and wrongful death charges against the resort.

    Named as defendants in the case are resort owners and operators David Callan and R. Scott Williams, along with Hawk Opportunity Fund LP, a venture capital company based in Newtown, Pennsylvania. Attempts to reach the defendants for comment were unsuccessful on Friday.

    The tragedy occurred while the Gardner family was enjoying a vacation. Miller Gardner lost his life, and Brett Gardner along with other family members became ill from what Costa Rican officials determined was carbon monoxide exposure.

    According to Randall Zúñiga, who heads Costa Rica’s Judicial Investigation Agency, laboratory results revealed Miller Gardner had dangerous levels of carboxyhemoglobin in his system – a deadly compound that forms when carbon monoxide attaches to blood hemoglobin.

    The family’s legal complaint contends that inadequate ventilation in the resort’s machine room allowed carbon monoxide to escape, ultimately causing the teen’s death and harming other family members.

    Brett Gardner began his professional baseball journey when the Yankees selected him in the 2005 draft, remaining loyal to the organization throughout his entire career. During his 14-season tenure from 2008 through 2021, he compiled a .256 batting average along with 139 home runs, 578 runs batted in, 274 stolen bases, and 73 triples.

  • Musk Found Liable for Misleading Investors in Twitter Deal

    A San Francisco jury has determined that Elon Musk bears responsibility for intentionally deceiving investors by manipulating Twitter’s share price during the chaotic period before he completed his $44 billion takeover of the social media platform in 2022.

    While the jury held Musk accountable for deliberately depressing the company’s stock value in the months preceding the acquisition, they cleared him of certain fraud-related accusations.

    The verdict comes after legal proceedings that examined Musk’s actions during the volatile acquisition process that ultimately transformed Twitter into what is now known as X.

    Members of Musk’s legal defense team, including attorney Michael Lifrak, were seen leaving the Phillip Burton Federal Building in San Francisco following the jury’s decision.

  • Jury: Musk Misled Twitter Investors, But Clears Him of Fraud Scheme

    Jury: Musk Misled Twitter Investors, But Clears Him of Fraud Scheme

    SAN FRANCISCO — Elon Musk has been held responsible by a jury for intentionally deceiving Twitter investors through statements that caused the company’s stock value to drop during the chaotic period before his $44 billion takeover in 2022. However, the panel cleared him of deliberately orchestrating a scheme to defraud shareholders.

    The San Francisco civil case stemmed from a class-action lawsuit filed shortly before Musk completed his acquisition of Twitter, the platform he subsequently rebranded as X. The jury was tasked with determining whether specific social media posts and podcast remarks made by Musk in May 2022 constituted deliberate fraud against Twitter stockholders who made selling decisions based on his public statements.

    Following three days of jury deliberations, the nine-member panel delivered their decision nearly three weeks after proceedings commenced on March 2. The verdict established Musk’s liability for deceiving investors through two social media posts, including one stating the Twitter acquisition was “temporarily on hold,” while clearing him of fraud related to podcast comments and rejecting claims of an intentional deception “scheme.”

    The financial impact for Musk remains uncertain since this is a class-action matter involving thousands of shareholders, including major institutional investors, though damages could reach billions of dollars. The jury determined compensation should range from approximately $3 to $8 per share for each affected day.

    With an estimated net worth of roughly $814 billion, primarily from Tesla stock holdings, Musk has substantial resources to cover potential damages.

    Trial proceedings heavily examined Musk’s assertions regarding automated accounts on Twitter’s platform. During testimony, Musk maintained that Twitter harbored significantly more fake and spam profiles than the 5% figure reported in official regulatory documents. He pointed to what he characterized as Twitter’s false reporting of bogus accounts as justification for attempting to withdraw from the acquisition.

    When Musk sought to abandon the deal, Twitter pursued legal action in Delaware courts to compel completion of the original agreement. Just as that litigation was set to begin, Musk changed direction once more and fulfilled his initial financial commitment.

  • NBA Champion Thunder Skip White House Visit Due to Scheduling Conflicts

    NBA Champion Thunder Skip White House Visit Due to Scheduling Conflicts

    The Oklahoma City Thunder, fresh off their 2025 NBA championship victory, will skip a traditional White House visit during their Washington D.C. road trip this weekend, according to a team representative who spoke Friday.

    Although both the Thunder organization and White House officials held conversations about hosting a championship celebration, scheduling conflicts ultimately made the visit impossible.

    “We have been in touch with the White House, and we are appreciative and grateful for the communication we have had, but the timing just didn’t work out,” the Thunder said in a statement.

    The tradition of NBA champions meeting with the president stretches back to 1963 when the Boston Celtics made the first such visit. Championship teams commonly arrange these ceremonies to coincide with regular season matchups in Washington D.C. The Thunder are scheduled to face the Wizards on Saturday.

    Multiple championship teams have turned down White House invitations in recent years, with the Golden State Warriors’ 2017 decision being among the most prominent examples.

    Earlier this month, the U.S. men’s hockey team that captured Olympic gold accepted President Donald Trump’s invitation to attend the State of the Union address. The team also participated in an Oval Office ceremony with Trump and enjoyed a White House lunch.

    Trump extended a similar State of the Union invitation to the gold medal-winning U.S. women’s hockey team, but the players declined to participate, explaining that “the timing and previously scheduled academic and professional commitments” prevented their attendance.

  • Treasury Department Taking Control of Student Loan Defaults

    Treasury Department Taking Control of Student Loan Defaults

    The Treasury Department will assume control of student loans in default under a new federal agreement revealed Thursday. This transfer represents the latest move in President Donald Trump’s initiative to reorganize the Education Department by shifting its responsibilities to other agencies.

    The comprehensive 17-page document details a major restructuring of federal student loan oversight, ending more than four decades of Education Department management in this area.

    According to the plan, Treasury will ultimately handle all student loan operations. A future phase, though without a set timeline, indicates Treasury will take on “operational responsibility” for loans not in default “to the extent practicable.”

    Recent Education Department statistics show approximately 9.2 million Americans have defaulted on their student loans.

    For current borrowers, officials emphasize no immediate action is required during this transition period. Students will maintain their existing loan servicer relationships and continue making payments through current channels. Those with defaulted loans can access information about their federal student debt at myeddebt.ed.gov.

    Treasury’s initial focus will be managing defaulted student loans, where borrowers have fallen months behind on payments. These defaulted accounts total roughly $180 billion, representing 11% of the government’s massive $1.7 trillion student loan portfolio.

    This loan program transfer aligns with Trump’s broader strategy to disassemble the Education Department. While only Congress can officially eliminate the department, administration officials are systematically relocating departmental functions through various inter-agency agreements.

    The complete transfer of all student loans to Treasury is anticipated, though no specific timeline exists for the second implementation phase.

