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Ranking 10th biggest stolen base and best value

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  • Several teams found potential bargains on Days 2 and 3 of the 2026 NFL Draft.
  • Injuries and physical measurements were factors that led to some prospects being taken out of the draft.
  • CB Keonte Scott, selected by the Bucks, may be the biggest bargain of this draft.

The 2026 NFL Draft still feels fresh, but some teams must have come out of the exercise confident they’ve unearthed the latest big bargain. However, only a handful are proven correct.

Making big hits on the second and third days of the draft and generating substantial surplus value could be a fast track to revamping a roster and becoming one of the league’s top contenders. But in reality, a select few players provide the huge returns that every franchise seeks in their selections. Still, this year’s event featured several choices that stood out for their potential payoffs.

Here are the 10 biggest steals of the 2026 NFL Draft.

There is plenty of depth at center this year, with at least four players ranked as close candidates to be starters early in their careers. Two of them, Logan Jones and Jake Slaughter, were eliminated in the second round. Lou hung around much longer, despite not being noticeably behind either player in any phase. The torn anterior cruciate ligament he sustained in October likely weighed on his draft stock. The Bengals could ask veteran Ted Karras to mentor Lue before taking over the Auburn product as Joe Burrow’s pivot long-term.

9. Emmett Johnson, RB, Kansas City Chiefs (5th round)

It was a tough year for the running back group, taking just three in the first three rounds. Johnson was one of the backs who was viewed with skepticism until the Chiefs called up the Nebraska standout midway through Day 3. For runners who don’t have a breakthrough strategy, it may not be easy to achieve great results. But Johnson has the size to evade and barrel through would-be tacklers at point-blank range, and he’s comfortable taking on the heavy workload of a pass catcher. The Chiefs would be wise not to overload Kenneth Walker III, who is used to operating in a timeshare from his time in Seattle, with new talent. That could mean quite a few chances for Johnson early on.

8. Joshua Josephs, Delaware State, Washington Commanders (5th round)

It’s hard to find an edge rusher with enough athleticism to be a real factor in putting pressure on the quarterback after Day 2. Joseph could also be considered an exception. The 6-3, 242-pound edge rusher troubles opposing blockers with his long arms, is quick off the line of scrimmage, and can overwhelm opponents early on. He has little consistency in actually making his way to quarterback and requires a plan built on more than just determination. However, managers could slowly bring him in behind Odafe Oweh and K’Lavon Chaisson, with the latter potentially being replaced after this season.

7. Jayshawn Barham, LB, Dallas Cowboys (3rd round)

Barham offered a less straightforward projection than many of his peers due to his size (6-4, 240 pounds) and limited usage at edge rusher until his final season at Michigan. But what was immediately apparent was his overall talent for creating chaos. Upon transferring to Maryland, his intensity instantly increased and he was able to quickly get to quarterbacks and ball carriers. The Cowboys will start him at off-ball linebacker, where his responsibilities will certainly be more complex than just finding and chasing the ball. But it may not be long before defensive coordinator Christian Parker wants to get more reps for a player who can be a mainstay in opposing backfields.

6. Kyle Lewis, LB/S, Miami Dolphins (4th round)

Louie doesn’t fit into the typical position bucket, so some creativity will be required to get the most out of the 6-0, 220-pound hybrid defender. But for a team with patience and defensive vision, the Pitt product could be a versatile coverage asset and all-around playmaker. The Dolphins are building a team from the ground up, so new head coach Jeff Hafley will be able to find a way to unlock Louie’s dynamic abilities according to his plans.

5. Chandler Rivers, CB, Baltimore Ravens (5th round)

A modest 5-10, 185-pound frame appears to be the only thing standing in the way of Rivers’ professional prospects. But aside from playing against huge targets, experienced and savvy cornerbacks can handle just about anything thrown at them. A move to this slot should alleviate the biggest concerns about his game. In Baltimore, that could mean learning under four-time Pro Bowler Marlon Humphrey as a rookie before potentially replacing him in 2027.

4. Keith Abney II, CB, Detroit Lions (5th round)

With a plethora of talented cornerbacks still available early in the third day, Abney and several other talented coverage players paid for the buyer’s market. His size may have played a big role in his evaluation, and some teams must have doubted whether he could hold up on the outside. However, quarterbacks who target Abney do so at their own peril. His 12 pass breakups last season proved how easily he can find the ball whenever tested. Lions defensive coordinator Kelvin Shepard should appreciate his versatility, instincts and physical ability.

3. Emmanuel Preignon, G, Jacksonville Jaguars (3rd round)

The Jaguars’ general manager is the one who engineered one of this year’s more bizarre draft classes, with some head-scratching moves filling the team’s efforts on Days 2 and 3. Still, few would argue with Pregnon’s choice. A sixth-year senior who transferred from USC after starting his career at the University of Wyoming, the 6-4, 314-pound blocker blossomed into an All-American last season. His age and pedestrian athleticism will put him behind top-35 draft picks like Olaiba Vega Ioane, Kieran Rutledge and Chase Visontis. But Preignon is adept at picking holes in ball carriers and is more than capable as a pass protector. He could be a high-end starter, responding to interest in continuing to strengthen Jacksonville’s ground game.

2. Chris Bell, WR, Miami Dolphins (3rd round)

Bell might have had a strong claim to the first round if not for the torn ACL he suffered in November. Instead, his wait was extended until the end of the second day. At 6-2, 220 pounds, he has drawn comparisons to AJ Brown, which are lofty but not unfounded. Like the bulky former Mississippi State receiver, Bell’s usage at Louisville (which consisted primarily of drags and slants) obscured his true ability as a downfield weapon. If he can regain his explosiveness and become a more accurate and sensitive route runner, he could be a nightmare matchup for the Dolphins’ offense, which is starting from scratch.

The Auburn transfer’s breakout season in Miami helped fuel the Hurricanes’ surprising run to the national championship game. But in this year’s draft, Scott seemed to be down for his age — he turns 25 in August — and has only played one year as an elite player. He eventually found the right role from the slot where his talents as an agent of chaos played out, and his best work came as a blitzer. The Buccaneers have cycled through several nickel options in recent years, but the addition of Scott could allow them to move Jacob Parrish to the outside to anchor the secondary. And Todd Bowles’ scheme should allow him to continue producing splash plays at an incredible rate.

Longevity influencer Kayla Barnes-Lentz follows this strict routine

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AUSTIN — Overhead lights and lamps in homes change from bright yellow to soft orange. Every room features custom furniture that is free of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Other features include a hyperbaric chamber, a PEMF machine, a sauna with built-in red light therapy, a home gym, and a cold plunge pool. Air purifiers protect the occupants of your home from all harmful substances that enter from the outside. Say what you like about longtime entrepreneur Kayla Burns-Lentz: This woman is methodical.

The 35-year-old is the most publicly measured woman in the world and has developed a cult following as the first woman to undergo an ovarian biological age test. Her ovaries are 30, not 35, thank you.

After living on a diet of Pop Tarts and toaster strudel, Burns-Lentz chose to study nutrition in college. Although she didn’t graduate, that didn’t stop her from learning all she could about how to live a healthy lifestyle, including earning certifications and growing her business, Burnslenz said. She opened her clinic LYV in Ohio in 2018 (retiring in 2025), aiming to improve health metrics in the process. Research doesn’t necessarily support everything she does, and some experts worry that her legion of fans may be misled by the data she shares widely.

Burns-Lentz has equipped LYV with a medical team that strives to give patients a deeper look into their health than a typical doctor’s visit. Bowel exam, advanced thyroid panel, total toxin test. She was the clinic’s first patient. And she began publishing her results in 2019.

“I said, ‘Guys, why don’t we develop the most science-backed protocol for longevity?’ Essentially, that’s what I was thinking about: How healthy can I make myself?” she says.

She discovered some differences early on that distinguish her personal data from previous studies conducted on men. For example, calorie restriction disrupted menstruation.

“For the first time, I had irregular periods. My thyroid started to fail. I ended up being prescribed thyroid medication. So I took a step back and thought, ‘Okay, wait a second, this doesn’t seem right,'” she says.

Burns-Lentz’s experience is not surprising. For example, two-thirds of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease occur in women, but they are not proportionally represented in research. As of 1993, women were only required to participate in clinical research, not to mention that only 1% of federal funding went to women-specific research outside of cancer. It’s the Wild West for women’s health and longevity, and Burns-Lentz is at the helm.

“We live in exciting times.”

Reading the complete Barnes-Lentz protocol is like trying to read a dictionary from A to Z at once. There’s nothing left to take in all. However, you can certainly pick and choose which factors to focus on, such as what scans she recommends, what supplements or prescriptions she takes, and a general picture of her daily life.

If you read too quickly, you may miss important medical disclaimers. “This website, including the experimental results presented, is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice or professional services,” it says. “The information provided should not be used to diagnose or treat any health problem or disease. Persons seeking medical advice should consult a qualified physician.” Other longevity practitioners, including Brian Johnson, have posted similar messages on their sites. She also emphasized that she prioritizes the basics of sleep, exercise, stress management, nutrition, and connection over many devices.

A snapshot of her protocol: She wakes up naturally at 5 a.m. every day, takes a body composition test, then works out and does red light therapy in the sauna. Breakfast follows. She rotates what she eats, but it always includes fermented foods, proteins, vegetables, and a Greek yogurt or coconut yogurt bowl. Her plates sometimes include eggs, salmon, vegetables, arugula, and spinach. She mixes collagen peptides and countless fibrous seeds in a yogurt bowl. She strives to get 40 grams of fiber per day and 60 grams of protein from breakfast alone.

