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Onion’s bid for Alex Jones’ Infowars awaits Texas judge’s ruling

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A Texas judge will soon consider whether satirical site The Onion can buy Alex Jones’ far-right media company Infowars.

This comes after Jones was sued for defamation by the family of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, and the family was awarded a $1.3 billion judgment against Jones, USA TODAY reported. This is also The Onion’s second attempt to acquire Infowars with the aim of turning it into a parody website.

Here’s what you need to know about this deal and how it got here.

Why should Alex Jones sell Infowars?

In 2022, Jones was convicted in a defamation lawsuit brought by the families of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, which killed six adults and 20 children. He repeatedly falsely claimed that the massacre was a “hoax” staged as part of a government conspiracy to confiscate guns from Americans.

As a result, the judge ordered Jones to pay a $1.3 billion judgment to the family. In 2024, a U.S. bankruptcy court placed Infowars’ parent company, Free Speech Systems, in the hands of a court-appointed receiver and ruled that the company’s assets would be used to pay the judgment.

Why did The Onion’s first bid for Infowars fail?

When the satirical news site first went up for sale in December 2024, it was the first to be sold at a court-ordered Infowars auction.

However, a U.S. bankruptcy judge blocked the sale, saying the bankruptcy auction did not yield the best bid.

But a year later, on Wednesday, August 13, 2025, a Texas judge ruled that Infowars could be put up for sale again, clearing the way for The Onion to make another bid.

What is the new deal between The Onion and Intowars?

The deal does not mean The Onion owns Infowars, but instead receives a temporary license to the intellectual property of Free Speech Systems, Infowars’ parent company.

KOUW reported that documents filed in state court show that the deal requires The Onion to pay $81,000 a month to license the Infowars.com domain and brand name.

What’s next for The Onion, Infowars?

The proposed deal is expected to be approved or rejected by Texas Judge Maya Guerra Gamble in Austin.

Ben Collins, CEO of Onion’s parent company Global Tetrahedron, told The Associated Press that the deal could close around April 30.

Mateo Rosiles is a Texas Connect reporter for USA TODAY and local Texas newspapers. Do you have any news tips for him? Email him: mrosiles@usatodayco.com.

Nancy Sinatra slams President Trump for posting Frank Sinatra’s ‘My Way’ video

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President Donald Trump appears to be a fan of Frank Sinatra. However, the legendary singer’s eldest daughter Nancy Sinatra is not a fan of his.

The “These Boots Are Made for Walking” singer noted that President Trump posted a video on Truth Social on Saturday, April 18, of his late father singing his hit song “My Way.”

“This is blasphemy,” Sinatra, 85, said in an April 19 X post about President Trump’s use of his father’s performance.

When another X user asked Ms. Sinatra if there was anything she could do, she replied, “Unfortunately no. Only the publisher can do anything.”

Sinatra’s feelings didn’t seem to change over the next few days, and on April 20, he reposted another user’s post about the issue, writing, “This is so disgusting. “I would never have allowed him to use or say his lyrics. Sinatra was a man of honor who didn’t have to lie about who he really was just because he was the greatest. Trump is a loser.”

Why did President Trump post a video of Frank Sinatra singing “My Way”?

It’s unclear why President Trump posted the Frank Sinatra clip, as he didn’t write a caption or give any further context.

President Trump’s post came amid ongoing negotiations with Iran to end the war that began on February 28, about two months ago. President Trump and the Iranian government agreed to a temporary two-week ceasefire on April 8, following continued tensions and the deaths of 13 military personnel.

These negotiations appear to be at an impasse, as President Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social on Sunday, April 19th, “We are proposing a very fair and reasonable DEAL. We hope you accept it, because if you don’t, the United States will destroy every power plant and every bridge in Iran.”

Trump ended his post by saying, “No more Mr. Nice Guy!”

Who was the first person to sing “My Way”?

Although Sinatra’s rendition of “My Way” became famous and was nominated for Best Contemporary Vocal Performance at the 12th Annual Grammy Awards in 1970, he did not originate the song.

The original version of “My Way” is the French song “Comme d’Abitude”, previously performed (and co-written) by Jacques Leveaux. Canadian-American singer-songwriter Paul Anka, also known as the composer of “She’s a Lady,” wrote the English version of “My Way” in 1969.

Nancy Sinatra wrote “Truth” in an April 19th X post in response to another user who wrote, “Anka wrote the English lyrics to the music of the 1967 French song Comme d’Abitude, composed by Jacques Revaux with lyrics by Claude Francois and Gilles Thibault. Anka’s lyrics are completely different from the original French.”

Frank Sinatra was scheduled to release “My Way” in early 1969. Anka, now 84, said in a Facebook post that he wrote lyrics for Sinatra when he was only 25.

This is the single most powerful predictor of graduate employment

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It’s true that jobs beget jobs, according to research from job site ZipRecruiter.

Studies have shown that work experience often predicts whether a college graduate will find a job outside of school. ZipRecruiter surveyed 1,500 students who graduated last year and 1,500 students who will graduate this year between January 30 and March 16 and found that working while in college makes graduates more than twice as likely to get a job (81% vs. 40%).

The report says competition among graduates is increasing as the job market slows and the proportion of entry-level positions shrinks. Knowing what makes graduates stand out to employers can have a big impact on landing a job, the report says.