    Current suspension of involuntary debt collection on federal student loans continues. The Trump administration announced in February it would postpone plans to garnish wages from defaulted borrowers.

    Typically, federal student loan borrowers face wage garnishment and tax refund seizure when they default on payments.

    Borrowers with defaulted loans can reach out to their loan holder to explore rehabilitation program options.

  • Missouri Court Orders Rewrite of Ballot Language for Congressional Map Referendum

    Missouri Court Orders Rewrite of Ballot Language for Congressional Map Referendum

    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Missouri voters may eventually decide the fate of new congressional boundaries endorsed by former President Donald Trump, but the ballot language they see won’t mention gerrymandering at all.

    On Friday, a state judge mandated a revised, more neutral description of the redistricting proposal after Missouri’s GOP Secretary of State admitted he had written an unfair summary that would likely bias voters toward the new boundaries by labeling existing districts as “gerrymandered.”

    The decision represents at least a partial win for critics of the revised map, who previously collected over 300,000 petition signatures to force a statewide vote. However, whether that referendum will actually take place this November remains uncertain.

    Officials are still working to confirm if opponents collected sufficient valid signatures on their petitions. Meanwhile, the state’s highest court is reviewing a different challenge that seeks to throw out the new map entirely, arguing that mid-decade redistricting violates Missouri’s constitution.

    State legislators passed the new congressional boundaries last September, making Missouri the second GOP-controlled state following Texas to answer Trump’s push for redrawn districts aimed at boosting Republican chances in this year’s midterm contests.

    This sparked an uncommon back-and-forth redistricting fight that expanded to include Republican-controlled North Carolina and Ohio, plus Democratic-led California and Virginia. Florida’s Republican leadership plans to enter the congressional redistricting discussion during a special legislative session in April.

    Missouri’s current U.S. House delegation includes six Republicans and two Democrats under boundaries drawn in 2022 following the latest census. The proposed map targets a Kansas City-area seat now held by Democratic Representative Emanuel Cleaver by splitting portions into two adjacent districts and extending the remaining area into heavily Republican rural regions.

    Secretary of State Denny Hoskins, who backs the new boundaries, has until August 4 — the state’s primary election date — to decide if the referendum petition meets constitutional standards and contains enough verified signatures. Should it qualify, the new districts would be put on hold pending the voter decision.

    Hoskins’ initial ballot summary would have asked voters whether to eliminate “Missouri’s existing gerrymandered congressional plan that protects incumbent politicians” and substitute new boundaries “that keep more cities and counties intact, are more compact, and better reflects statewide voting patterns.”

    The opposition organization People Not Politicians, which organized the petition effort, filed a lawsuit claiming Hoskins’ language was prejudiced and would likely push people to support the new districts, which critics argue represent the actual gerrymander.

    Legal representatives for Hoskins admitted during court hearings that characterizing Missouri’s current districts as gerrymandered and protecting incumbents was unfair. However, Hoskins maintained the remaining description of the proposed districts was appropriate.

    Cole County Circuit Judge Brian Stumpe removed much of the original language but sided with Hoskins that accurately describing the new districts as more compact and keeping more counties and cities together was fair. He retained those elements in the revised version he ordered for use.

    A representative for Hoskins refused to provide comment on the court’s decision.

    Chuck Hatfield, legal counsel for People Not Politicians, called it “a solid victory, and important victory.” However, he noted the group still disagrees with some remaining language and would weigh whether to file an appeal.

  • Federal Court Blocks Pentagon’s Controversial Media Access Rules

    Federal Court Blocks Pentagon’s Controversial Media Access Rules

    WASHINGTON — A federal court has issued an injunction preventing the Trump administration from implementing new Pentagon regulations that curtailed media access, following a successful legal challenge by The New York Times arguing the restrictions violated constitutional protections.

    U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in the nation’s capital ruled in favor of the publication on Friday, determining that the Defense Department’s credentialing requirements unlawfully targeted journalists who refused to accept the updated guidelines and left the Pentagon facility.

    The newspaper filed suit against the Pentagon and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth last December, contending the new credentialing system infringed upon reporters’ First Amendment free speech protections and Fifth Amendment due process guarantees.

    Currently, the Pentagon’s press pool consists primarily of conservative media organizations that accepted the new requirements. News outlets that declined to follow the updated protocols, including The Associated Press, have maintained their military coverage from outside the building.

    Judge Friedman, appointed during the Clinton administration, determined the regulations “fail to provide fair notice of what routine, lawful journalistic practices will result in the denial, suspension, or revocation” of Pentagon media credentials. His ruling found the policy breached both First and Fifth Amendment constitutional protections.

    “Those who drafted the First Amendment believed that the nation’s security requires a free press and an informed people and that such security is endangered by governmental suppression of political speech. That principle has preserved the nation’s security for almost 250 years. It must not be abandoned now,” the judge wrote.

    New York Times legal counsel Theodore Boutrous released a statement calling the court decision “a powerful rejection of the Pentagon’s effort to impede freedom of the press and the reporting of vital information to the American people during a time of war.”

    Pentagon officials had not provided immediate response to requests for comment regarding the judicial decision.

    Defense Department representatives have defended their approach as implementing “common sense” regulations designed to safeguard military operations from potential national security breaches.

    “The goal of that process is to prevent those who pose a security risk from having broad access to American military headquarters,” government attorneys wrote.

    Legal representatives for The Times maintain the policy was crafted to suppress critical media coverage of President Donald Trump’s administration.

    “The First Amendment flatly prohibits the government from granting itself the unbridled power to restrict speech because the mere existence of such arbitrary authority can lead to self-censorship,” they wrote.

    Judge Friedman acknowledged in his ruling that “national security must be protected, the security of our troops must be protected, and war plans must be protected.”

    “But especially in light of the country’s recent incursion into Venezuela and its ongoing war with Iran, it is more important than ever that the public have access to information from a variety of perspectives about what its government is doing — so that the public can support government policies, if it wants to support them; protest, if it wants to protest; and decide based on full, complete, and open information who they are going to vote for in the next election,” Friedman wrote.

    The judge cited “undisputed evidence” demonstrating the policy was structured to eliminate “disfavored journalists” while favoring those who are “on board and willing to serve” the government, constituting clear viewpoint discrimination.

    “In sum, the Policy on its face makes any newsgathering and reporting not blessed by the Department a potential basis for the denial, suspension, or revocation of a journalist’s (credentials),” he wrote. “It provides no way for journalists to know how they may do their jobs without losing their credentials.”

    Pentagon officials requested a one-week delay of the ruling to pursue an appeal, which Judge Friedman denied.