After starting work at noon, she goes for a walk, puts on a red-light laser cap, and spends an hour in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber. She starts making an organic dinner around 2 or 2:30 p.m., eats at 3 p.m., takes her evening supplements, and is in bed by 8 p.m. (she has an entire room in her home dedicated to supplements, but she emphasizes that she doesn’t take them all). My stomach rarely grumbles, but if it does in the evening, I drink plain or carbonated water.

Barnes-Lentz posts all her results, but that doesn’t mean every woman’s results mirror hers. She credits her ovarian age with lowering her ovarian age to longevity efforts, in which she and her husband, Warren Lentz, spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on equipment and tested its effectiveness at Timeless Biotech, the company she advises.

How does an ovarian age test work? “It requires some standard biomarkers that we had access to, but now we have machine learning capabilities,” she says. These biomarkers include lean body mass, height, weight, and onset of first menstrual cycle, as well as follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and estrogen levels.

Research has not yet confirmed that lowering your biological age in any organ can help you live longer. But this data means Burns-Lentz can consider interventions to improve her health. While she can’t pinpoint the exact reason why her ovarian age is so low, she says, “Now that we have that baseline, we only have one additional intervention (hyperbaric oxygen therapy) besides the basic lifestyle,” so she may be able to understand what effect it has had on her body when she reexamines her body next month. Burns Lentz and her husband hope to have children someday.

But what exactly does this information tell us? “While her followers believe that her ovaries are five years younger as a result of her protocol, that causal inference is completely unfounded by the data,” says Dr. Eric Berdin, president and CEO of the Buck Institute on Aging. “The science of ovarian aging deserves serious research investment. What it doesn’t pay for is anecdotes fabricated as evidence by large platforms.”

That said, “we doctors who are busy with work may not be able to do the great job she does in spotlighting preventive medicine,” says the osteopathic internist, who also specializes in lifestyle medicine and emergency medicine, and “particularly infertility medicine. When there’s so much buzz about ovaries, you might not be able to do the great job that she does of really starting a conversation that makes people go, ‘Oh, you should think about how fast your ovaries are aging.’

“Things like this are completely normal to me.”

Barnes-Lentz has built a cohort of physicians, nutritionists, and other health care providers to help inform protocols and consult with specific physicians about specialized treatments such as hyperbaric oxygen therapy, peptides, and therapeutic plasma exchange.

She earns money from affiliate links on her website and charges $19 a month for a private membership that allows her followers to ask questions directly about the protocol. However, she is not the source of income for the family.

She and her husband co-own a sauna company, Heavenly Heat Saunas. Before their first date, she asked him to undergo a myriad of tests, as well as a biomarker screening.

“If a man is going to take a stool sample for you, he’s going to cooperate long-term,” she joked during a panel discussion at SXSW in March. They had their first date in a multi-person hyperbaric chamber. She said clearly: Do you really want to come in? If pressure is applied, it will not be able to move for a while. He was down, but four months later, in 2023, they got married. She wants to live as long as he did, preferably well into her 100s.

Tests never stop in the home they share. Gadgets are spilling out of the cabinets. The toilet is equipped with a device that photographs all fecal and urine deposits. “By the way, this kind of thing is very normal for me,” she added.

Many people ask Barnes-Lentz if she is having fun or enjoying life. She must be very miserable, they think. But she says that’s not the case.

“Who decided that fun meant staying out until 3 in the morning?” she wondered during the panel discussion. “Who decided that alcohol was the only way to celebrate? Who decided this?”

Donald Trump’s surreal White House press conference after the shooting

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The president and reporters were all dressed up for a party at the Washington Hilton. They ended up at the White House trying to make sense of another story of shocking political violence.

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WASHINGTON – One of the year’s most elegant and highly anticipated parties, with speakers and interrogators in tuxedos and evening gowns, took on a surreal appearance in the White House press briefing room, turning it into a crime scene instead.

President Donald Trump, wearing a black tie, was evacuating the Washington Hilton when a gunman opened fire outside the banquet hall that houses some of America’s highest levels of power and influence. Safely back in the White House, the president was flanked by Cabinet members who typically meet during business hours to discuss tougher issues like tariffs and farm policy.

Vice President J.D. Vance, FBI Director Kash Patel, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, and Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin joined President Trump on stage in the briefing room. First Lady Melania Trump was flanked by Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

Reporters rushed in from the White House Correspondents’ Dinner to find women in colorful satin gowns and men in black bow ties and shiny tuxedos scrambling to make sense of a shocking new story of political violence in a country where it has become all too common.

“I saw a lot of tuxedos and beautiful dresses. It was a little different night than I expected, but I’ll do it again,” the president said.

President Trump said the police officer who was injured in the attack but was saved by a bulletproof vest is “doing well” and in good condition.

“He was shot at close range with a very powerful weapon. The vest did its job,” Trump said.

Trump added: “I spoke with the police officer and everything is going well.” “He’s doing great. He’s very energetic. And we told him we love him and respect him. He’s a very proud man. He’s proud of his work.”

The press briefing room where President Trump spoke was named after President Ronald Reagan’s press secretary, James Brady. Mr. Brady and Mr. Reagan were both shot in 1981 at the same hotel that Mr. Trump had just left.

The White House Correspondents’ Dinner has been postponed. President Trump claimed there would be another party in 30 days, bigger and better than ever.

“I’m ready, I’m willing, I’m capable,” Trump said. “I don’t know if I’ll be as rowdy as I plan on being,” he said of his traditionally humorous speech.

Trump was shot in the ear during a 2024 campaign rally. Another would be the assassin who was arrested after stalking him on his golf course. Reporters asked whether it was possible to lower the temperature of political debate.

President Trump said that while politics is a dangerous profession, he lives a “very normal life considering it’s a dangerous life.”

“I think we’re handling it as well as we can,” President Trump said. “I’m not a basket case. I take it for what it is. I’m doing it for my country.”

The president said when he first heard it, he thought a tray had fallen. A loud bang caused the crowd to duck under the table.

Trump was seated on a raised podium but was quickly removed. He said he wanted to return to continue the dinner, but the event was ultimately canceled. Law enforcement said they immediately took the suspect into custody.

“It’s always a shock when something like this happens, and that will never change,” Trump said. “I heard a noise and thought it was Tray.”

“It was quite far away, but it was a gun,” he added.

Which city is the worst for a hurricane? Maps show risks. Some locations are “past due”

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Several locations along the East Coast are in an extended “hurricane hiatus.” Some forecasters are concerned about that.

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More than 100 years later, will 2026 be the year Tampa gets hit by a hurricane? What about Miami 34 years after Andrew’s hit? Or will it be Southern New England’s turn for the first time in decades?

None of these questions can be answered at this time, but experts say all three locations are among the least likely to be hit by hurricanes in the nation.

AccuWeather’s forecast highlights an unusual “hurricane hiatus” in these three locations, according to research compiled by Michael Ferragamo, a freelance hurricane researcher and prospective University of Oklahoma graduate, indicating that these areas have been without a hurricane for an unusually long time.

“All of these regions have seen significant population increases since the last major impact,” AccuWeather hurricane expert Alex DaSilva told USA TODAY. “Many residents have never experienced a hurricane and may not be familiar with evacuation zones or proper preparation, which increases the risk.”

Why are these places so vulnerable?

In Florida, both Tampa and Miami are “very vulnerable,” DaSilva said. “Both are low-lying areas with a high risk of storm surge flooding and have seen rapid development in recent decades. Tampa was very lucky when Hurricane Milton passed just to the south. If its path had shifted slightly north, the effects could have been catastrophic.”

In the Northeast, areas from New York City to Providence, Rhode Island, are also highly susceptible to storm surge.

Tampa: “I was very, very lucky.”

Florida’s second-most populous metropolitan area (after Miami) hasn’t suffered direct damage since 1921, when an unnamed storm ripped through the city, killing eight people and leaving $10 million in damage (equivalent to $170 million to $185 million today).

Hurricane Milton in 2024 was a close call for Tampa. But “Tampa’s remarkable performance in avoiding a direct hit from a major hurricane continued in Milton,” DaSilva said.

Although Milton caused a shock, the worst of the storm, and storm surge, did not affect the city. DaSilva said there is no geographic or topographical or even meteorological reason for Tampa’s long streak. “They were very, very lucky,” he said.

“A typical ‘return interval’ is about 10 years, so depending on how you classify Milton, Tampa could still be considered overdue for a more immediate and severe hit.” (Return interval or return period is the average time between hurricanes at a given location, based on historical data, rather than schedules or forecasts.)

Phil Klotzbach, a hurricane researcher at Colorado State University, agreed with DaSilva. “Tampa is a good example of a city that has had some close calls, but hasn’t had direct landfall in recent years,” citing Hurricanes Charlie (2004), Irma (2017) and Idalia (2023) as examples.

Miami: “Eerily quiet”

“Since 2004, Miami and the entire East Coast of Florida has been eerily quiet,” Klotzbach said. “Since Jeanne in 2004, the only hurricane to make landfall on Florida’s east coast was the havoc that was Nicole in 2022. Of course, Miami had a pretty good scare with Irma in 2017,” he said.

“Miami is one of the areas that lags behind the most,” DaSilva said. “The average time between hurricanes is about every six to eight years, but this is the first time we’ve had a direct hit since 2005. So South Florida is far above its historical frequency.”

Hurricane Andrew in 1992 was the deadliest storm in South Florida history in terms of structural damage and destruction, and remained the costliest in monetary terms until Hurricane Irma surpassed it 25 years later.

Ferragamo also said Florida’s east coast has had very few hurricanes make landfall recently, “in stark contrast to the seven hurricanes that occurred between 1945 and 1950.”

Southern New England: ‘It’s going to be devastating’

Southern New England, including Providence, is also far behind, DaSilva said. “The typical recurrence interval is about 17 to 20 years, but the last time a hurricane made direct landfall was Hurricane Bob in 1991. That was more than 30 years ago.”