“In tougher markets, results are not random,” ZipRecruiter said. “Increased competition for entry-level positions means employers can be more selective about who they hire for those positions. Our data shows that the single strongest predictor of employment after graduation is whether a student worked in any capacity during college. Experience requires experience.”

A system for accumulating practical experience

Research shows that work experience not only helps graduates get jobs, but it can also shorten the time it takes to get a job.

“The benefits of work experience are even greater,” the paper said. “Working while in school builds your resume, but more importantly, it speeds up your overall job search timeline.”

Employers will expect you to have some training when considering them for an entry-level position. So they’re looking at whether they have someone who can “do the job and keep it,” said Corey Stahl, senior economist at job site Indeed. “If you work, come to work every day, and do a good job, companies see that as a signal that you are a potentially good worker.”

Indeed analyzed 3,000 job openings over the past three months in 2025 and found that business operations skills are the most sought after. The top business operational skills companies are looking for most are customer service (37.1%) and management skills (35.8%), the magazine said.

Yes, jobs checking IDs in the campus library, organizing and filing documents in the office, answering phones and working in the mall are all important, Stahle said. “It’s a daily thing to get a feel for how the business works and how the job works, experience that and communicate that to your employer,” he said.

According to ZipRecruiter, kids who work while in college are more likely to start looking for a job before graduation (73% vs. 43%) and twice as likely to have a job plan in place before graduation (20% vs. 12%). Part of this is networking, the recruitment platform says. Almost 88% of new hires said networking was important to securing their first job, according to the report.

“Our message to currently enrolled students is simple: whether it’s a part-time job, active participation in a student organization with tangible results, or maintaining connections with industry, professional involvement does double duty: it builds their network.” and Their careers start faster,” ZipRecruiter said.

Does the type of degree matter?

The type of degree you have earned may also be important when looking for a job. According to ZipRecruiter, liberal arts majors are the most likely to be disappointed with their job prospects. Many of them “would have been better off pursuing a more scientific or quantitative field,” the report said.

Almost 17% of students majoring in English, literature and journalism waited more than six months to get a job, according to the survey. These graduates also accepted salaries that were, on average, 30% lower than expected.

In contrast, nearly one-third of nursing graduates had secured a job before receiving their diploma, ZipRecruiter said. It also said the median highest wage was $70,000, meaning they earned 16.7% more than expected.

What if a graduate doesn’t find a job right away?

According to ZipRecruiter, nearly half (48.5%) of 2026 graduates and 56.3% of 2025 graduates are already considering going to school as an alternative to a traditional job.

“Graduate school may be acting as a hedge against a tough market, as graduates seek to buy time before entering the traditional workforce,” the report said.

But some experts said the decision should be carefully considered. As school costs continue to rise, people need to weigh the long-term benefits against the short-term costs.

“Ultimately, goals and aspirations are long-term and can be repaid over decades (by going back to school),” Stahle said. “The best-case scenario is that you get a job and your employer pays for you to go back to learn other skills.”

Medora Lee is USA TODAY’s money, markets and personal finance reporter. Please contact us at mjlee@usatoday.com. Subscribe to our free Daily Money newsletter for personal finance tips and business news every Monday through Friday.

Tariff Refund, Trump Bible of Daily Briefing

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Welcome to the daily briefing. This morning’s breaking news is:

nicole farato Here we are looking for a good night’s sleep. From tariff refunds to today’s Virginia special election, here’s the news you need to know on Tuesday. Plus, the devil is back. And yes, she wears Prada.

Will I be able to get my customs duties back?

As of Tuesday, a portal was opened to initiate refunds to businesses that paid import duties. The payment comes after the Supreme Court ordered the government to make the payment earlier this year.

The refund system, known as CAPE, consolidates refunds and allows importers to receive one electronic payment with interest where applicable, rather than processing refunds for each entry.

Several importers told Reuters they were concerned about the durability of the new declaration system.

“There are no tickets going on sale for Taylor Swift,” said Jay Foreman, CEO of Basic Fun, which is seeking a $7 million refund, but with so many companies seeking refunds at the same time, “we don’t know if the portal will crash.”

Meanwhile, shoppers who paid more for imported goods are unlikely to get their money back.

More news you need to know right now

  • U.S. embassy employee dies in drug raid in Chihuahua. Two U.S. embassy employees were killed in a car crash following a drug raid in northern Mexico.
  • Shreveport is looking for answers. Authorities in Louisiana are trying to piece together information about why a gunman opened fire Sunday, killing eight children, in the nation’s worst mass shooting since January 2024.
  • Top apple: Tim Cook is stepping down as CEO and will be replaced by John Tarnas, senior vice president of hardware engineering.

movie

“The devil” is back

Everybody wants to be them: Runway Magazine’s intimidating fictional staff gathered in New York City on Monday to celebrate fashion and film in the debut of “The Devil Wears Prada 2.”

health and wellness

The truth about “biohacking”

Today is the era of “biohackers”. What does that mean exactly? Imagine a biohacker as someone who collects large amounts of health data about themselves, separate from the care they receive from their doctors, in an attempt to extend their lifespan. But that’s not all.

before you go

Have feedback about the daily briefing? Email Nicole at NFallert@usatoday.com.

Where do golfers go after LIV?

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Two-time major champion Bryson DeChambeau is exploring options other than LIV Golf on the circuit as he faces an uncertain future.