    The court has mandated the Pentagon restore press credentials for seven New York Times reporters. However, Friedman specified his decision to invalidate the contested policy elements applies to “all regulated parties.” The Pentagon has one week to submit written documentation of its compliance with the order.

  • Trump’s Iran War Objectives and Timeline Continue to Change, Critics Note

    Trump’s Iran War Objectives and Timeline Continue to Change, Critics Note

    WASHINGTON – Since launching military operations alongside Israel against Iran in late February, President Donald Trump and his senior officials have presented constantly changing justifications and expected durations for the conflict, leading critics to question whether adequate planning occurred before the war began.

    The administration’s stated goals have ranged from encouraging regime change in Tehran to diminishing Iran’s military capabilities and reducing its regional power, while also advancing Israeli security interests.

    The following timeline shows how Trump’s explanations have evolved:

    FEBRUARY 28: ENCOURAGING REGIME CHANGE

    As U.S. and Israeli forces began their assault, Trump posted a social media video urging Iranian citizens to “take over” their nation’s leadership. “It will be yours to take,” Trump declared. “This will be probably your only chance for generations.”

    Trump characterized the military action as “major combat operations.”

    FEBRUARY 28: TARGETING MILITARY CAPABILITIES

    Trump stated that Washington would prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, despite Tehran’s assertions that its nuclear program serves civilian purposes. Iran currently possesses no nuclear weapons, while both the United States and Israel maintain nuclear arsenals.

    The president vowed to eliminate what he called Tehran’s ballistic missile capabilities. “We’re going to destroy their missiles and raze their missile industry to the ground,” Trump declared. “We’re going to annihilate their navy.”

    Trump alleged that Iran’s long-range missiles “can now threaten our very good friends and allies in Europe, our troops stationed overseas, and could soon reach the American homeland.”

    These statements mirrored arguments made by President George W. Bush before the Iraq invasion, which contained inaccurate claims. Current intelligence assessments and expert analysis contradict Trump’s statements, indicating Iran’s missile program remains years away from posing a threat to American territory.

    MARCH 2: CHANGING TIMEFRAMES

    Trump indicated the conflict would continue for four to five weeks but acknowledged it might extend longer.

    “We’re already substantially ahead of our time projections. But whatever the time is, it’s okay. Whatever it takes,” Trump stated during White House remarks. On social media, he claimed America possessed a “virtually unlimited supply” of weapons and that “wars can be fought ‘forever,’ and very successfully, using just these supplies.”

    Congressional notification from Trump contained no specific timeline. Earlier media interviews showed Trump telling the Daily Mail the war might last “four weeks, or less,” then informing The New York Times it could take four to five weeks, before later suggesting a longer duration.

    MARCH 2: RUBIO CITES ISRAELI PRESSURE

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio explained to journalists that Israel’s decision to attack Iran compelled American involvement.

    “We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action, we knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces, and we knew that if we didn’t preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties,” Rubio explained.

    MARCH 3: TRUMP OFFERS DIFFERENT EXPLANATION

    Trump provided contradictory reasoning, claiming he authorized American participation because Iran appeared ready to attack first.

    “I might have forced their (Israel’s) hand,” Trump acknowledged. “If we didn’t do it, they (Iran) were going to attack first.”

    MARCH 4: PENTAGON DEFINES MISSION

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth outlined the objective as seeking to “destroy Iranian offensive missiles, destroy Iranian missile production, destroy their navy and other security infrastructure.”

    MARCH 6: DEMANDING TOTAL CAPITULATION

    “There will be no deal with Iran except UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER,” Trump posted on social media.

    MARCH 8-11: CONTRADICTORY ASSESSMENTS

    In a CBS News interview broadcast March 8, Hegseth described Iranian strikes as “only just the beginning.”

    Twenty-four hours later, Trump told the same network “I think the war is very complete, pretty much.”

    “We’ve already won in many ways, but we haven’t won enough,” Trump informed reporters that same day. When questioned whether the conflict was starting or finishing, he responded: “Well, I think you could say both.”

    By March 11, Trump again claimed victory while adding: “We’ve got to finish the job.”

    MARCH 13: MODERATING REGIME CHANGE RHETORIC

    During a Fox News appearance, Trump said the war would conclude “when I feel it in my bones.”

    Trump backed away from his earlier calls for internal Iranian uprising. “So I really think that’s a big hurdle to climb for people that don’t have weapons,” Trump acknowledged.

    MARCH 19: NO DEFINITIVE ENDPOINT

    Hegseth announced that Washington would not establish a specific timeline, leaving the decision to Trump.

    “We wouldn’t want to set a definitive time frame,” the Defense Secretary stated. “It will be at the president’s choosing, ultimately, where we say, ‘Hey, we’ve achieved what we need to.’”

    MARCH 20: CONSIDERING CONCLUSION

    Trump wrote on Truth Social that “we are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts” regarding Iran. Earlier that day, he told reporters “I don’t want to do a ceasefire” when questioned about the conflict.

  • Buy Now, Pay Later Firm Sezzle Switches Auditors, Cites Control Issues

    Buy Now, Pay Later Firm Sezzle Switches Auditors, Cites Control Issues

    Payment technology company Sezzle announced Monday it has terminated Baker Tilly as its independent auditing firm and selected PricewaterhouseCoopers to handle its financial audits starting in 2026, according to regulatory documents filed by the buy now, pay later service provider.

    In the same filing, Sezzle revealed significant internal control deficiencies regarding how it categorized cash flows connected to notes receivable during the 2024 and 2025 fiscal years.

    While Baker Tilly provided unqualified audit opinions for both years without issuing adverse findings or disclaimers, the auditing firm determined that Sezzle’s internal financial reporting controls were inadequate as of December 31, 2025, citing the material weakness.

    According to the filing, Sezzle maintained it experienced no disputes or disagreements with Baker Tilly throughout the past two fiscal years or during any subsequent interim periods.

    The company’s audit committee gave approval for Baker Tilly’s dismissal, while the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers remains contingent on completing routine client acceptance procedures.

  • Federal Prosecutors Move to Dismiss Breonna Taylor Case Against Two Ex-Officers

    Federal Prosecutors Move to Dismiss Breonna Taylor Case Against Two Ex-Officers

    Federal prosecutors filed a motion Friday to abandon criminal charges against two former Louisville, Kentucky police officers who were accused of creating false documentation for the search warrant that resulted in the deadly shooting of Breonna Taylor, a Black healthcare worker, in 2020.

    Department of Justice attorneys stated in their court filing that they decided against continuing the prosecution after conducting an internal assessment prompted by a federal judge’s actions to reduce the most serious charges from felony level to misdemeanor level on two separate occasions. The dismissal requires judicial approval to become final.