“I can attest to the fact that it’s been a long time since a major hurricane has impacted this region,” said Klotzbach, a former Massachusetts resident.

Bob brought destruction, but the scale and severity of the death and devastation caused by the ferocious hurricane of 1938 remains almost unparalleled in New England.

The 1938 hurricane killed 682 people and had Category 3 winds ranging from 115 to 190 mph. Additionally, it moved at about 50 miles per hour and provided little warning, causing devastating high waves and winds across Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts.

“Last summer, our team highlighted how the Northeast slows the arrival of hurricanes and ran scenarios. If the Great New England Hurricane of 1938 were to hit the same region now, with the same storm surge, flooding, and wind impacts, AccuWeather experts estimate that the total damage and economic losses would be $440 billion.”

In recent times, the last hurricane to make landfall was Bob in 1991, Ferragamo said. “Since then, kids in this area have grown up and are in their 20s and 30s, and they have yet to experience a hurricane.”

“My biggest concern for New England is a major hurricane, a once-in-a-lifetime monster like the 1938 hurricane or Carroll in 1954. Residents have no idea how much damage a hurricane can cause in this region, and if another hurricane hits, even a Category 2, it will be devastating.”

Which U.S. city is worst hit by hurricanes?

The map (above) shows the hurricane “return window” across the U.S. coasts. The return period, also known as the “return interval,” is the interval between hurricane occurrences in a particular location. This is based on historical data and is not a schedule or forecast.

The more frequent the return period (red on the map), the more frequently hurricanes have historically hit the area.

The map was for Ferragamo’s capstone project during his last semester at the University of Oklahoma. “For the return window map, we set a 30-mile radius around the county (taking into account the average diameter of hurricane-force winds in the storm).”

Doyle Rice is a national correspondent for USA TODAY, focusing on weather and climate.

Queen Elizabeth gives King Charles a lesson on how to deal with the president

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Charles III may be channeling his mother when he arrives in Washington on April 27th.

During her record-setting reign, Queen Elizabeth met with 13 sitting US presidents, more than any previous figure from any country, sometimes at moments when the US-Britain’s “special relationship” was strained.

It was his son’s first mission to visit the former colony since his coronation, arriving amid a rift over the Iran war and the future of NATO.

What is Elizabeth’s lesson?

Here we will introduce four of them.

What is your problem today? Please ignore

The constitutional monarch has no power to negotiate the US role in the Western alliance or the deployment of British troops to the Strait of Hormuz. These are Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s problematic mandates.

So why get into trouble today?

Elizabeth became the first queen to arrive in Washington shortly after Britain’s attempt to seize the Suez Canal, a plan that not only failed but also infuriated President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

However, there is no evidence that the Queen and President discussed Suez during their visit. Instead, they reminisced fondly, remembering when she was a teenage princess and he was an American general sent to London to help win World War II, and discussing the latest news of the day: the Soviet Union’s Sputnik launch.

It was a challenge to U.S. supremacy in space, a partnership between the two countries.

A few years later, in 2003, she hosted President George W. Bush in London during mass protests against the Iraq war, an issue that engulfed politics in both countries.

Did they talk about it?

“No,” the senior palace advisor added emphatically, surprised at the very idea, “no, no, no, no.”

There’s no need for that. Leave it to 10 Downing Street.

Please bring me something shiny

Royal treasures have long fascinated millions of Americans. That includes President Trump, who added a palatial layer of gold leaf to the Oval Office. The huge new ballroom he ordered is likely to dwarf the grand dining rooms at Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace.

During formal meetings with presidents and other foreign leaders, Elizabeth embraced history and dazzled with tiaras, earrings, and necklaces filled with precious jewels.

Of course, Charles will be sporting medals rather than jewelry. However, take a look at Queen Camilla putting some of her crown jewels on display.

The royal couple’s gift to President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump will be another opportunity to tap into Britain’s treasure trove and make a good impression.

Let’s take a long view. About 250 years

The king’s arrival comes at a fortuitous time, as the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence approaches. No one seems to care that the proclamation was directed at his great-grandfather, George III, who was denounced in it as a tyrant who “destroyed the lives of his people.”

Rather, that shared history gave Charles an opportunity to emphasize the common language and values ​​of the United States and Britain.

Half a century ago, Elizabeth visited the White House for the nation’s bicentennial celebrations.

For her, it was a chance to meet the new president, Gerald Ford, in the wake of the Watergate scandal involving his predecessor, Richard Nixon.

This scandal and concerns about its impact forced Britain to maintain a degree of diplomatic distancing for some time. There was behind-the-scenes debate in London over whether the Queen should visit during her 200th anniversary, with some suggesting that her son Charles be sent instead.

That’s if Nixon survived. He didn’t and solved the problem.

If all else fails, wait. Another president will soon be inaugurated.

Although there are no terms or term limits for monarchs, Charles’ reign will certainly be shorter than his mother’s 70 years. He was 73 years old when he was crowned in 2022. Two years ago, he revealed that he was battling cancer.

Presidents, by contrast, have a sell-by date, and the end of Trump’s White House term is currently two and a half years away. At that point, Charles or his successor will likely still be imprisoned at Buckingham Palace.

Elizabeth understood that. When President Lyndon Johnson rejected her pleas to visit London, she bided her time until the friendlier President Richard Nixon took office. After a rocky relationship with President Jimmy Carter, she developed her closest relationship with his successor, President Ronald Reagan.

She was generally careful not to let her relationship with the current president complicate her relationship with the next president.

The exception was when British authorities searched files for dirt on Bill Clinton, an Oxford Rhodes Scholar during the Vietnam War. This was a not-so-subtle effort to help President George HW Bush defeat his Democratic challenger in 1992.

Although Mr. Clinton won, he insisted he held no grudge but never forgot.

During the Queen’s visit in 1976, British officials invited Mr. Carter, then the likely Democratic candidate, to a mutual dinner at the British Embassy and discussed whether to meet the Queen. However, the White House made it clear that Ford opposed the idea, but they did not.

This time, the focus will be on whether Charles will try to reach out to the Democratic Party diplomatically.

Because presidents come and go. The British monarchy has existed for more than a thousand years and will continue to exist for many years to come.

Susan Page, USA TODAY’s Washington bureau chief, is the author of “Queens and Presidents,” published by Harper in April.

Smartphone data is at the center of Supreme Court battle over police investigations

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Okello Chattry was convicted of bank robbery after police tracked him through his smartphone. But he argues that the searches violate the Fourth Amendment and that the potential abuses are “stunning.”

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WASHINGTON – Bringing a smartphone to a bank robbery wasn’t such a smart move for Okello Chattry.

The Supreme Court must now decide whether the “groundbreaking” and “previously unimaginable” method in which police tracked Chatry through his Samsung Galaxy S9 cell phone violates Fourth Amendment protections from unlawful searches.

At issue in the case is whether the government can examine vast amounts of data revealing the location of cellphones at crime scenes without knowing who is holding them. Searches like this with Google’s location data start with a haystack of hundreds of millions of phones and allow police to weed out the few that might lead to a suspect.

This tactic, known as a “reverse search” without identifying a suspect, is attractive to police whose shoe leather investigation has stalled. But civil libertarians are concerned about such a wide dragnet gathering highly personal information on hundreds, perhaps thousands, of non-criminals.

If courts uphold such digital investigations without identifying suspects, legal experts say the strategy could expand to eavesdropping using search engines, cloud storage and artificial intelligence chats.

“There’s no question that depending on how it’s written and how the decision is made, it could be a very important landmark decision,” William McGevellan, dean of the University of Minnesota School of Law, told USA TODAY.

Police track bank robbers using smartphone location information

Chatley was sentenced to nearly 12 years in prison after pleading guilty to robbing Coal Federal Credit Union at gunpoint on May 20, 2019.

Video showed Chatley walking into a bank in Midlothian, Virginia, talking on a cell phone at 4:52 p.m. Police suspect he may have been talking to an accomplice. Chatley handed the teller a note demanding money, brandished a silver and black pistol and left with $195,000.

Police interviewed witnesses, but ran out of leads after about a month. But because the cellphones were visible on surveillance video, police obtained a warrant to search Google location data for all cellphones on both sides of the robbery for 30 minutes, within a soccer field about 1.5 minutes from the bank.

Officials call such searches “geofencing.” This is to specify the boundaries to search. The data is fairly accurate and is measured every two minutes to within 3 meters based on the Global Positioning System, Bluetooth beacons, cell phone towers, and local Wi-Fi networks.

The data is also huge. Google was tracking the location of more than 500 million users at the time. During the search, 19 phones were found near the bank at the right time, but the owners remained anonymous at the time. Police asked Google for the names of the three owners of the phone, one of whom was Chattry.

After identifying Chattry, police discovered that he had recently purchased a pistol similar to the one used in the robbery. Police conducted a separate search and found nearly $100,000 in cash and a silver and black 9mm handgun at the suspect’s residence.

‘The potential for abuse is breathtaking’: Chattry

Ms Chattry pleaded guilty on the condition that she could still appeal the court’s decision authorizing the search.

Attorney General John Sauer, representing the federal government, argued that Ms. Chattry waived her expectation of privacy by sharing her location with Google.

“Individuals do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy when they make movements that anyone can see, that they choose to allow third parties to analyze for their own purposes, and that reveal little about their living patterns over a sufficiently short period of time, especially if their identities remain anonymous,” Sauer said in one filing.

He said there was no “just cause” to overturn the conviction “based on the objective integrity of the efforts of the investigating authorities.”

But Chatley argues that this kind of broad research without a specific subject in mind is exactly what the Fourth Amendment was designed to prevent.

“The technology may be new, but the constitutional issues it raises are not,” Chattry’s lawyers said in the filing. “The potential for abuse is staggering. A government could simply draw a geofence around a church, political rally, or gun store and force a search of all users’ records to find out who was there.”