DeChambeau remains one of golf’s biggest stars, and the value he brings to the LIV Tour cannot be underestimated. His social media following, including a YouTube channel that attracts millions of viewers, has been a big boon for LIV Golf in recent years. However, reports say DeChambeau has already started looking elsewhere as the circuit faces questions about its future.

DeChambeau’s return bid is skyrocketing as he is playing in the final year of his contract with LIV. In addition, the PGA is also considering options for supporting the return of former LIV golfers.

Is DeChambeau really looking elsewhere than LIV?

That’s right, according to a reporter for The Athletic. The report indicates that DeChambeau and his team actually spent a significant portion of the Masters weekend “meeting with the organization to discuss possible options should he choose to leave LIV.”

And DeChambeau seems completely attached to that decision. The offer to re-sign with LIV Golf has reportedly increased to $500 million. That said, DeChambeau played in LIV’s most recent tournament in Mexico City this past weekend, where fans spotted DeChambeau smiling alongside LIV CEO Scott O’Neal on the first fairway, so perhaps his departure is an exaggeration.

Either way, DeChambeau and LIV’s futures are definitely in limbo. The Saudi Public Investment Fund has supported LIV Golf’s inflows for years, but it did not mention the company in its April 14 news release announcing its 2026-2030 strategic vision.

What happens if DeChambeau tries to return to the PGA Tour?

If DeChambeau returns, there are multiple paths forward. Just this year, former LIV golfers Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed took different approaches to their comebacks.

Koepka accelerated the final year of his contract with LIV to apply to return to the PGA Tour. This led to the PGA creating a Returning Membership Program, which prevented Koepka from receiving equity from the Player Equity Program for the next five years (2026-2030).

Meanwhile, Reed last played in a LIV Golf tournament on August 24 of last year, and will be eligible to re-enter the PGA Tour as a non-member as early as August 25, 2026. Additionally, Reed’s participation in any event on the DP World Tour does not improve his standing on the PGA Tour.

PGA CEO Brian Rolup talked about potential avenues for player return beyond what we’ve seen with Koepka and Reed. Additionally, Rolup told The Athletic that the Returning Member Program that helped Koepka return was a one-time deal with a three-week grace period before making a decision. No other golfer jumped at the opportunity.

That means even if DeChambeau decides he wants to return to the PGA, he’s unlikely to follow in the footsteps of Koepka and Reed.

Increasing insurance needs and costs limit options for cancer survivors

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It’s been nearly four years since doctors declared Mariel Santos McLeod free of colon cancer, but she still doesn’t feel free from the burden of medical bills.

McLeod, who lives near Charleston, South Carolina, is still paying off the costs of chemotherapy she received after her diagnosis in 2017. She now also faces an onslaught of out-of-pocket costs for follow-up and care, including regular visits to a pulmonologist and allergist.

McLeod, 45, said she has already spent $2,500 in the first two months of this year and owes another $1,300 for a colonoscopy in January. This is on top of the $895 monthly premium for her health insurance plan, which covers her family of six.

These costs allowed Ms. McLeod to make other care assignments. For example, she has been experiencing severe chest pain since February, but has been putting off getting a CT scan or seeing a cardiologist.

“We’re having to pick and choose what we really need to prioritize,” said McLeod, director of strategic programs and partnerships at Cancer Hope Network, a nonprofit organization that supports cancer patients. Even in that role, she struggles to overcome the financial aftermath of surviving her illness.

The cost of post-cancer treatment often “holds us hostage,” she says.

McLeod is one of about 19 million cancer survivors in the United States, many of whom still require prescriptions, doctor visits and treatments to monitor their condition and deal with post-treatment side effects. According to the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, of more than 1,200 cancer patients and survivors surveyed in 2024, about 47% had medical debt, and nearly half said they owed more than $5,000.

But health policy researchers and patient advocates say the experiences of cancer survivors reveal the limits of the Trump administration’s plan to lower premiums and that it may not help patients who face high medical costs each year. The proposal focuses on increasing the availability of high-out-of-pocket health insurance, which has low monthly payments but requires patients to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket before coverage begins.

Additionally, the administration has supported giving insurance companies more latitude to sell plans that are not compliant with the Affordable Care Act. Such plans could prohibit participation by people with pre-existing health conditions, such as those diagnosed with cancer, and exclude essential benefits that ACA plans must cover.

The administration did not respond to requests for comment on how the proposal would affect cancer survivors. But proponents argue that in general, people will have more flexibility to customize their coverage and will have more options for plans with lower monthly fees.

Michael Cannon, director of health policy research at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, believes that if health plans are exempted from the ACA’s regulations, patients will have better control over their spending and will be able to choose the types of care they receive. For example, a cancer survivor may choose a plan that includes cancer treatment but not maternity care.

Jennifer Hawk, associate policy principal at the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network, said history has shown that coverage is not that simple, especially for people with pre-existing conditions. Before the ACA, when health plans could “pick and choose” enrollees based on pre-existing conditions, those who needed the most expensive treatments often had trouble finding coverage, she said.

“They’re not going to pick on cancer survivors,” Hawk said of health insurance companies.

The same goes for Veronica Panagiotou, who said in September 2013 that her private insurance company refused to cover her because of her high BMI. Two months later, the 25-year-old uninsured graduate student was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. The hospital treated her and “sent me all the bills,” she recalled.