    Former Louisville Police Department detective Joshua Jaynes and ex-sergeant Kyle Meany faced allegations of violating Taylor’s constitutional rights by providing false and misleading information in the sworn statement used to authorize the search of Taylor’s residence.

    This action represents another instance of Republican President Donald Trump’s administration reversing civil rights and police misconduct prosecutions initiated under Democratic President Joe Biden’s leadership, particularly those connected to widely publicized law enforcement killings. Taylor’s death in March 2020 sparked widespread street protests as part of broader demonstrations against racial injustice and police practices.

    “Kyle is incredibly grateful for today’s filing. He is looking forward to putting this matter behind him and moving forward with his life,” Michael Denbow, a lawyer for Meany, said in a statement.

    Legal representatives for Jaynes did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

    Taylor lost her life in March 2020 during a failed police operation when officers investigating a man Taylor had formerly dated carried out a no-knock warrant at her residence. Her boyfriend, who possessed a legally registered firearm, opened fire on police, leading them to return fire 22 times into the dwelling.

    Officers discovered no illegal substances in the residence. Taylor was not armed.

    Jaynes and Meany were not among the officers who entered Taylor’s home. Federal charges alleged they submitted sworn documentation while aware they lacked proper legal grounds for the search.

    Both defendants entered not guilty pleas.

    Trump Justice Department political appointees had previously interfered in another federal civil rights prosecution related to Taylor’s death.

    Justice Department attorneys requested just one day of imprisonment for a former Louisville officer who was found guilty on civil rights charges for shooting into Taylor’s home, although his gunfire did not hit Taylor. The judge imposed a 33-month prison term on the former officer.

    The Trump administration also withdrew the Justice Department’s determination of systematic civil rights violations by Louisville police, a separate investigation prompted by Taylor’s killing. A federal judge approved the Trump DOJ’s motion to exit a proposed settlement agreement negotiated during the Biden administration.

    Civil rights prosecutors have received notice that there will be stricter legal standards for pursuing law enforcement excessive force cases under the Trump administration, according to Reuters reporting.

  • Federal Judge Halts Pentagon’s Controversial Media Access Rules

    Federal Judge Halts Pentagon’s Controversial Media Access Rules

    A federal judge in Washington D.C. has temporarily halted a controversial Pentagon policy that would have allowed the Defense Department to revoke press credentials from journalists who seek information not cleared for public distribution.

    U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman issued the ruling Friday following a constitutional challenge brought by the New York Times in federal court. The newspaper argued that policy modifications implemented by the Defense Department violated First Amendment free speech protections and constitutional due process guarantees.

    The contested regulations, which took effect in October 2025 under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s leadership, would permit officials to classify journalists as security threats and strip their press credentials if they attempted to obtain both classified and certain unclassified materials from military personnel without authorization.

    Judge Friedman acknowledged in his decision the necessity of safeguarding military personnel and operational plans, but emphasized that public access to diverse governmental information perspectives was “more important than ever” given President Donald Trump’s recent “incursion” into Venezuela and conflict with Iran.

    The policy changes prompted a mass exodus from Pentagon press coverage, with only one of the 56 news organizations in the Pentagon Press Association agreeing to acknowledge the new requirements, according to court documents. Journalists who refused to sign the acknowledgment were forced to surrender their press passes.

    Following the departure of established reporters, the Pentagon created a replacement press corps featuring pro-Trump media outlets and personalities, which the Times cited as proof the policy targeted critical coverage rather than addressing legitimate security concerns.

    While the regulations acknowledge that publishing sensitive materials “is generally protected by the First Amendment,” they specify that requesting such information could factor into officials’ assessments of whether a reporter presents a “security or safety risk.”

    In their legal filing, Times attorneys argued the policy illegally curtailed fundamental newsgathering methods and provided the Pentagon with unlimited authority to revoke credentials, enabling the kind of “viewpoint-based” media restrictions prohibited by constitutional law.

    Department of Justice attorneys defending the policy conceded it contained subjective elements but maintained that credentialing decisions remained guided by neutral, objective standards. Government lawyers also contended that encouraging military personnel to violate disclosure rules by sharing unauthorized information did not constitute legally protected speech.

    Press freedom organizations condemned the policy as another assault on journalism by the Trump administration.

    Seth Stern, advocacy director for the Freedom of the Press Foundation, applauded Friday’s court decision in a public statement, calling it “shocking” that government attorneys had characterized “journalists asking questions of the government” as criminal behavior.

    The Associated Press is pursuing separate litigation against Trump administration officials following its removal from White House press access after the news organization continued using the established name “Gulf of Mexico” while acknowledging Trump’s executive directive for U.S. institutions to call it the Gulf of America.

    The AP characterized the exclusion as illegal viewpoint discrimination, while administration officials argued they possessed broad authority over media access decisions in restricted government facilities.

    Neither the Pentagon nor the New York Times provided immediate responses to requests for comment regarding the ruling. The government is expected to file an appeal.

  • Nuclear Power Company X-energy Seeks to Go Public on Stock Market

    Nuclear Power Company X-energy Seeks to Go Public on Stock Market

    Nuclear reactor company X-energy announced Friday that it has submitted paperwork for a public stock offering, seeking to benefit from increased investor interest in nuclear energy solutions.

    The firm intends to trade its Class A shares on the Nasdaq stock exchange using the trading symbol “XE.”

    Company officials have not yet revealed how many shares will be made available to investors or what price range they expect for the offering.

  • Minnesota Family Challenges Court Order to Send Them Back to Ecuador

    Minnesota Family Challenges Court Order to Send Them Back to Ecuador

    A Minnesota family is challenging a court decision that would send them back to Ecuador after an immigration judge denied their asylum request.

    The case involves a young father and his 5-year-old son who were taken into custody by federal immigration officials in January. The family had sought protection in the United States through the asylum process.

    Immigration attorneys for the family are now working to overturn the judge’s decision that rejected their bid to remain in the country legally. The ruling would result in their deportation to Ecuador if the appeal is unsuccessful.

    The detention of the father and young child earlier this year has drawn attention to ongoing immigration enforcement actions affecting families with young children.

  • Hawaii Dam Emergency Forces 4,000+ to Evacuate as Flooding Swamps Communities

    Hawaii Dam Emergency Forces 4,000+ to Evacuate as Flooding Swamps Communities

    Emergency officials have issued evacuation orders affecting more than 4,000 residents in Hawaiian communities located north of Honolulu as dangerous flooding conditions persist throughout the region.

    The evacuation comes amid growing concerns about a dam that has stood for 120 years and could potentially collapse under current conditions. Heavy rainfall has created hazardous flooding that has overwhelmed roadways, submerged cars, and created treacherous conditions with murky, debris-filled water.