Court to tackle ‘groundbreaking’ investigative tools ‘unimagined’

Courts have expressed various opinions regarding investigation methods.

U.S. District Judge Hannah Lauck of Virginia ruled that the search violated the Fourth Amendment, but that police acted in good faith so that the results could be used in court. She warned against “simply rubber stamping geofencing warrants in the future.”

“This case signals the next step in the court’s continued efforts to apply the fundamental doctrines of the Fourth Amendment to previously unimaginable investigative methods,” Lauck wrote.

4th The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals split 7-7 on the issue, upholding Lauck’s decision. The court ruled that the warrant was not actually a search because Chattry “voluntarily released this information to Google.” Chief Justice Albert Diaz said he sided with the lower courts solely because of the goodwill of the police.

“My colleagues have very different views on the intersection of the Fourth Amendment and the innovative investigative tools at issue here,” Diaz wrote. “But judicial humility sometimes advises against making sweeping constitutional proclamations simply because you can, and this is precisely the case.”

State courts and lower federal courts have been grappling with geofencing cases for years, but this appears to be the first time the case has reached the Supreme Court. The last major Fourth Amendment case before the high court eight years ago dealt with the privacy of location data, but not during the search for a suspect, but after the suspect had been identified.

“I believe this is the first time the Supreme Court has dealt with geofencing warrants,” McGevellan said.

Google resists requests for information about large areas of San Francisco and Albuquerque

Google, which currently leaves location data on individual phones, said it had challenged more than 3,000 warrants, many of which were later withdrawn. Some of the requests could have inundated hundreds or even thousands of innocent people, the company said.

One of the warrants at issue sought the phone locations of thousands of people over two and a half days in a 2.5 square mile area of ​​San Francisco.

In another case, the warrant sought location data for 489 acres in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The search would have captured 3,000 users, including more than 1,000 people who attended a funeral at the New Mexico Islamic Center.

In the third case, the warrant sought location data for 25 square miles over Vail and Aspen, Colorado. The raids were expected to target hundreds of homes, about 80 hotels, numerous places of worship and at least two hospitals.

“Personal documents and data stored electronically and securely on remote servers are modern ‘papers and effects’ protected by the Fourth Amendment,” the company said in its filing. “These documents are stored on servers in the ‘cloud’ but are not available to the public. These documents include emails, documents, photos, search history, and more that are privately stored by technology companies such as Google.”

Mobile phones track personal data such as visits to psychiatrists and abortion clinics

Critics of the data search, including the American Civil Liberties Union, said it would seriously violate the privacy of millions of people in the wrong place at the wrong time, regardless of crime.

Chattry said searches could reveal when people visited “psychiatrists, plastic surgeons, abortion clinics, AIDS treatment centers, strip clubs, criminal defense attorneys, hourly motels, trade union meetings, mosques, synagogues and churches, gay bars, etc.”

The ACLU said authorizing such searches would use new and powerful technology to violate privacy.

“The warrants purporting to authorize these dragnet searches are general warrants and are prohibited by the Fourth Amendment,” the ACLU said in one filing.

Cloud storage search and AI chat could be next: Law professor

Eight law professors filed arguments in the case, explaining that searches for highly personal data can go far beyond the phone.

For example, police can track suspects based on what they type into a search engine. But they will do so without knowing whether their requests for information about “Savannah Guthrie” or “Charlie Kirk” were made for nefarious reasons, mere curiosity about public figures.

Chats with artificial intelligence could provide new nuggets of information from the 700 million people who use the program every week.

Another option is to search cloud storage for billions of photos, including time and location stamps, email messages, and calendar items. A 2020 user study concluded that a significant portion of US users store sensitive information in the cloud, including 35% of office documents, 27% of passwords and login data, and 17% of financial information.

“All such uses generate an ocean of data in the form of archived conversations, irresistible data for drawing in the web of law enforcement,” the lawyers wrote. “As the court specifically considers geofence warrants in this case, it should be mindful of the potential ramifications of its opinion.”

Inside the White House Correspondents Dinner filming room

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A reporter recounts the moments before and after the gunshots rang out at the annual press conference, which President Trump also attended.

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Three quick pops echoed across the banquet hall floor.

I swung my head across the room, hoping to see a tray of dropped food. After all, the ballroom was a small venue with over 250 tables.

Instead, the last thing I saw before being pulled under the table was one entrance door swinging open.

Just an hour before an armed man tried to breach security and enter the International Ballroom at the Washington Hilton, where President Donald Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, Vice President J.D. Vance and top members of the president’s Cabinet were in attendance, hundreds of people in tuxedos and gowns slowly made their way to the ballroom for the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. Including me.

Dinner was scheduled to begin at 8pm ET. And I was there to report on what’s inside Washington’s most popular dinner, often referred to as “Geek Prom.” This is already particularly historic, as Trump is the first president to attend. Little did I know how newsworthy this event would become.

The International Ballroom is huge. There were over 250 tables packed inside. At the front of the room was a long table where the White House Correspondents Association director, Trump, Melania Trump and Vance all sat. Behind the table was a banner that read in all caps: “Celebrating the First Amendment.”

Dinner started normally. The association’s board of directors was introduced. CBS reporters and WHCA president Weijia Jiang welcomed the guests. There was a color presentation by the U.S. Army Color Guard. The national anthem was sung.

Then it was time for a meal before the entire program began, including remarks from Trump himself.

As the waiters tried to wade through the sea of ​​tightly packed tables, they heard three rapid thumps. As I scanned the room for the source of the noise, I heard someone whisper, “It’s a gunshot.”

Several entrances to the banquet hall exploded open, sending waves of attendees fleeing under the tables. I was pulled over by a co-worker. With trembling hands, I quickly typed “shot” into my work chat for the event around 8:35 PM ET. “Shots fired,” I quickly followed.

I later learned that I could hear the Secret Service and other security personnel rushing into the room. As I took shelter on the floor, my view obscured by a white tablecloth, I thought there might be a scuffle going on in another part of the room. It was the Secret Service that removed the first lady and vice president from the stage.

The attendees around me were sitting on the floor, some on their sides, some on their stomachs. Others, including me, peeked into our phones to see what was going on. Someone chanted “America.”

After that, the movement briefly calmed down, finally signaling that it was okay to stand up. People got up from the floor and looked around, trying to figure out what was causing the commotion. One person was escorted out and appeared to be hurt from having to cover himself so quickly. Chairs were scattered on the floor.

Hundreds of journalists then operated their cell phones, making calls and sending messages, rushing towards each other to discuss what to do. Despite having Wi-Fi, service was spotty. Some media outlets reported that there was a gunman. It’s unclear where he was in the hotel, what his position was, or how close he was to the ballroom.

As I was about to convey a message about what I had seen and heard in the banquet hall, the smell of gunpowder filled the room.

The confusion continued even after we were told to leave. I was then asked to stay as dinner was to follow. In the end, we all had to evacuate due to security regulations.

Maroon napkins were scattered like confetti on the banquet hall floor. When I finally evacuated the building with other reporters, several people caught my heel.

But my night wasn’t over. It was time to head to work.

Security after the White House Correspondents Association dinner shooting

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How did the suspected shooter get so close to the black tie celebration? A former Secret Service leader tells us what it takes to protect the annual event.

WASHINGTON – The Washington Hilton, site of the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, is one of the most heavily guarded venues visited by the president of the United States and many of the capital’s elite.

Hundreds of Secret Service agents and senior officials, including paramilitary counter-assault teams, travel everywhere with President Donald Trump.

A Secret Service sniper was on the roof of a nearby building, part of a large security force that has been preparing for the annual event for weeks, even months. There is almost certainly a drone flying overhead.

And perhaps as many Washington Metropolitan Police Department officers and employees are working “in partnership” with numerous federal agencies to secure buildings and create impenetrable perimeters in case someone with malicious intent tries to do something.

That’s according to A.T. Smith, a private security consultant who served as deputy director of the Secret Service from 2012 to 2015 and has worked on many such events, including the annual dinner, which is traditionally attended by the president, vice president, Cabinet members, senior White House aides, members of Congress, and hundreds of journalists.

On April 25, the president and first lady Melania Trump rushed out of the dinner after gunshots were heard inside the hotel where the event was being held, causing attendees to collapse to the floor. Poole’s report said several U.S. Secret Service agents shouted “shots fired” during the event.

The suspect was identified as Cole Thomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California, by The New York Times, CBS, and The Associated Press, citing anonymous law enforcement officials. USA TODAY has not independently confirmed the suspect’s name.

The president and law enforcement officials said one suspect was in custody and facing charges.

What will security look like for the White House Correspondents Dinner?

Smith said the annual dinner is protected by one of the largest security operations outside of so-called special national security events such as presidential inaugurations and political conventions.

“Security in this building has to be at the absolute highest level,” Smith told USA TODAY shortly after the incident. “On a scale of 1 to 10, this should be a 10.”

The Secret Service never says how it will protect the president, including staffing or technology used. Officials did not respond to requests for comment from USA TODAY.

However, Smith said there were likely a total of several hundred operatives on site for the dinner. The dinner took place in the same sprawling complex where a lone gunman attempted to assassinate President Ronald Reagan as he left his hotel on March 30, 1981.

How did someone get close to the ballroom?

So why would someone bring a gun so close?

Federal and local officials will follow protocol and consider the matter over days, weeks and even months, Smith said.

At a White House briefing on April 25, President Trump suggested the suspect was outside the most important layer of the security perimeter. This boundary is the line of magnetometers that all guests must pass outside the ballroom where the dinner party was held.

Previously, anyone wishing to enter the hotel had to present an invitation to either the dinner itself or one of the many pre-parties hosted by media and other groups elsewhere in the building.

“A man stormed into a security checkpoint with multiple weapons and was subdued by very brave members of the Secret Service who acted very quickly,” Trump said.