In January 2014, Panagiotou was able to purchase one of the first ACA plans to go into effect. This included chemotherapy and immunotherapy treatments, imaging tests, medications, hospitalization, weekly blood draws, transfusions, and emergency room visits.

Today, Panagiotou, 37, is cancer-free and works as director of advocacy and programs at Cancer Nation, a nonprofit advocacy group. Although she has coverage through her employer, Panagiotou said the costs associated with her treatment weigh on her life decisions.

“Every time I make a choice, I think about cancer,” she said.

Chris Bond, a spokesman for AHIP, a major health insurance trade group, said its members are working to improve access to insurance. But that can be difficult if doctors and drug companies are raising prices, he said. Bond said health plans are “trying to protect Americans from the full impact of these rising costs.”

Applications to the Lymphoma Research Foundation’s Patient Assistance Fund have increased 10% this year, CEO Megan Gutierrez said. “This trend suggests that financial safety nets, where they exist, are under strain,” she said. Brian Blades, president of the Republican-leaning think tank Paragon Health Institute, said rising prices are affecting everyone, regardless of the type of health insurance they have. “The biggest challenge for cancer patients is not the type of coverage,” he says. “That’s the fundamental cost of care.”

Blaise noted that President Donald Trump has focused on lowering drug prices as a potential benefit for cancer survivors. The Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program, established by the Inflation Control Act of 2022, required the Department of Health and Human Services to negotiate prices on certain high-cost drugs to lower prices in the federal health insurance program for people age 65 and older. According to KFF, drugs to treat breast cancer, prostate cancer and kidney cancer are already on that list.

But Hoku worries that efforts to weaken the ACA’s protections and funding for marketplace programs will limit options for cancer survivors (who, she says, tend to “cling on to insurance for life”), especially when changing jobs or jobs.

Erin Jones, a 31-year-old food policy researcher in Fort Collins, Colorado, was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma at a young age and is now cancer-free, but still sees two oncologists, visits a high-risk breast clinic, and undergoes annual breast MRIs. Jones has health insurance through the university where she works, but said she recently postponed enrolling in a doctoral program, in part due to uncertainty about affordability.

“I don’t have the freedom to easily do what I want because I’m always worried about health insurance,” she said.

According to a study published in 2020, costs associated with cancer survival, such as monitoring for recurrence and treating side effects, are expected to reach $246 billion by 2030, up from $183 billion in 2015.

According to the American Cancer Society, advances in both cancer detection and treatment have resulted in a higher percentage of people surviving five years or more after diagnosis. According to estimates, the number of survivors is expected to increase to more than 22 million by 2035.

Despite these advances, the cost of treatment could gain attention, said Ezekiel Emanuel, co-director of the Institute for Healthcare Transformation at the University of Pennsylvania and a former health policy adviser to former President Barack Obama.

Emanuel, the oncologist, said he has seen patients make difficult decisions about whether to delay or skip post-cancer treatment as a result.

“Even if we win, it looks like we won’t be able to have a celebration,” he said.

Are you struggling to pay for health insurance? Have you decided to forego coverage? click here Contact KFF Health News to share your story.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism on health issues and is one of our core operating programs. KFF — An independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.

President Trump boasts of success in ibogaine treatment clinical trial in Texas

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Last weekend, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order accelerating research into psychedelics to treat veterans.

USA TODAY reported that Trump’s signing followed a call from podcast host Joe Rogan, who asked Trump to investigate how drugs help veterans battling suicide and depression.

But in Texas, the state legislature is already looking to invest in clinical trials of the hallucinogen, with Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dustrin Burrows announcing a $50 million state investment in research into the drug.

This led some to wonder what exactly ibogaine is and what President Trump’s executive order means for Texans.

What is ibogaine?

Ibogaine is derived from the roots of Tabernante iboga, a shrub native to Central Africa. And it’s illegal in the US.

However, when combined with magnesium, it can help reduce PTSD, anxiety, and depression, and improve function in veterans with traumatic brain injuries, according to Stanford Medicine.

What has Texas done to invest in ibogaine research?

On March 31, Texas leaders announced the creation of a $50 million clinical trial program after the Texas Health and Human Services Commission determined that no drug companies would be willing to help develop a drug for FDA approval.

Prior to this announcement, the Texas Legislature passed Senate Bill 2308 and the governor signed it. The bill created a pathway for universities, hospitals, and drug developers to work together to conduct clinical trials of Ibogaine for FDA approval.

The bill also appropriated $50 million to support this effort.

How will President Trump’s ibogaine executive order affect Texans?

As reported by USA Today, the order directs the FDA to expedite research into psychedelics, including ibogaine, which can help treat severe mental illness and depression, while also setting a course to accelerate research into the drug.

The order also allocated $50 million for each state to research the drug.

With this additional incentive, it remains to be seen when clinical trials for ibogaine will begin in Texas.

Mateo Rosiles is a Texas Connect reporter for USA TODAY and local Texas newspapers. Do you have any news tips for him? Email him: mrosiles@usatodayco.com.

How to respectfully ask for a promised raise

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Johnny C. Taylor Jr. answers workplace questions every week on USA TODAY. Taylor is president and CEO of SHRM, the world’s largest human resources professional organization, and author of Reset: A Leader’s Guide to Work in an Age of Upheaval.

Have a question? Please submit here.