    The severe weather has transformed streets into rivers of muddy water, making travel dangerous and forcing residents to abandon their homes and vehicles. Emergency responders are closely monitoring the aging dam structure as floodwaters continue to rise in the affected areas.

    Communities in the northern regions of Oahu are bearing the brunt of the flooding emergency, with officials working around the clock to ensure resident safety as the weather crisis unfolds.

  • Farm Groups Press Washington for Emergency Aid Amid Economic Crisis

    Farm Groups Press Washington for Emergency Aid Amid Economic Crisis

    Listen to the Evening Delmarva Farm Report Update — March 20, 2026

    DELMARVA — Agricultural leaders are pressing Washington for immediate emergency financial aid as farming operations face mounting economic pressures nationwide. Nathan Reed with the National Cotton Council says expenses have climbed dramatically while commodity prices remain under pressure.

    The call for federal relief comes as Arkansas leads the nation in farm bankruptcy filings, reflecting the severe financial stress hitting producers across multiple regions.

    Meanwhile, USDA officials are urging producers to document any weather-related damage from recent storms. Sandy Chalmers with Wisconsin’s Farm Service Agency says thorough reporting is crucial for accessing potential federal disaster assistance. That information gets used to put together requests for disaster declarations.

    Markets

    Major crop prices dropped across the board to close the week. May corn settled at $4.65.5/bu, down 4.25 cents. May soybeans closed at $11.61.25/bu, falling 7.25 cents. May wheat finished at $5.47.75/bu, losing 3.75 cents.

    Cattle markets showed strength with April live cattle gaining 77 cents to $234.05/cwt.

    Forecast

    Expect mostly cloudy skies this evening with temperatures around 60°F and south winds at 15 mph. Showers and thunderstorms move in tonight with lows near 47°F. Saturday brings mostly sunny skies with highs reaching 60°F and northwest winds 5-10 mph.

    This article is based on the Delmarva Farm Report Update Evening Edition, March 20, 2026. Hosted by Tom Bradley.

  • Construction Closes Right Lane on Old Orchard Road Until 5PM

    Construction Closes Right Lane on Old Orchard Road Until 5PM

    Motorists should expect delays on Old Orchard Road near East Edgemoor Street as construction crews have shut down the northbound right lane.

    The Delaware Department of Transportation reports the lane closure is necessary for ongoing construction activities in the area. Traffic restrictions are expected to continue through 5 PM today.

    Drivers are advised to use caution when traveling through the work zone and allow extra time for their commute. Consider alternate routes if possible to avoid potential backups during the closure period.

  • Iranian Americans in Delicate Balance: Celebrating Nowruz Amid Homeland Conflict

    Iranian Americans in Delicate Balance: Celebrating Nowruz Amid Homeland Conflict

    Conflict in their homeland and tensions with their adopted country have left Iranian Americans facing a difficult decision this week: whether to celebrate Nowruz, their traditional new year holiday.

    Kayvon Pourmirzaie and his spouse, Behnaz Almazi, chose to mark the occasion by traveling from Philadelphia to attend a Persian pop-up dinner in New York City over the weekend. Born and raised in America after his parents immigrated before Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution, Pourmirzaie expressed optimism about the ongoing turmoil.

    “Nowruz for me this year signifies a chance to see my beautiful homeland,” said Pourmirzaie. “Even more important, I’m excited for the world to see the beauty of Iran. Nobody wants war, but this is a very strong feeling for me.”

    The current U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran creates complex emotions for Iranian Americans: hope that a despised government might fall; concern for loved ones still under its control; frustration with what many view as poorly planned military action; and sometimes guilt over their own safety.

    As the conflict enters its third week, Nowruz — among Iran’s most significant secular observances — brings these internal conflicts into sharp relief. The Friday celebration traditionally features dancing, music and meals centered on herb-rich foods like kuku sabzi, a frittata-style dish representing spring renewal and new beginnings.

    Across America, many Nowruz gatherings have been scrapped or transformed into solemn events. Saeed Shafiyan Rad, who leads Boston’s Iranian Association, explained their decision to cancel their usual large-scale celebrations that typically draw thousands of participants.

    “We want to respect the people,” said Shafiyan Rad. “We just want peace and prosperity for the Iranian people.”

    While disagreements within Iranian immigrant communities aren’t unusual, the current warfare has intensified these divisions just as Nowruz draws attention to them. Young Iranian Americans, many who have never visited Iran, are particularly affected as generational differences emerge around what Iranian identity means from a distance.

    Hedi Yousefi is organizing her second annual Norooz Bazaar in New York City, featuring Iranian American cuisine and artists. Despite receiving threatening messages from critics and her own doubts about appropriateness, she concluded that honoring Nowruz aligns with Iranian people’s wishes.

    “For me, this is an act of resistance against the regime,” said Yousefi, who left Tehran for America 13 years ago. “My grandfather always said (the regime) would like nothing more than to stop Nowruz.”

    Persian American content creator Omid Afshar has turned to his kitchen more frequently before Nowruz, experimenting with traditional Iranian dishes. The Instagram personality, who showcases Persian dining establishments at @omidafshar, sees cooking as cultural reconnection.

    “Cooking Persian food has become a way to reconnect with our culture,” said Afshar. “For a long time growing up in America, I felt like I had to make that part of myself smaller so I could fit in with the rest of the world around me.”

    According to Persis Karim, former head of San Francisco State University’s Center for Iranian Diaspora Studies, Nowruz feasts should provide consistency during turbulent periods. However, she finds herself unable to embrace the holiday’s hopeful message this year.

    “I’m not comfortable celebrating a tradition I love because I’m so appalled by what is happening to my family in Iran,” Karim said. “Of course I wish for a change of regime. But it should come from within Iran, not from bombs from the United States.”

    Brooklyn restaurateur Nasim Alikhani initially considered shutting down Nowruz celebrations at her Persian establishment, Sofreh, but ultimately reached a different decision, similar to Yousefi’s reasoning.

    “Iran has been invaded throughout history … And yet Iranians kept the tradition of Nowruz alive,” she said. “I will not allow this unjust war and this aggression to win. Instead of singing and dancing around the table, maybe we will pray for peace and hold hands with our guests. But the food will absolutely be there, because there is no gathering without food.”

    Persian dining establishments and markets usually experience their busiest period during Nowruz. This year, however, sales have declined in areas where public opinion opposes the military action. Conversely, in regions with strong support, particularly Los Angeles — whose massive Iranian population earned it the nickname “Tehrangeles” — business surges with each news development.

    Farinaz Pirshirazi, who co-owns Los Angeles Persian restaurant Toranj, described the correlation between current events and customer traffic.