Asked later in the press conference whether he was concerned about safety at the indoor event, Trump said, “The room was very safe.” “You know, he charged from 50 yards away, so he was pretty far from the room.”

Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a post on X that the shooting occurred near the main magnetometer inspection area during the dinner party.

President Trump praised the work of the Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies Saturday night.

“I had to go through a lot” to get to dinner, he said. “We had resources everywhere, we had resources sitting at the table,” he added.

Trump also said the suspect was “moving, really moving. And the reaction time of the officers who apprehended and detained him was excellent.”

President Trump said a police officer was shot “at very close range with a very powerful weapon” but survived because of his security vest.

Other VIPs, including ministers, were also grabbed and pushed to the ground by two or three operatives, pictures emerging from the chaos that followed the attack showed.

Asked if he thought he was a target, Trump said: “I do. I mean, these people are crazy. They’re crazy. And, you know, you never know. They were so far away from me.”

But President Trump noted that the suspect somehow found a way through a less secure layer of the security perimeter before reaching the lower-floor ballroom area where the dinner was held.

“It wasn’t a particularly safe building,” Trump said.

Local and federal authorities said based on preliminary information they believe the suspect in the shooting was a guest at the hotel. According to media outlets including Reuters and ABC News, law enforcement agencies have secured a hotel room believed to belong to the suspect and are conducting an investigation.

The hotel operator told USA TODAY that a man named Cole Thomas Allen was staying at the hotel on April 25th.

Asked about any remedial action he felt was necessary to protect himself, Trump suggested that someone could always find a way to get to him.

“I don’t care how many people you have, I don’t care how good they are. They are your greatest people, and they could be your greatest security in history,” Trump said. But “even if you have a great job and a brain, if it’s a little skewed or a lot skewed, it can cause problems.”

Shooting wreaks havoc at White House Correspondents’ Dinner

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WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump had been sitting on stage talking with other VIPs just minutes earlier when a series of loud bangs rippled through the packed Washington Hilton ballroom.

Chaos broke out at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, one of Washington’s major social events.

Guests in tuxedos and evening dresses crouched under tables. Secret Service agents rushed to the stage and quickly evacuated President Trump and first lady Melania Trump from the room. Banquet chairs fell over and maroon napkins were scattered on the floor. A strong smell of gunpowder was in the air. Some prayed.

Trump attended his first dinner as president in more than a decade and was returned to the White House. Later, still wearing a black tie and tuxedo, he told reporters at a news conference that he initially thought the loud bang was caused by a waiter dropping a tray.

“It was either a tray or a bullet,” he said. “I thought it was a tray, but it wasn’t.”

Law enforcement officials said a man with multiple weapons stormed a security checkpoint in the lobby outside a hotel ballroom on Saturday, April 25.. He was apprehended and arrested by Secret Service agents. FBI Director Kash Patel told reporters that a long gun and shell casings were found at the scene.

Reschedule within 30 days

The White House Correspondents Association, organizers of the Black Tiger Gala, canceled the banquet but announced it would reschedule it within 30 days.

This annual glitzy event brings together some of Washington’s most powerful people and the journalists who cover them. The dinner often attracts Hollywood celebrities, and dozens of parties are held across Washington prior to the event.

More than 3,000 people packed into a huge ballroom for this year’s dinner in the basement of the Washington Hilton, about a mile north of the White House.

The Hilton is the same hotel where President Ronald Reagan was shot and killed in an assassination attempt by John Hinckley in 1981. Then-White House Press Secretary James Brady and several law enforcement officers were injured.

According to multiple reports, authorities identified the suspect in the shooting who attended the correspondents’ dinner as Cole Thomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California. Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said he was taken to a local hospital and is currently being evaluated. He is believed to have been the only shooter, she said.

President Trump said one police officer was shot but survived because of his bulletproof vest.

“I spoke with the police officer and he is in very good condition,” Trump said. He said the officers were “in good spirits”.

U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro told reporters that the suspect in custody is charged with two crimes, including use of a firearm in a crime of violence and assault on a federal officer with a dangerous weapon. He is scheduled to be arraigned on Monday, April 27th.

“Based on what we know so far, it is clear that this person had the intent to cause as much harm and damage as possible,” she said.

USA TODAY reporters said they heard what sounded like gunshots and the chanting of “USA” inside the ballroom.

Kerry Kennedy, the daughter of slain Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, said she was knocked to the floor when she heard loud gunshots and cries of “Get down, get down, get down!”

One of his tablemates, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), “heroically protected me, whispering, ‘It’s okay, it’s okay, it’s okay,'” Kennedy said on social media.

She said armed guards burst into the room and were looking for ministers to take them to safety.

Erin Thieleman, an Air Force veteran who was a guest at the dinner, said she saw the suspected gunman run through the hotel’s security checkpoint. She had left dinner and called her teenage son, who was babysitting his younger brothers.

“As soon as he stood up, I heard three loud gunshots and immediately saw the man face down,” Thielman told USA TODAY. “He was carrying a rifle and appeared to have a magazine rope hanging from it like a crossbody bag.”

Thielman said she remembered running back to the dinner party and yelling “guns, shooters, guns, shooters” and alerting security to close the banquet door.

President Trump has been the target of multiple assassination attempts.

On July 13, 2024, during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, a 20-year-old sniper armed with an AR-15-style rifle opened fire from the roof of a nearby building, wounding him. One of the bullets grazed President Trump’s right ear, and a 50-year-old retired firefighter who was in the crowd was killed in the shooting. Two other people in the crowd were also injured.

The gunman, Thomas Crooks, was shot and killed by a Secret Service sniper.

Two months later, on September 15, 2024, a second would-be assassin targeted Trump while he was playing golf at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida. Secret Service agents found a rifle that had penetrated the course’s fenced perimeter. Investigators fired shots at the suspect, Ryan Wesley Routh, and pursued him.

Routh, 59, was later convicted in federal court of attempted assassination and sentenced to life in prison.

Asked why people continue to target him, Trump said at a White House press conference that would-be assassins target “the most influential people.”

“I don’t want to say it’s an honor, but I’ve done a lot. We’re trying to do something great, but it also comes with risks,” he said.

Being president, he said, is a more dangerous job than driving a race car or fighting bulls.

“I don’t think there’s any other job that’s more dangerous,” he says.

Michael Collins writes about the intersection of politics and culture. He is a veteran reporter who has covered the White House and Congress. X: Follow him at @mcollinsNEWS.

Zachary Levi: Gunshots rang out at White House Correspondents’ Dinner

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Actor Zachary Levi was also at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on April 25, the day of the shooting at the Washington Hilton Hotel.

“We were sitting at a table and there was a loud banging sound that definitely caught my attention,” he said. “In the back of my mind, I jokingly thought it sounded like a gunshot.”

“The next thing we saw was everyone start turning around and falling down and there was a commotion,” he added. Guests hid under tables as the Secret Service rushed to ensure the safety of the “importers,” including members of Congress and ministers, Levi said. “After that, things seemed to calm down.”

Levi looked in disbelief when the early news came that dinner was to follow. “I don’t see why they would continue with the dinner if there was actually live filming going on.”

Levi was USA TODAY’s guest at the dinner, seated with Chairman Mike Johnson and his wife, but was safely removed from the room.

The dinner portion of the event had just begun, and employees were trying to move through the crowded room to clear salad plates from the first course.

The Secret Service later announced in a post on X that all of its protected persons, including President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump, were safe.

One person is in custody and the Secret Service is investigating the incident. The incident occurred near the main magnetometer testing area at the dinner party.

What we know about the suspect in the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting

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Multiple media outlets are reporting that Cole Thomas Allen is in custody for the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.

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Multiple state media outlets have reported that Cole Thomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California, is in custody in connection with the April 25 shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner attended by President Donald Trump and the first lady.

Allen’s name has been reported by the New York Times, CBS, and the Associated Press, citing anonymous law enforcement officials. USA TODAY has not independently confirmed the suspect’s name.

U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro told reporters that the suspect will be arraigned in U.S. District Court on April 27 on charges of assaulting a federal officer with a dangerous weapon and using a firearm during an assault. She would not rule out terrorism charges.

“If there is something like that, we will find it and submit it,” she said.

Trump, who was escorted from the banquet hall after gunshots were heard in the lobby, told reporters that the suspect made a “50-yard charge” to avoid security checkpoints and was carrying multiple weapons.

He posted security camera video of a person running past security guards and being pinned to the ground.

FBI Director Kash Patel said the suspect had long arms. D.C. police said he was armed with a shotgun, a handgun and multiple knives. Officials said the man appeared to be acting alone.

(This story will be updated.)

Diego Pavia is faced with the harsh truth.

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The 2026 NFL Draft concluded on Saturday, April 25th in a subdued manner befitting the later rounds. But even if the final act in Pittsburgh could not compare to the drama of the first two days, the outcome of the event still had a notable impact.

Several promising stars who endured unexpected falls have finally reached the end of their wait. However, some players weren’t so lucky as some big names went undrafted. And it appears some teams have taken advantage of this opportunity to enrich their rosters with promising projects.

Here are the biggest winners and losers from the final day of the 2026 NFL Draft.

2026 NFL Draft Day 3 Winner

Jermod McCoy

At least his painful fall wasn’t as bad as Saturday.