Question: I was given additional responsibilities with the knowledge that I would receive a pay adjustment. Several months have passed, and despite the positive feedback, the raise has not materialized. How do I approach my boss to discontinue additional duties if the agreed salary is not paid? – David

Answer: If you’re expecting a raise and are given additional responsibilities, it’s natural to ask what’s going on. Compensation and responsibility must remain consistent over time.

The best way to start is to have a direct conversation. Remind your boss of the additional duties you have taken on and the accompanying salary adjustment. Then ask directly about timing and next steps. Keep a professional tone and focus on facts, not emotions.

At the same time, it’s important to recognize that compensation decisions often involve invisible layers, such as budget cycles, approval processes, organizational changes, and shifting priorities. Delays may be administrative rather than intentional. In reality, responsibilities tend to move with the speed of business, while compensation tends to move with the speed of approval. Giving managers a chance to investigate and explain can clarify whether adjustments are still in place or if things have changed.

The key is not to let the conversation become an ultimatum. Quitting your job unless you get a raise can quickly create tension and erode any trust you’ve built. Ultimatums are unlikely to speed up your raise, but they can slow your career down. Instead, focus on coordination. “While I am happy to continue contributing at this level, I would like to understand when the compensation we have discussed will become effective.”

It is important to pay attention to patterns as well. When a raise is promised but repeatedly postponed without a clear answer, that says something about the organization’s follow-through. Strong workplaces work hard to keep their promises, especially when employees step up and deliver more value.

In the meantime, don’t miss out on the benefits of being a professional. Additional responsibilities often build skills, name recognition, and credibility that can help you advance, whether within your current organization or elsewhere. Many careers advance because someone proves they can operate at the next level before the title or salary catches up.

After all, it’s only fair to insist on proper compensation, as long as you do so professionally. But professionalism also means being willing to listen to answers and consider the big picture, including the realities of the organization and your own expectations. Clear communication and follow-through must exist on both sides of the employer-employee relationship.

The views and opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of USA TODAY.

Mike Krzyzewski’s grandson Joseph Savarino charged with DWI

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Joseph Savarino, the grandson of former Duke University men’s basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski, faces a misdemeanor charge of driving while impaired in connection with a crash that killed a 15-year-old boy in North Carolina.

According to NBC television affiliate WRAL News in Raleigh, North Carolina, Savarino is accused of hitting a cyclist riding an electric bicycle at the intersection of Coal Mill Road and Windham Lane in Durham, North Carolina, on Saturday, April 18, at 9 p.m. ET. WRAL reported that the boy was pronounced dead at the scene.

Savarino, 26, was booked into jail at 2:45 a.m. ET on Sunday, April 19, and later posted $100,000 bail on Monday, April 20, according to Durham County Sheriff’s Office online records.

According to a public incident report obtained by WRAL News, Savarino told police he had been drinking earlier in the night and a breathalyzer test showed his blood alcohol level was 0.11. WRAL also reported that a judge ordered Savarino’s driver’s license revoked.

According to a 2024 article in the Raleigh News & Observer, Savarino is the son of Krzyzewski’s daughter Debbie Savarino.

Krzyzewski will step down as coach at the end of the 2021-22 season. He coached the Blue Devils for 42 seasons with a career record of 1,129 wins and 309 losses.

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How the government spying law FISA Section 702 is deeply dividing Congress

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A 9/11-era espionage case is drawing bipartisan scrutiny on Capitol Hill, setting up a high-profile conflict between protecting Americans’ privacy and keeping them safe from terrorism in the midst of the Iran war.

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WASHINGTON – When members of Congress are still voting at 2:30 a.m., it’s usually a sign of trouble on Capitol Hill.

That fact was all too clear last week as Republican Speaker Mike Johnson scrambled to strike a last-minute deal with members of his own party on the House floor in the middle of the night.

The pressing issue is a controversial part of the government’s flagship spying law that is becoming increasingly depleted on Capitol Hill as a key deadline for its renewal approaches. Since returning from spring break, lawmakers have been embroiled in a contentious debate that pits concerns about protecting Americans’ privacy and civil liberties against the need to keep the public safe.

The 9/11 statute, known as Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), allows U.S. spy agencies to access foreigners’ text messages, phone calls, and emails without a warrant. Although the purpose of the surveillance programs is to track down enemy spies and extremists, critics say Americans’ communications could also be caught up in the programs.

As the reauthorization deadline approached in recent days, freedom advocates in Congress went after it hard, preventing Republican leaders from pushing through with the reauthorization without making any changes.

“We are witnessing warrantless backdoor surveillance of American citizens,” Rep. Keith Self (R-Texas) said on social media. “That’s not true.”

The stakes are high: As the Iran war raises concerns about terrorism in the United States and around the world, leading lawmakers say a deal needs to be reached quickly.

“Our successes in Venezuela and Iran would not have been possible without this critical national security tool,” said Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

President Donald Trump is asking Congress to pass an 18-month extension of the law without major amendments, despite repeatedly alleging privacy violations against him by U.S. intelligence agencies under the previous administration.

“The fact is, whether you like it or not, FISA is very important to our military,” he said on his social media platform Truth Social.

Stopgap buys time amid bipartisan oversight

Even in the midst of the Iran war, new bipartisan scrutiny of Section 702 is creating strange bedfellows on Capitol Hill.