    “When the war started, we had a spike. When the supreme leader of Iran was said to be dead, we had a spike,” said Pirshirazi. “Whoever came in had the biggest smile on their face, and they were crying a little bit out of joy. They were all telling us, ‘We have to go out tonight, and we have to have Persian food.’”

    The current situation has also reversed some cultural customs. Following Iran’s brutal January crackdown on demonstrators, many Iranian Americans prepared halva, a sweet paste typically served during mourning periods. When warfare commenced and Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei died, they continued making the confection.

    “It was a sarcastic way of sharing the joy and happiness,” Pirshirazi said. “Usually halva is something that they do at funerals, when you’re sad. But in this particular situation, it was very sarcastic, because it was a sign of joy that they were making halva.”

    Anais Dersi helped organize the pop-up dinner that Pourmirzaie attended, where dishes included a pasta interpretation of tahdig, Iran’s beloved crispy rice preparation. After her Brooklyn event last month sold out within hours, she decided to host another Nowruz gathering, with both events raising funds for Iranian charities.

    “The idea was bringing the community together over something. Giving people a place to mourn, to feel distraught, or whatever they were feeling,” she said. “As a first-generation American, food is a tether to my culture. I can’t always connect through politics or language, but the food feels like mine. And it feels like it belongs to others too. It’s a great unifier.”

  • Ukrainian Orthodox Leader Who Championed Church Independence Dies at 97

    Ukrainian Orthodox Leader Who Championed Church Independence Dies at 97

    Patriarch Filaret of Kyiv, who dedicated much of his life to creating a Ukrainian Orthodox church separate from Russian religious control, passed away on Friday at the age of 97, according to church officials.

    The Orthodox Church of Ukraine confirmed his passing, stating that the “exacerbation of chronic diseases” led to his death.

    While Filaret’s influence had diminished in recent years as tensions between Ukraine and Russia escalated into open warfare, his lasting impact includes decades of work toward establishing religious independence for Ukraine’s Orthodox community.

    Metropolitan Epiphanius of Kyiv, current leader of the OCU, honored the deceased patriarch’s contributions. “The person and numerous good deeds of the late Patriarch Filaret rightfully occupy a special place in the modern history of both the local Ukrainian Orthodox Church and Ukraine as a whole,” Epiphanius stated.

    According to Epiphanius, Filaret “did much to preserve church life during the years of Soviet oppression of the Church, during the spiritual revival of Ukraine, and especially during the years of the struggle for the establishment of church autocephaly,” referring to religious independence. Despite acknowledging past “difficult events” between them, Epiphanius said he “always consistently respected the contribution of Patriarch Filaret.”

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also paid tribute, calling Filaret’s passing on Telegram “a great loss for Ukrainians.”

    “He was a strong personality and one of the most steadfast defenders of the Ukrainian church, independence and statehood,” Zelenskyy wrote. “Without the energy, character and courage of Patriarch Filaret, many of Ukraine’s accomplishments simply would not have been possible.”

    The Ukrainian Parliament praised Filaret’s role in maintaining religious life during Soviet persecution and beyond.

    Born as Mykhailo Denysenko in 1929 in Blahodatne village in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, Filaret’s path to religious leadership began after his father died during World War II. Despite the Soviet Union’s official atheist stance, he pursued ministry, eventually becoming a monk and adopting the name Filaret.

    After studying and serving in both Russia and Ukraine during the Soviet era, he rose through church ranks to become a bishop. By the 1960s, he had become the Russian Orthodox Church’s top representative in Ukraine and was even considered for the position of Moscow patriarch in 1990, though he wasn’t chosen.

    When Ukraine gained independence in 1991 following the Soviet collapse, Filaret spearheaded a parallel movement for church independence. He led the formation of a separate Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate.

    The Russian Orthodox Church, which maintained authority over Ukraine, rejected this breakaway movement. Church officials stripped Filaret of his clerical status and excommunicated him, actions he refused to acknowledge.

    In 2018, Filaret’s church combined with another breakaway congregation, and he received the honorary patriarch title. The merged OCU gained official recognition in 2019 from Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople, who also declared Filaret’s Moscow excommunication invalid.

    While the ecumenical patriarch holds the position of “first among equals” in Eastern Orthodoxy, he doesn’t possess papal authority over other patriarchs’ regions. Moscow’s Patriarchate disputed Bartholomew’s right to hear Filaret’s case or recognize the merged church.

    This situation created two competing Orthodox churches in Ukraine — the OCU and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. Ukrainian officials have alleged the latter maintains Moscow connections, which that church denies.

    The breakaway church’s recognition added religious tensions to the growing Ukraine-Russia divide, with Russian leaders even accusing the United States of involvement.

    Soon after the OCU formed, Filaret and Epiphanius disagreed about church structure and leadership, leading Filaret to attempt reviving the Kyiv Patriarchate. The OCU suspended Filaret’s participation in 2020.

    The two leaders eventually reconciled, meeting in late 2023 to pray together for Ukraine’s victory against Russia, according to OCU news services. The church’s obituary honors him as “His Holiness Patriarch Filaret of Kyiv and All Rus’-Ukraine.”

    Filaret generated controversy in other areas as well. In 2020, he blamed the COVID-19 pandemic on divine punishment for human sins, specifically citing same-sex marriage in a television interview.

    Throughout his lifetime, he received numerous religious and governmental honors, including Ukraine’s highest recognition — Hero of Ukraine — in January 2019.

  • Senate Blocks Homeland Security Funding as Airport Delays Worsen Nationwide

    Senate Blocks Homeland Security Funding as Airport Delays Worsen Nationwide

    WASHINGTON — Senate lawmakers failed to move forward with Department of Homeland Security funding legislation on Friday, as travelers across the nation face increasingly lengthy airport security waits.

    The funding bill stalled when Democrats withheld necessary votes to advance the measure toward a final vote. New York Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer announced plans to introduce alternative legislation on Saturday that would specifically fund the Transportation Security Administration, the agency responsible for screening travelers and their belongings. However, this targeted approach is also expected to fail during the rare weekend legislative session.

    Negotiations continued behind closed doors Friday, with White House border chief Tom Homan scheduled to hold a second straight day of meetings with senators from both parties. Democratic lawmakers are pushing for changes to how federal immigration agents operate, citing the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis.

    South Dakota Republican Senator John Thune, the Senate Majority Leader, expressed optimism about the White House discussions, saying he sees “deal space” emerging. However, he questioned whether Democrats genuinely want to reach an agreement that would increase Immigration and Customs Enforcement funding.

    “This is a pox on everybody’s house,” Thune stated. “You’ve got people standing in lines at the airports. This needs to be fixed. It needs to get resolved and there are good-faith efforts being made finally on all the relevant issues.”