The Tennessee cornerback finally found clarity after the Las Vegas Raiders selected him with the third-day No. 1 pick. How McCoy can move forward could largely depend on his health, with reports that bone plugs and knee cartilage issues are scaring teams. But Las Vegas could very well be the cornerstone of a secondary that currently lacks true long-term assets.

mike mcdaniel

If anyone had any questions about how Jim Harbaugh would blend his proclivities with those of a new offensive coordinator, the third day of the draft may have provided some clues. McDaniel’s handprint appeared to be all over wide receiver Brennen Thompson, a fourth-round pick who has a legitimate claim to being the fastest player in the draft. Thompson provides a lot of offensive breadth for Justin Herbert, allowing him to be used to the fullest in both the deep game and as a run-after-catch threat. The Bolts also strengthened their support up front with huge offensive tackle Travis Burke and solid offensive guards Logan Taylor and Alex Harkey.

tyler shaw

The New Orleans Saints have put their second-year quarterback’s health at the center of their offseason strategy. After making some bold free agent acquisitions in running back Travis Etienne Jr. and offensive guard David Edwards, the Saints shifted their draft attention to their receiving corps with first-round wideout Jordyn Tyson and third-round tight end Oscar Delp.

More support arrived on Saturday. Fourth-round receiver Bryce Lance, who averaged more than 21.1 yards per catch last season, could form a dynamic connection downfield with the hard-armed Shaw. Fourth-round guard Jeremiah Wright could also strengthen his push up front and prepare for a more formidable ground game. And while sixth-round receiver Barion Brown is a game-breaking speed demon, his most valuable contribution may come in the return game.

patrick mahomes

The Kansas City Chiefs have ensured their star signal-caller will be a fun addition to their new circle as he returns from a serious knee injury last season.

After revitalizing the defense on Days 1 and 2 by using cornerback Mansour Delane, defensive tackle Peter Woods and edge rusher R. Mason Thomas, the Chiefs focused on offense on Day 3. Running back Emmett Johnson will help get a totally ineffective running game back on pace with the splashy signing of Kenneth Walker III. Fifth-round receiver Silas Allen has the tools to become an instant favorite of Mahomes as a vertical threat outside the slot. And Kansas City completed a successful undrafted free agent class with Allen’s former teammate Jeff Caldwell. Although unpolished, Caldwell is a unique matchup threat at 6-5, 216 pounds and with plenty of deep speed.

tight end

Perhaps it was fitting that a rather modest draft class ended up being defined by a more journeyman position. The demand for tight ends was very high down the stretch, with 22 taken overall. Get ready for a surge in multiple tight end sets as more teams imitate Sean McVay and the Los Angeles Rams. They created the NFL’s highest scoring offense in 2025 by regularly deploying three players at on-field positions.

2026 NFL Draft Day 3 Losers

Garrett Nussmeyer

LSU’s quarterback ended up being this year’s Quinn Ewers, surviving until late in the seventh round before being picked up by the Chiefs.

Of course, there are worse places to sit and learn than under Andy Reid or behind Mahomes. However, it looked like Nussmeier might qualify as one of the few passers in this class who could be at least a spot starter within the next two years. NFL teams quickly rejected that idea, so Justin Fields will take on a backup role, and he’ll need to show his growth while serving as the third-stringer.

Tyren Green

That’s all for the dazzling combine performance.

Nearly two months ago in Indianapolis, Green, 6-6, 227 pounds, set himself apart from his peers by running the 40-yard dash in 4.36 seconds and having the best vertical jump and broad jump. Already a proven big-play dynamo as a deep ball thrower and running threat, he sparked excitement about what he could accomplish with further refinement.

But for now, the only role a player with his athletic ability can play is quarterback. Green stuck around until the sixth round, but was taken by the Cleveland Browns, a team rich in young quarterbacks. In this situation, it may be difficult to find someone in charge, which will further hinder Green’s development. Given the huge demand for tight ends and receivers, it might have been better to accept a position change that he adamantly rejected throughout the pre-draft process.

Diego Pavia

Perhaps this was a preordained outcome for Pavia, but his physical limitations and unique dynamics coupled with his playing style made him seem unfit to serve as a backup. But now, the Vanderbilt quarterback has become an unfortunate bit of trivia as the first Heisman Trophy finalist to go undrafted since 2014 and the first undrafted runner-up since 2003. Pavia will have to make quite a statement throughout the spring and summer if he is to get anywhere.

Harold Perkins Jr.

The former LSU linebacker and pass rusher joined the procession of college stars who crash-landed on Day 3, with the Atlanta Falcons ending their wait late in the sixth round.

Perkins has had a pretty tumultuous life the past two years, so this result wasn’t at all surprising, especially given the difficulty of projecting a 6-1, 223-pound defender without a true spot to call home. Still, he began his college career as a legitimate playmaker with his pass-rushing talents. Perhaps he can use his talents as a hybrid playmaker for Jeff Ulbrich, but he faces an uphill battle to stick around.

All your NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th Monday newsletter.

Number of Powerball winners on April 25th when the jackpot rose to $118 million.

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The Powerball jackpot has increased to $118 million with a cash value of $53.7 million ahead of the drawing on Saturday, April 25th.

According to Powerball, the jackpot has been won nearly 200 times since the lottery’s inception in 1992. Currently, 48 lotteries in the United States participate in Powerball games, but five states do not offer Powerball games: Alabama, Alaska, Hawaii, Nevada, and Utah.

There was some big news recently as Powerball was announced to be coming to the UK this summer. Lottery officials said the move would help the game grow over the long term, making jackpots bigger and faster.

Here’s what you need to know about Saturday night’s Powerball drawing.

What are the winning Powerball numbers for April 25th?

USA TODAY will publish the winning numbers at 11pm ET after the lottery drawing.

Do I have to be a US citizen or resident to play Powerball?

The short answer is no. You do not need to be a U.S. citizen or resident to play Powerball. Anyone visiting any of the 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, or the U.S. Virgin Islands may purchase lottery tickets from authorized and licensed retailers, regardless of nationality, as long as they meet the legal age requirements (usually 18 years old) at the time of purchase.

Top 10 Powerball Jackpots

  • $2.04 billion in California on November 7, 2022
  • December 24, 2025, $1.817 billion in Arkansas.
  • $1.787 billion in Missouri and Texas on September 6, 2025
  • $1.765 billion in California on October 11, 2023
  • January 13, 2016, $1.586 billion in California, Florida, and Tennessee
  • April 6, 2024, $1.326 billion in Oregon.
  • $1.08 billion in California on July 19, 2023
  • $842.4 million in Michigan on January 1, 2024
  • March 27, 2019, $768.4 million in Wisconsin
  • August 23, 2017, $758.7 million in Massachusetts

How to play Powerball

Powerball tickets cost $2 per play and are sold in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. This can be done at a variety of locations, including local convenience stores, gas stations, and grocery stores. In some states, you can purchase Powerball tickets online depending on the local jurisdiction.

Once you have your ticket, you have to choose six numbers. Five of them are white balls numbered from 1 to 69. The red Powerball range is 1-26. You can also add a “Power Play” for $1, which increases your winnings on all non-jackpot prizes. “Power Play” multipliers allow you to increase your winnings by 2x, 3x, 4x, 5x, or 10x.

A “Quick Pick” option is also available if you want the computer to select the numbers for you. To win the jackpot, players must match all five white balls with the red Powerball in any order.

Powerball drawings are held on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday nights. The winnings continue to increase even if no one wins the jackpot.

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Contact us at fernando.cervantes@gannett.com and follow us at X @fern_cerv_.

President Trump suddenly departs from White House Correspondents’ Dinner

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President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump were evacuated from the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner minutes after it began on Saturday, April 25, as attendees took shelter on the floor.

USA TODAY reporters who were in the ballroom of the Washington Hilton Hotel said they heard loud noises that sounded like gunshots and the chanting of “USA.” Members of the press in attendance collapsed to the floor.

It was the first time in more than a decade that Trump had attended the dinner, and the first time as president. He has repeatedly absented himself from the annual gathering of Washington’s most influential figures and the reporters who cover them.

Watch the moment the president evacuates from WHCD

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President Trump evacuates White House Correspondents’ Association dinner

President Donald Trump was evacuated from the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner after hearing a loud bang.

Reuters contributed to reporting this story

Megan Thee Stallion accuses Klay Thompson of ‘cheating’, confirms breakup

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Megan Thee Stallion spoke the truth after her breakup with NBA star Klay Thompson.

The “His” rapper lashed out at his ex-girlfriend, a Dallas Mavericks player, on his Instagram Story on Saturday, April 25, writing, “He cheated on me and made me play house with the whole family…’cold.'”

“I’ve been holding you down all basketball season with your horrible mood swings and treatment of me, and now you don’t even know if you can be ‘monogamous’?” she wrote. “I need a real break after this…goodbye.”

Although she did not name the athlete in her post, she released a statement acknowledging the breakup.

“I have made the decision to end my relationship with Clay,” she said in a statement shared with USA TODAY. “For me, trust, loyalty, and respect are non-negotiables in relationships, and when those values ​​are compromised, there is no real path forward. I am taking this time to prioritize myself and move forward with peace and clarity.”

USA TODAY has reached out to Thompson’s representatives for comment.

It was confirmed today that Megan Thee Stallion will appear in the Broadway production of Moulin Rouge! The Musical on Saturday night at the Al Hirschfeld Theater in New York City, USA.

When did Megan Thee Stallion and Klay Thompson start dating?

Thompson and Megan Thee Stallion went public with their relationship in July last year, amid mounting speculation that they were dating.

They made their red carpet debut on July 16th at the Pete & Thomas Foundation’s inaugural gala in New York City. “I won’t say how or when, but the movie was about[Thompson]being the nicest person I’ve ever met in my life,” she told People magazine that night.

“I’m just grateful that he’s by my side and feels the same way about me,” she continued.

Their relationship made headlines in November when Thompson accused NBA players Patrick Beverley and Jason Williams of using vulgar language (describing the female anatomy) while discussing the rapper on his “Whoopin’ and Hollerin'” podcast.

Thompson called the remarks “disgusting and disturbing” in a comment on the Instagram Reel that shared the clip. “How would you feel if I spoke to your wives like that? @patbev21 please try harder. I’m so sorry.”