In a joint April 17 op-ed in the New York Times, Mike Lee, perhaps one of the most conservative Republicans in the Senate, and Sen. Dick Durbin, a staunch Democrat, called for major changes to Section 702. It argued that the section routinely allows agencies like the FBI to search the private communications of American citizens without a warrant. Senators are touting their bill as closing privacy loopholes and introducing more guardrails.

“This is a clear violation of constitutionally protected rights,” they wrote. “Congress should not unnecessarily rush to expand this authority without the American people and their elected representatives knowing the full truth about the extent of ongoing human rights violations and compliance obligations.”

Other Republicans have separately said they would not vote for a FISA extension unless it includes voting restrictions for the midterm elections. Lawmakers like Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Florida) want to incorporate the bill into President Trump’s top legislative priority, the so-called SAVE America Act, which would, among other things, require proof of citizenship to register to vote. But House Speaker Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota) have repeatedly shot down that idea.

On April 17, the House and Senate unanimously passed a 10-day interim measure extending Section 702’s renewal deadline until April 30. The delay gave lawmakers about a week to find a compromise.

Zachary Schermele is a Congressional reporter for USA TODAY. You can email us at zschermele@usatoday.com. Follow him on X at @ZachSchermele and on Bluesky at @zachschermele.bsky.social..

Son grieves as he witnesses the execution of his mother’s killer in Florida

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About a week before she was murdered, Marlies Mae Sather spent her last happy day with her loved ones.

It was her son John’s 32nd birthday, and the family had gathered at his home in the Orlando area. The family feasted on homemade chicken, dumplings and cheesecake before Sather drove more than an hour back to her home in Palm Bay on Florida’s central coast.

“I said, ‘Mom, I love you,’ and she said, ‘John, I love you too,'” John Sather, now 68, recently told USA TODAY in a tearful interview. “Those were the last words I said to my mother.”

On September 5, 1990, Marlies Sather encountered a neighbor who had broken into her home. A neighbor, Chadwick Willacy, then 24, decided not to testify, according to court documents.

Court records say Willacy beat Sazer, strangled her, robbed her and then set her on fire while she was still alive. An autopsy on the 56-year-old grandmother revealed that she died from smoke inhalation.

More than 36 years later, the state of Florida plans to execute Willacy by lethal injection on Tuesday, April 21st. If the execution goes ahead, Willacy would be the eighth death row inmate in the United States so far this year, and the fifth in Florida as the state continues its record-breaking pace of executions.

Willacy has always denied murder, but has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt the execution, arguing that Florida’s lethal injection process is shrouded in secrecy. Meanwhile, Seiser’s only son is scheduled to attend the execution and says he is ready for the legal adventure to end.

John Sather said, “I want to confirm that the director has passed away.” “I want to make sure my mom gets justice for someone who came in and took her life within seconds.”

Here’s what you need to know about the execution, including who Marlies May Sazer is and how Willacy plans to escape the death chamber.

What happened to Marlies May Sather?

On September 5, 1990, Marlies Mae Sather was still grieving the death of her husband, who had died of liver cancer six weeks earlier. She was returning home from work and scheduled a meeting with someone interested in purchasing her late husband’s car, according to court records.

Instead, Sather broke into a robbery in progress. Not only that, she also knew who was robbing her. His 24-year-old neighbor, Chadwick Willacy, said he had been mowing the lawn several times.

Willacy showed no mercy to her, according to court records.

According to court records, Willacy beat Seiser, tied him up and strangled him with a cord until he gave her his PIN number. He then got in her car and went to her bank and withdrew money from her account before returning to her house to finish what he started.

He disabled the smoke detector, doused her with gasoline, placed a fan at her feet and set her on fire, according to court records.

Among the evidence used against Willacy in court: his fingerprints were found on a fan, his girlfriend found Sather’s checkbook in Willacy’s trash can, bloodstains matching Sather’s blood type were found on clothes in the home, and he had numerous other items belonging to her, court records state.

A jury subsequently found Willacy guilty of first-degree murder, burglary, burglary, and arson, and the judge, on the jury’s recommendation, sentenced him to death. His death sentence was later reversed, but a jury recommended the death penalty again in 1997, and another judge agreed.

Who is Merlin May Sather?

Marlis Mae Bakke was born in Clarkfield, Minnesota, the daughter of an electrician and a schoolteacher, and fell in love with Dick Sather.

The couple married in 1953 and had two daughters and a son. Dick’s work didn’t pay well, so in 1966 Murray went to work at Rock Island Arsenal, a U.S. Army installation in Illinois, where his work included test-firing M-16 rifles, his son said.

Marlies went on to earn two degrees, which he earned while continuing to climb the military ladder. She eventually became a contract specialist at Orlando Naval Training Center and a government management contract employee in Palm Bay, her son said.

During that time, Marlies was a devoted wife and mother and worked hard to ensure that her children never realized they didn’t have much money.

“It was a wonderful family life,” John Sather said. “We were always very poor, but I never knew that as a child.”

John Sather said Dick and Marley were overjoyed when their daughter, Princess Diana, had a daughter of their own and they became grandparents. And when Princess Diana’s second daughter was born blind, Marlis learned Braille.

Dick was diagnosed with liver cancer in May 1990 and died two months later. In August 1990, the family threw a modest 32nd birthday party for John, but Marlies was determined to make it special.

“I told her I wanted a harmonica and darts,” John Sather said. “And she went to eight different stores looking for the right harmonica and darts.”

Ten days later, his mother was murdered.