    During Senate floor proceedings, Schumer emphasized the need to quickly restore TSA operations while rejecting Republican proposals to fund the entire Homeland Security Department. Democrats prefer to fund TSA separately while continuing discussions about Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    “Tomorrow, America will see the matter crystal clear: which senators want to open up TSA, pay TSA workers, and end the chaos at our airports, and which senators are going to block TSA funding yet again,” Schumer declared.

    Most TSA personnel are classified as essential workers and must continue their duties during the funding gap, though they receive no compensation. Employee absence rates have begun rising at various airports, resulting in extended wait times for travelers.

    Democratic demands for the funding package include multiple policy reforms, such as requiring ICE agents to obtain judicial warrants before forced home entries. They also want agents to display identification on uniforms and prohibit mask usage during operations.

    “The American people have had enough of this rogue agency. We need to rein it in. And we are negotiating right now over how to do that,” said Senator Patty Murray, the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee.

    The Trump administration reports it has already accepted several modifications, including broader deployment of body cameras with exceptions for covert operations, and restricted civil enforcement at sensitive locations like hospitals, schools, and religious facilities. Republicans point to Trump’s dismissal of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Homan’s appointment to oversee Minneapolis operations as evidence of the administration’s commitment to reforming ICE practices.

    Lawmakers are scheduled for an extended Easter recess lasting two weeks near month’s end. Thune has warned he may cancel the break if the dispute remains unresolved.

    “I can’t see us taking a break if the government is still shut down,” Thune said.

  • State Department Creates 12 Global Disaster Response Centers

    State Department Creates 12 Global Disaster Response Centers

    WASHINGTON — Federal officials announced Friday they will establish 12 regional disaster response centers across the globe as part of a restructured approach to international humanitarian assistance.

    The State Department’s newly created Bureau of Disaster and Humanitarian Response will operate from Washington headquarters with approximately 200 employees, according to Friday’s announcement. However, field operations will be managed through the dozen regional centers positioned throughout Latin America, Asia, Europe and Africa.

    Relief organizations have widely condemned the Trump administration’s decision to eliminate USAID, the federal agency that served as America’s primary foreign aid platform for many years. The replacement bureau will focus exclusively on disaster relief and emergency assistance as a component of a broader foreign aid oversight office.

    Foreign assistance funding has faced severe reductions under the current administration, especially programs addressing climate change and social justice initiatives. However, officials committed $2 billion to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in late 2023, creating a channel for directing aid to targeted organizations and nations requiring assistance.

    The dozen regional centers will operate from Miami; Bogota, Colombia; Guatemala City; Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; Kyiv, Ukraine; Amman, Jordan; Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Nairobi, Kenya; Dakar, Senegal; Bangkok; Dhaka, Bangladesh; and Manila, Philippines.

  • Iowa State Star Forward Jefferson Injured in NCAA Tournament Game

    Iowa State Star Forward Jefferson Injured in NCAA Tournament Game

    ST. LOUIS — Iowa State’s standout forward Joshua Jefferson will not return to action in the Cyclones’ opening NCAA Tournament matchup against Tennessee State due to a lower left leg injury.

    As the second half was about to commence, Jefferson made his way back to Iowa State’s bench using crutches and sporting a walking boot on his injured left leg.

    The All-American player received a standing ovation from fans when he emerged from the tunnel during halftime, taking his place at the end of the Cyclones’ bench. At that point, Iowa State held a commanding 55-29 lead over Tennessee State. Whether Jefferson will be available for a possible second-round matchup against Kentucky on Saturday remains unknown.

    The injury occurred early in the contest, just 2 minutes and 36 seconds after tipoff, following a successful driving layup by Jefferson. As he moved across the lane from left to right, Jefferson collapsed beneath the Iowa State basket after his shot found the net. His left foot rolled outward and bent at a sharp angle, causing him to fall to the court. Jefferson required assistance getting to his feet and was immediately taken for X-rays of his lower left leg and ankle area. He was unable to bear weight on the injured foot as he made his way to the locker room.

    Jefferson entered Friday’s tournament game averaging 16.9 points, 7.6 rebounds and 4.9 assists per contest in his point forward role for the Cyclones.

    Speaking to CBS Television during the halftime break, Iowa State head coach T.J. Otzelberger explained the impact of losing his star player. “For our team, Joshua (Jefferson) is such a huge part of everything we do,” Otzelberger said. “So we have a more guard-oriented attack when he’s not out there.”

  • Tech Company Co-Founder Steps Down After Federal Smuggling Charges

    Tech Company Co-Founder Steps Down After Federal Smuggling Charges

    A founding member of Super Micro Computer has stepped down from the company’s board of directors with immediate effect following federal criminal charges tied to an alleged artificial intelligence chip smuggling operation targeting China.

    The company announced Friday that Yih-Shyan Liaw submitted his resignation after being formally charged by federal prosecutors with participating in an illegal scheme to export billions of dollars worth of AI technology overseas.

    Following news of the resignation, Super Micro’s stock price climbed 2% during after-hours trading sessions.

    Federal prosecutors filed charges Thursday against Liaw alongside two other individuals – sales executive Ruei-Tsang Chang and independent contractor Ting-Wei Sun. The trio allegedly operated a complex routing system that funneled American-manufactured servers through Taiwan before ultimately delivering them to Southeast Asian destinations.

    In a separate announcement, Super Micro revealed it has named DeAnna Luna to serve as interim chief compliance officer, a role she assumes immediately. Luna previously joined the artificial intelligence server company in 2024, where she held the position of vice president overseeing global trade regulations and sanctions compliance.

  • Federal Court Overturns FTC Ban on Intuit’s TurboTax ‘Free’ Ads

    Federal Court Overturns FTC Ban on Intuit’s TurboTax ‘Free’ Ads

    A federal appeals court has overturned a government ban that would have prevented tax software company Intuit from marketing its TurboTax service as “free” when many customers end up paying fees.

    On Friday, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the Federal Trade Commission’s directive that prohibited what regulators called misleading advertisements for basic tax filing services.

    The appellate judges determined that allowing an administrative law judge to rule on the deceptive advertising case crossed constitutional boundaries regarding the separation of powers between government branches.

  • Iranian Hackers Quickly Restore Website After FBI Domain Seizure

    Iranian Hackers Quickly Restore Website After FBI Domain Seizure

    An Iranian government-connected cyber group has successfully brought its website back online within 24 hours of federal authorities seizing its internet domains, demonstrating the persistent nature of state-sponsored hacking operations.

    Federal investigators on Thursday took control of four web domains belonging to the “Handala Hack Team,” which operates as a front for Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security psychological warfare division, according to the Department of Justice.

    The hacking collective had previously taken credit for launching a destructive cyber assault against Michigan-based medical technology corporation Stryker on March 11.

    By Friday, the group had posted a defiant message on their newly established website, calling the federal seizures “desperate attempts by the United States and its allies to silence the voice of Handala.”