Steelers strike out on Drew Aller pick

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Day 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft may not have had as much weight as the first round, but there were still big stakes throughout the order.

Eight teams ultimately made their first selections after sitting out opening day as other franchises continued to fill out their classes. With many high-profile names off the board, some organizations have seized the opportunity to address key deficiencies and build for the future. But some questioned the path they were taking in the roster creation process.

Here are the biggest winners and losers in the second and third rounds of the 2026 NFL Draft.

NFL Draft Day 2 Winner

cleveland browns

The immediate and impressive returns of last year’s draft class were probably the only silver lining for the Browns last fall outside of Myles Garrett. With Todd Monken taking over as coach and uncertainty remaining at quarterback, Cleveland needed to continue revamping its roster with a new infusion of young talent, something it had long lacked.

And Andrew Berry seems to have found success again.

After taking Spencer Fano and KC Concepcion in the first round, Cleveland made a big hit on Day 2 by selecting wide receiver Denzel Boston and safety Emmanuel McNeil-Warren. Both would have been perfectly reasonable choices with the 24th overall pick the night before. Boston can use back-shoulder throws and deeper heaves on offense, while McNeil-Warren can help match up with tight ends and solidify the middle. Third-round offensive tackle Austin Barber offers some upside as a deployment option up front.

Terrell family

Atlanta Falcons cornerback AJ Terrell was definitely thrilled wherever his brother Avion landed. But it sparked one of the coolest moments of the entire event when the Falcons scooped up the fellow Clemson product and cornerback to make the secondary a sibling affair.

This isn’t just a feel-good story for families who get to watch siblings compete together. Avion is a very capable cover man who can fill the outside spot opposite AJ or work from the slot, but his skill set seems better suited to the latter. Not a bad start to the reign for Matt Ryan.

Kayden McDonald

The Ohio State defensive tackle was understandably emotional after his long wait in the dressing room was finally over. Once considered the favorite to become the first player at his position, while he was at a loss on his first day, two other interior linemen heard their names called.

But in the end, McDonald’s found itself in a very advantageous situation.

After all, what better spot for a defensive tackle between Will Anderson Jr. and Daniel Hunter? The Houston Texans have acquired McDonald over the New York Giants, and he is expected to play a key role up front alongside DeMeco Ryans. A rapid acclimatization period will allow him to quickly forget about waiting for the draft.

tight end

As teams skew toward higher run rates, it has become fashionable to have multiple tight ends on the field. That momentum looks set to continue into 2026, as eight players at that position were acquired on the second day.

Perhaps even stranger than the tight end totals was how many teams that already looked set there jumped into contention. The Los Angeles Rams added Max Clair to a group that already includes Colby Parkinson and 2025 second-round pick Terrence Ferguson, while the Chicago Bears added third-round pick Sam Roush to follow Colston Loveland and Cole Kmet. It speaks volumes that Sean McVay and Ben Johnson, two of the league’s biggest trendsetters, are building their rosters their own way.

veteran running back

It has long been clear that this draft class lacks a starting ball carrier. However, the second day brought home just how few veteran full-backs are at risk of having their roles reduced. After former Notre Dame teammates Jeremiah Love and Jadarrian Price were rivals in the NFC West in the first round, Kaylon Black (90th overall, San Francisco 49ers) was the only player at the position selected in the second or third round.

Black won’t do much more than curse Christian McCaffrey’s inside run. And his selection may speak to Kyle Shanahan’s pattern of investing in mid-round running backs rather than league-wide value. Meanwhile, Mike Washington Jr. of Arkansas, Emmett Johnson of Nebraska and Jonah Coleman of Washington State remain on the waiting list despite having the starting lineup.

NFL Draft Day 2 Losers

Jermod McCoy

When the 2024 All-American was knocked out of the first round, many thought he might be headed for a similar trajectory as former University of Michigan cornerback Will Johnson, who made it to the second round in 2025 amid injury concerns. But McCoy’s fall has been steeper, and he’s still far from over it.

The Tennessee cornerback enters Day 3 as the top player available. But the X-factor here isn’t talent. NFL Network reported on April 20 that McCoy was foggy from a bone plug used to repair cartilage in his knee after recovering from a torn anterior cruciate ligament last January.

At some point, teams should be attracted to the potential payoff. But that’s a harsh reality for McCoy, who spent much of the pre-draft process being viewed in the same category as Mansour Delane, who went No. 6 overall to the Kansas City Chiefs.

pittsburgh steelers

Omar Khan made it clear in the lead-up to the draft that he wants what many envision in an AFC North quarterback: a statuesque figure with a strong arm. He found one in former Penn State quarterback Aller, whom the general manager took in the third round.

However, therein lies the problem of Allah. He resembles the ideal quarterback, but he’s a long way from actually living it up.

The former five-star recruit has long been intriguing with his 6-5, 228-pound frame and ability to threaten defenses vertically in the passing game. But in the final season, when many were hoping for a much-awaited breakthrough in Alaa’s development, all of his flaws were exposed. Before suffering a season-ending ankle injury, he was repeatedly sabotaged by sloppy footwork, erratic ball placement, and a hesitant approach that always threw him off rhythm.

The Steelers, focusing on physical traits, may be adopting an “I can fix him” mentality here. But whether or not the four-time NFL MVP re-signs with the team, it’s hard to trust Aller to replace Aaron Rodgers anytime soon. And while it’s understandable that the Steelers would want to bring in a passer behind Rodgers, there’s also a good chance they’ll be looking to bring in another passer in the near future.

The Cardinals, who were the subject of widespread derision for selecting running back Jeremiah Love with the No. 3 overall pick, appeared to be in for a reprieve on Day 2. They acquired offensive guard Chase Visontis with a second-round pick, strengthening a shaky front and looking like they were headed for a one-shot deal.

Then the Cardinals orchestrated one of the strangest moves of the year, grabbing quarterback Carson Beck again.

Acquiring a mid-round signal-caller would certainly facilitate what seems like a major addition for general manager Monty Ossenfort and first-year coach Mike LaFleur. However, this is not actually a sound investment strategy, but rather an attempt to make money playing the lottery.

And even if all goes well, Beck isn’t a particularly high-return prospect. If he does his best, he can become a competent distributor with pocket money. But he can succumb when faced with pressure and doesn’t have the toolkit to earn a second chance. That’s more of a reliable backup who can fill in, rather than the profile of a potential legitimate starter.

Beck could be a project worth tackling for some franchises. But Arizona can’t simply give away an early third-round pick.

Garrett Nussmeyer

LSU’s gunslinger once appeared to be on relative parity with Beck and Aller in the second tier of quarterbacks in this class, with many considering him even above his two colleagues. But the 6-2, 203-pound passer took a backseat to players more typical of his position.

It’s not just about size. Nussmeier’s aggressive approach may have been a deterrent for some teams, while others may have been bitter about his disappointing final season, which was marred by injuries. But now as a third-day prospect, he won’t be much more than a dart thrower no matter which team plays him. The promotion of Shedule Sanders from fifth-round pick to rookie starter doesn’t bear that out. But his climb will be tough.

james gladstone

In the first draft, the Jacksonville Jaguars’ general manager made a bold move by trading up for Travis Hunter Jr. with the No. 2 overall pick. With reduced funding this time around, Gladstone had a rather puzzling start to this year’s class.

The second round selection of tight end Nate Verkacher set the tone for the night. The Texas A&M product was bought ahead of several more high-priced stocks at tight end. Jacksonville may not have been looking for a receiving threat at the position with Brenton Strange in the fold, but the spot had better value than a player who could top the list as a good blocker. He then closed out the night with Jalen Huskey, a defensive back with significant field limitations, doubling his reach. The Jaguars have a promising core, but this felt like a missed opportunity to replenish that group.

Georgia wildfires were caused by an unlikely balloon

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A fast-moving fire that destroyed homes and forced evacuations in Georgia was likely sparked by a surprising cause, wildfire investigators believe. It’s about a whimsical balloon colliding with a power line.

The Highway 82 Fire in Brantley County started April 20 and had grown to 7,567 acres as of April 25 and was about 10% contained, according to the Georgia Forestry Commission. Another large fire in the state, the Pineland Road Fire, has burned an estimated 31,976 acres since April 18 and is 10% contained near Fargo, Georgia.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp said on April 24 that an investigation had determined that a balloon was likely the cause of the Highway 82 fire. Kemp and Forestry Commission Director Johnny Szabo said at a news conference that a metal balloon, like the kind you see at children’s parties, fell onto the power lines, creating a spark that ignited the ground.

While balloons may sound like an unlikely source, there are “infinite” ways people could accidentally start a fire, especially during a record drought in the Southeast, said Joseph Roys, a professor at North Carolina State University’s College of Natural Resources.

“It’s difficult to rule out all the different ways a fire could start. But in this situation, a small spark can start a fire,” Lloyds told USA TODAY.

According to the National Interagency Fire Center, humans caused nearly 90% of wildfires on average from 2013 to 2023. Non-human-caused fires are usually caused by lightning strikes. Experts say having an outdoor heat source in dry, windy conditions could lead to disaster.

How balloons cause wildfires

When a Mylar foil balloon comes into contact with a wire, it creates an “arcing,” or electrical flash, said Albert Simeoni, professor and chair of Worcester Polytechnic Institute’s fire protection engineering department. A spark that lands on a dry plant can grow completely out of control in a fraction of a second, he said.

“There’s a flash of light, particles fall, and within a few seconds, maybe a minute or two at most, a fire starts, and the hot particles actually ignite the surrounding vegetation and then get pushed by the wind,” Simeoni said.

Fires have occurred in the past when balloons collided with power lines. In 2017, a Mylar balloon hit a power line in San Diego, California, starting a small wildfire, Fox 5 reported. In June 2025, a balloon floating on a power line started a fire in Philadelphia, damaging a home and injuring two children, according to NBC10.