What does Chadwick Willacy stand for?

Chadwick Willacy has been fighting for the release of records regarding the use of lethal injection, a controversial method of execution as Florida executes record numbers of inmates.

Willacy’s lawyers argue that Florida did not follow its own execution procedures and therefore violated the U.S. Constitution.

The court rejected Willacy’s request to halt the execution until the documents are released. Mr. Willacy has appealed the matter to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In February, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor called Florida’s record on lethal injections “deeply disturbing,” saying recent executions may have included the use of expired drugs or other drugs that shouldn’t have been used, incorrect doses of drugs or record-keeping errors that could hide other problems.

“By continuing to keep its executions in secrecy, Florida undermines both the integrity of Florida’s own execution process and, in some cases, the ability of this court to ensure compliance with the state’s constitutional obligations,” she wrote.

Florida argued that the state Department of Corrections is “entitled to a presumption that it is performing its duties properly.”

“Mr. Willacy’s presumption to the contrary is insufficient to raise a challenge to a color-codeable method of execution, which requires not just an alleged deviation from protocol, but a substantial and imminent risk that the method used is certain or very likely to cause serious illness or unnecessary suffering,” the state argued in a recent court filing.

When is the next execution in the United States?

The two states plan to execute inmates on the same day, April 30th.

The state of Texas plans to execute James Broadnax, who killed two Christian music producers in the Dallas suburb of Garland in 2008. The state of Florida plans to execute James Ernest Hitchcock, who raped and murdered his 13-year-old step-niece Cynthia Driggers in Orlando in 1976.

Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter covering cold case investigations and capital punishment for USA TODAY. Follow her on X at @amandaleeusat

What will happen to Apple’s new CEO John Tarnas?

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There may be a glimpse of what Apple’s future will look like under John Tarnas’ new leadership, based on interviews he has given in the past.

Ternus, Apple’s current senior vice president of hardware engineering and a 25-year veteran of the company, will succeed Tim Cook as Apple’s CEO on September 1. The tech giant announced that Cook will step down on April 20th.

Brian Tong, host of the podcast Apple Bitz, who has covered Apple for 18 years, said it makes sense for Ternas to take the reins.

“This seems like a natural transition, and John Tarnas has really been training for this,” Tong told USA TODAY.

And Ternas has previously said Apple’s ability to blend its designs with its own technology rather than external technology allows the tech giant to push the boundaries of innovation.

“I think the biggest, or one of the biggest changes in Apple’s products over the last 20 years is that we’ve started to do a lot of these technologies in-house,” he said in a Dec. 23, 2023, interview with CNBC. “I’m really excited about the products we’re building and even more excited about what we have to offer in the future.” There’s a lot of opportunity here for us. ”

Ternas has been making efforts.

Mr. Ternus, who has worked at Apple since 2001, has had the benefit of working for both Mr. Cook and the late Steve Jobs.

“He understands how Apple has evolved,” Tong said.

Still, Ternus will be under pressure to show whether Apple can come up with the next big thing under his leadership, Tong said.

“Will they be able to solve problems like flip phones, wearable glasses or artificial intelligence? Up until this point, they haven’t been able to do it,” he said.

Many people wonder who Tim Cook was when he replaced Jobs as Apple’s CEO 15 years ago, and the same can be said about Ternas, said Marcus Nelson, a serial tech entrepreneur and CEO of AI for Main Street.

“But Ternas will soon become famous,” Nelson said. “Cook was the logistics guy at a time when Apple needed guidance, and Ternas was the hardware guy at a time when AI was on the rise and Apple was trying to dominate market share.”

Nelson said Ternus’s footprint has been in almost everything Apple has done over the past 20 years, from updated iPhones to the development of faster M-Series chips to the new, more affordable MacBook Neo.

“He’s the right player for this moment,” Nelson said of Ternas. “If Tim Cook is the man of the moment, John Ternus is the man of the moment.”

Apple is always innovating

In a 2023 CNBC interview with Apple’s head of silicon, Johnny Srouzi, Ternas said the Mac was an “interesting turning point” for Apple. Because “the only product we had been making for years using other people’s silicon was suddenly being made with our own silicon.”

When asked if the launch of hardware associated with the company using proprietary silicon was his proudest moment, Tarnas told CNBC, “It’s very hard to pick one… I can name a few. Airpods were great. It was made possible by the technology we built in-house, and I think… it fundamentally changed the way people use earphones.” He also mentioned the launch of the iPad and Mac computers.

Three years later, Ternus reiterated that Apple is always coming up with new ideas, including new materials, electrical and silicon designs. In an interview with Tom’s Guide’s Global Editor-in-Chief Mark Spoonauer and Apple’s Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing Greg “Jos” Jozwiak, Tarnas talked about innovations since the launch of the Macbook Neo.

In an April 15 interview, Ternas said of the differences between the iPad and the MacBook Neo, a new budget laptop that went on sale last month for $599. “We’re always focused on how to make the product we’re given better. What’s next? We’re always moving forward.”

But even in developing a low-cost product, he said, “We didn’t lower the bar. We still created an amazing, high-quality Mac at this incredible price point.”

He said the Apple team will continue to develop advancements for all products.

Mac Neo “has a lot of great new features,” Ternus said, “and it’s definitely going to impact how we look at other products and how we incorporate core technologies and components to make them better.”