    Cybersecurity expert Ari Ben Am from the Foundation for Defense of Democracies Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation noted that Iranian cyber units have proven remarkably adaptable to law enforcement actions.

    “Iranian threat actors, MOIS in particular, are no strangers to takedowns,” Ben Am explained. “Handala alone has had tens of Telegram channels, X accounts and domains taken down, and these takedowns have never slowed them down significantly. It will be trivial for Handala and its MOIS operators to get that content back up on another domain very, very soon.”

    Court documents filed by the FBI in support of the domain seizures reference the March 11 attack on what investigators describe as a major American multinational medical technologies company, with details matching the assault on Stryker.

    A Justice Department representative confirmed Friday that the FBI’s court filing “asserts that there is probable cause to believe that the operators of the ‘Handala’ persona are members of a conspiracy that carried out a destructive malware attack against a U.S.-based multinational medical technologies firm.”

    Stryker acknowledged the cyber incident in a March 19 company statement, reporting progress in restoring critical business systems while emphasizing that their medical products remained safe for patient use.

    “We’re grateful to the government for their efforts to seize domains linked to the purported threat actors,” the medical device manufacturer stated.

  • War-Fueled Energy Crisis Sends Bond Markets Plummeting Worldwide

    War-Fueled Energy Crisis Sends Bond Markets Plummeting Worldwide

    Financial markets worldwide experienced severe turbulence on Friday as mounting concerns about inflation driven by the Iran conflict sent government bond yields soaring across the United States and Europe, with analysts warning the pressure may persist.

    Market participants are quickly reassessing central banks’ capacity to loosen monetary policies as the conflict continues. Rising oil costs have increased the likelihood that the Federal Reserve might need to raise interest rates instead of cutting them.

    “Expectations for a rate cut are fading fast,” said Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth Management. “You need to get the Strait of Hormuz opened up and you need to get oil flowing, and that would relieve the pressure on oil prices.”

    Ten-year Treasury yields in America climbed to levels not seen since last summer. Market participants, who had been anticipating additional rate reductions this year, began factoring in a modest probability that the Fed will be compelled to raise rates before year-end. Bond yields serve as crucial benchmarks that influence corporate lending rates and mortgage costs.

    Dramatic increases in these rates can negatively impact both economic expansion and asset values. American equities plummeted Friday, pushing the S&P 500 into its fourth consecutive weekly drop for the first time in twelve months, while the Nasdaq fell 2% daily, approaching correction territory with a 10% decline from recent highs.

    British ten-year government debt costs also skyrocketed, reaching their peak since the global financial crisis. The benchmark gilt yield exceeded 5%, a threshold widely considered problematic given Britain’s susceptibility to energy price increases.

    German ten-year bond yields reached their highest point since the eurozone crisis in 2011. This key European borrowing benchmark hit 3.025%. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

    European Central Bank officials cautioned about escalating inflation dangers Friday but refrained from advocating stricter policies, despite numerous financial firms beginning to forecast rate increases starting as early as April.

    Major central banks including the Federal Reserve and Bank of England conducted policy sessions this week, expressing similar wariness regarding inflation threats.

    Friday brought news from three American officials who informed Reuters that thousands of additional Marines and sailors are being sent to the Middle East, departing approximately three weeks earlier than originally planned.

    Subsequently, Iraq announced force majeure on foreign-operated oil facilities due to Strait of Hormuz disruptions, a legal declaration typically used when circumstances beyond one’s control prevent fulfilling contractual obligations.

    “Nothing positive has happened so far with respect to the war and we’re heading into the fourth week, and we’re probably going to have a further build-up of these pressures,” said Padhraic Garvey, head of global rates and debt strategy at ING in New York.

    Fed Governor Christopher Waller revealed Friday that he had intended to advocate for a rate reduction at this week’s central bank meeting due to unexpected February job losses, but the energy crisis and threat of sustained inflation persuaded him that caution was necessary until the Iran conflict’s impact becomes clearer.

    “This is looking like it’s going to be a much more protracted conflict, and oil prices are going to stay high for a longer time,” Waller said on CNBC’s Squawk Box.

    American rate futures Friday began incorporating the possibility of interest rate increases later this year, with markets assigning a 32% probability of tightening by November according to LSEG data, up from nearly zero Thursday evening.

    Short-term bonds globally have suffered most from inflation anxieties. British short-term gilt yields rose over 30 basis points Thursday as prices collapsed. German two-year yields finished up 12 basis points at 2.566%, reaching nine-month peaks, then gained another 3 basis points Friday to 2.6%.

    Before the conflict began, markets indicated roughly 40% odds of another ECB rate cut this year. This has reversed to nearly fully pricing one increase for June and 60% probability for April.

    Some investors focused on potential government responses to economic damage. Spain’s administration Friday proposed 5 billion euro ($5.8 billion) measures to address the Middle East conflict’s impact on domestic energy costs.

    “A lot of attention today has been on fiscal policy,” said George Moran, European macro strategist at RBC Capital Markets in London.

    Italian ten-year yields rose 6 basis points to 3.846%, after Thursday’s 12 basis point spike. Italy’s greater reliance on energy imports compared to neighbors has made its bonds more vulnerable since the late February war outbreak.

    Italy’s benchmark yields have climbed nearly 60 basis points since then, exceeding the 45 basis point increases in French and Spanish yields and the 34 basis point rise in German bonds, widening the risk premium to nearly 80 basis points, the largest since October.

    “The sad fact is there are significant upside risks to inflation and therefore the selloff makes sense,” said Chris Scicluna, head of research at Daiwa Securities in London. “The repricing of the path of interest rates, at least in Europe, looks reasonable in light of the shock to energy prices.”

  • Houston Dynamo Adds Defender Sam Vines on Multi-Year Contract

    Houston Dynamo Adds Defender Sam Vines on Multi-Year Contract

    Houston Dynamo FC has acquired defender Sam Vines as a free agent, inking him to a contract that extends through the 2027 season, the team announced Friday.

    The 26-year-old left back became available after the Colorado Rapids released him prior to the 2026 campaign.

    During his time with Colorado across two separate stints (2018-21 and 2024-25), Vines recorded three goals and seven assists over 116 matches.

    “Sam is a fullback who brings versatility, quality on the ball and valuable experience at the MLS, European and international levels,” Dynamo president of soccer Pat Onstad said. “His technical ability and understanding of the game fit well with the way we want to play. We are excited to welcome Sam and his wife to Houston and look forward to his contributions this season.”

    Between his Colorado tenures, Vines spent two seasons (2021-23) competing for Royal Antwerp in Belgium’s top division. He has also represented the United States Men’s National Team in nine international matches, scoring once.