So many things can accidentally cause a wildfire

Dozens of Georgia counties have burn bans, the first of their kind in the state. But there are many other ways people can unintentionally create sparks that can get out of control during the peak of a fire, Simeoni and Roise said.

  • Welding operations produce sparks that can quickly attach to dry vegetation.
  • Sparks may fly when you hit farm equipment or a rock while driving through the forest.
  • When towing a trailer, Lloyds says it’s common for the tow chain to come loose and drag on the ground.
  • Broken bottle glass can cause the sun to expand and ignite plants, Lloyds said.

The list goes on: Hot exhaust fumes from a car hitting dry grass, a train sparking on the tracks, cigarette butts thrown on the ground (even when you think they’ve been stepped on), fireworks, a mountain biker accidentally hitting a rock with his pedal, a golfer hitting a rock with a metal club are all known to cause fires, Simeoni said.

Kemp said the Pineland Road fire likely started when someone was welding a gate and sparks fell to the ground.

According to the National Interagency Fire Center, other hazardous activities that can start a fire include poorly extinguished campfires, lighting fireworks or smoke bombs, flying sky lanterns, and children playing with matches.

“We need to be especially careful in situations like this because any heat source can start a fire,” Simeoni said.

Lloyds said residents should remove brush, pine needles and potential fuels such as propane tanks from their homes to prevent damage from wildfires. Mr Simeoni called on people to be mindful of the ban on burning outdoors and to closely follow authorities’ instructions.

“Even if you don’t intend it, it can have serious consequences,” Simeoni said.

Eileen Kelly defends singer Anthony Kiedis as twice her age

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Podcaster Eileen Kelly has explained why she is dating Anthony Kiedis, who is twice her age. She denied being a “gold digger” or having “daddy issues”.

Eileen Kelly has heard all about her 33-year age difference with Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman Anthony Kiedis.

The 30-year-old sex educator and podcaster opened up about their age gap in an essay, “My Boyfriend is Twice My Age,” published April 21 in Vogue magazine. Although she did not mention the 63-year-old “Californication” singer by name in the film, Kelly has been spotted with him in public several times since November. news and people.

In the essay, she revealed for the first time that she was dating someone “much older” than her, which she said was either “alarming or inspiring, depending on who you ask.” Overall, she liked the experience, claiming that the older man had had time to get his priorities straight, and quipped, “Sometimes I joke with my friends that I’ve been missing out my whole life.”

“My much older boyfriend really seems to enjoy being with me and isn’t biding his time until he finds someone better,” she wrote, adding that “he is fully aware” of how “lucky” she is.

The rock star’s girlfriend revealed that the two met at a birthday party after returning from a solo trip to Hawaii and hit it off because the man has owned a home in the state for more than 20 years. The two joked about how they might have “passed each other on the same beach or stood next to each other at the same health food store” before realizing the “invisible thread that connects us.”

“The age difference didn’t bother me at first. I met someone interesting and attractive. If anything, I thought we would just be friends,” she wrote. Soon, they exchanged numbers and made plans to grab coffee before establishing a strong connection.

Eileen Kelly slams ‘daddy issues’ and ‘gold digger’ stigma

The host of the podcast “Going Mental” then criticized her for being prejudiced against people in relationships with an age difference.

“Older men are reflexively labeled as ‘disgusting’ or ‘disgusting’, while women are ‘must have daddy issues’ or must be digging for gold. Is it really that hard to imagine that connections exist across generations and that two people of different ages can find authenticity in each other?” she wrote.

Kelly stressed that while she can love her boyfriend dearly because she has her own money, career and home, she doesn’t “risk losing everything if we break up.” She clarified that if she had been “18 or even 21, the scales would have weighed much differently.”

“Power is an annoyingly slippery thing. There’s the obvious kind: money in your name on a lease. And then there’s emotional intelligence: knowing exactly when to apologize and when to withhold an apology. The ability to steer a conversation so smoothly that the other person doesn’t even realize it happened,” she added. “All of these can cause imbalances, which are not limited to relationships with large age differences, but are easier to identify there.”

Kelly said that since they appeared in public together, the pair had received “unsolicited” and “incredibly awkward” comments about their age difference, and that Kelly was asked if Kiedis was the father.

“We tend to interrogate the unusual and excuse or explain away everything else,” she argued. “But the reality is relatively mundane. From the inside, we are mostly two people doing the ongoing, unnoticeable work of moving through life together.”

Beehive tour and AI event scheduled for King Charles’ visit to the US

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The White House has released new details about King Charles III and Queen Camilla’s state visit next week, highlighting two unexpected events during the four-day trip to commemorate America’s 250th anniversary.

President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump will welcome the royal couple to the White House from April 27 to April 30 as part of the first state visit of President Trump’s second term.

The visit was already expected to include a reception at the White House, a ceremonial military welcome, King Charles’ address to Parliament, and a state dinner. But a new White House release revealed additional details, including a tour of the newly expanded White House Beehive and a student-centered artificial intelligence event led by Melania Trump and Queen Camilla.

Royals stop by the newly expanded White House beehive

After arriving on Monday, the king and queen will have tea with President Trump and the first lady in the White House Green Room, before touring the newly unveiled and expanded White House Beehive on the South Lawn near the Kitchen Garden.

The beehive was announced by the White House this week as part of the White House Honey Project launched by Melania Trump. Shaped like a miniature version of the presidential mansion, it was designed by presidential staff before being handcrafted by craftsmen in Virginia.

Four bee colonies currently help produce the White House’s signature honey, which officials say is used by the mansion’s chefs to sweeten tea, make salad dressings and make desserts. Honey is sometimes given as a gift by the president and first lady.

The additional colonies are expected to increase annual honey production by about 30 pounds while helping pollinate the White House kitchen garden, flower garden, and vegetation on the National Mall.

The stop could hold further symbolism for King Charles, who has long championed the cause of the environment and sustainability.

AI/VR event for students

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump and King Charles III will hold a bilateral meeting, while President Melania Trump and Queen Camilla will lead another educational event with students at the White House Tennis Pavilion.

The students will use virtual reality headsets to learn about Britain, the White House said. Participants will also explore American history and the “special relationship” between our two countries by using AI-enabled glasses to examine artifacts in the White House Collection and the National Archives and Records Administration.

This event ties in with Melania Trump’s “Growing Our Future Together” initiative, one of her signature initiatives since her return as First Lady. The program focuses on children, education and technology, with artificial intelligence emerging as a central theme.

Last month, President Trump hosted a White House summit for the initiative featuring Figure AI’s humanoid robot, Figure 3, which appeared as the first lady spoke about AI’s potential role in education. The new event with Queen Camilla suggests that programs to promote technology during major diplomatic visits will remain part of the administration’s external agenda.

wider royal tour

The royal family’s trip will extend beyond Washington with stops in New York City and Virginia.

Plans announced so far include meeting with first responders and families affected by the Sept. 11 attacks in New York, as well as community events and cultural performances in Virginia before the couple departs for Bermuda.

Contributors: USA TODAY’s Michelle Del Rey, Fernando Cervantes Jr. and Kinsey Crowley

Reporter Anthony Thompson can be reached at ajthompson@gannett.com or on Twitter @athompsonABJ.

A missing U.S. military student in Japan is found dead. Roommate charged with two counts of murder

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Corrections and Clarifications: A previous version of this report misspelled the suspect’s name. The suspect is “Hisham Abu Gharbiyeh”.

Murder charges allege a man killed two University of South Florida doctoral students, including his roommate, who was missing for more than a week before his body was found. Authorities are still searching for the second missing student.

Zamir Limon and Nahida S. Bristi, both 27, had been missing since April 16, when they were last seen in the Tampa area. According to the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, Limon’s body was discovered on April 24, and his roommate, Hisham Abugarbi, was arrested on multiple charges.

Abugarbi, 26, is now charged with two counts of premeditated first-degree murder with a deadly weapon in the deaths of Limon and the missing Bristi, the sheriff’s office announced on the morning of April 25. The suspect had previously been charged with unlawfully retaining or moving a corpse, failing to report a death with intent to conceal it, tampering with evidence, false imprisonment and assault.

The sheriff’s office said the evidence was turned over to the state attorney’s office, but authorities would not provide further information about the results of the investigation.

It was not immediately clear whether Abu Gharbi had a lawyer who could comment on his behalf.

“This is a very disturbing incident that shook our community and affected many people who were hoping for a safe resolution,” said Sheriff Chad Chronister. “While the discovery of Zamir Limón’s body is heartbreaking, we want the public to know that our detectives are working tirelessly and relentlessly to uncover the truth. We will continue to follow up on every fact, pursue every lead, and use every tool available to us to hold those responsible fully accountable.”

Body of missing US military student in Japan found

Limon’s body was found on the Howard Frankland Bridge in Tampa, Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Joseph Maurer said at an April 24 press conference.

Earlier in the day, law enforcement responded to an unrelated domestic incident involving Mr. Abugarbi, and upon arrival, Mr. Abugarbi “barricaded himself in the residence” and refused to comply with orders to leave, the sheriff’s office said. A SWAT team and other specialized units arrived and he was later taken into custody.

The sheriff’s office said Mr. Abugarbi had already been designated as a person of interest because of his relationship with Mr. Limon and Mr. Bristi.

“At this time, the search for Ms. Bristi continues,” the sheriff’s office said, asking anyone with information about her disappearance to contact authorities.

The two were reported missing on April 17th by a family friend who had not heard from them.

According to the USA TODAY Network’s Sarasota Herald Tribune, Limon was pursuing a degree in geography, environmental science and policy. Bristi is studying chemical engineering. Authorities have not disclosed the relationship between the two students.

Contributors: Natalie Neysa Alund and Christopher Cann

(This story has been updated to change or add photos and video, and because a previous version contained inaccuracies.)