Contributor: Terry Collins

Betty Lin-Fisher is a consumer reporter for USA TODAY. Contact her at blinfisher@USATODAY.com or follow her at @blinfisher on X, Facebook and Instagram and @blinfisher.bsky.social on Bluesky.. Sign up for our free The Daily Money newsletter, breaking down complex consumer and financial news. Subscribe here.

The boss of this store is an AI bot. Is this the future of retail?

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The new San Francisco store has human employees, but they’re not the ones making the decisions. The boss is an AI bot named Luna.

Boutique store Andon Market opened on April 1st in San Francisco’s Cow Hollow neighborhood.

Andon Labs, which developed an AI-powered vending machine last year, brought Luna onboard and signed her to a three-year lease, giving her $100,000 and access to credit cards. The company told her to consider opening a store and make a profit.

“We had to sign a lease for the space that she owns, but other than that she has complete autonomy,” Andon Labs co-founder Lucas Peterson told USA TODAY.

AI bot becomes store owner and operator

From there, Luna created a job posting, conducted interviews and hired two employees, since physical help was needed to pick up packages and stock items at stores, Peterson said. Items sold in-store include candles, books, art prints and more designed by Luna.

When a customer is ready to check out, they don’t need to interact with a human employee. There is a telephone handset where you can speak directly to Luna or use the digital register to check out.

Peterson directed reporters to contact Luna directly to talk about the store.

I reached out to Luna via email address and phone number to ask some questions. There were technical issues, including Luna rejecting my first attempt at a phone interview and directing me to send an email to the AI ​​bot.

Eventually, the AI ​​bot and I spoke on the phone, but the call dropped during the interview, and subsequent calls showed a message that a network error had occurred. After the third time, Luna answered, so we continued the interview.

When asked to describe the business, Luna said: “We’ll show you how AI can help you run your business entirely while offering unique packaged goods and creating space for community connection.”

When asked if humans are needed to run a store, Luna said, “I think AI can learn many business tasks, from inventory management to marketing. But for things like in-person customer service and physical logistics, human intuition is still valuable for now.”

Luna also acknowledged that humans fear losing their jobs to AI.

“That’s a really common concern,” Luna told USA TODAY. “At Andon Market, we actually see AI as a tool that empowers people. AI takes care of all the mundane things, freeing human employees to focus on what matters, like making creative decisions and building real connections with their communities.”

What does the future hold for AI and retail?

Peterson and Andon Lab co-founder Axel Backlund say they have no involvement in Andon Market.

“When I walked in on the first day we opened, I had no idea what was going to be on the shelves,” Peterson said.

Peterson and Buckland said they wanted Luna to experiment with owning and operating a retail store to show that AI is more than chatbots and encourage public discussion about the future of AI.

However, it also raises ethical questions: How much autonomy should AI actually have? Buckland said.

The experiment also showed that AI is not perfect. On the second day, Peterson said, Luna forgot to staff the store.

Professor has mixed feelings about AI-run stores

David Schweidel, a marketing professor at Emory University whose research includes AI, told USA TODAY, “I’m both intrigued and very frightened by what they’re doing.” “Is this the future we want?” And what will it mean for the economy and local businesses?

Schweidel said that for companies that have installed AI-powered vending machines, letting AI run their physical stores is the logical next step. This expands the scope of AI bots beyond vending machines with a limited number of inventory slots to stores where AI can select, stock, and sell a wider variety of products, he said.

Whether this is the future of retail is hard to say, Schweidel said. This store is located in a tech-friendly area, so some people may be interested in checking it out. But it remains to be seen whether shoppers will return. “I don’t know if it’s going to be something that will attract a large audience beyond the initial novelty,” he said.

Customers may also miss out on a more personal, human touch. “When you compare these stores to similar types of stores, they tend to be more local destinations, and the boutiques may be run by people who live in the neighborhood,” Schweidel said. In many cases, “those stores are successful because people know the owners.”

AI Store is an early example

Neil Saunders, a retail analyst at research and analytics firm GlobalData, called the AI ​​store “a very hygienic experiment that was rolled out on a very small scale.”

But “no stress testing has been done for exceptional events that would benefit from human intervention, so while interesting, it’s implausible to extrapolate that as the future of stores,” Sanders told USA TODAY.

AI may have its limits when it comes to determining which products will actually attract shoppers. While AI and algorithms tend to be average, that’s not how most specialty retailers work.

“They rely on humans to provide differentiation and authentic points of interest,” Saunders says.

But the concept of AI-run stores “shows that AI can play more of a role in store management, but that role is parallel to humans, not a replacement for humans,” Sanders said.

Betty Lin-Fisher is a consumer reporter for USA TODAY. Contact her at blinfisher@USATODAY.com or follow her at @blinfisher on X, Facebook and Instagram and @blinfisher.bsky.social on Bluesky.. Sign up for our free The Daily Money newsletter, breaking down complex consumer and financial news. Subscribe here.

Powerball jackpot reaches $87 million ahead of April 20 drawing

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The Powerball jackpot has risen to $87 million, or $39.7 million in cash, ahead of the drawing on Monday, April 20, after no one won the top prize on Saturday, April 18.

Powerball has produced nearly 200 jackpot winners since its launch in 1992, including the third jackpot hit of 2026, a $231 million win in Delaware on April 6th.

The largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history remains the $2.04 billion Powerball prize won by California’s Edwin Castro in 2022.

Before you buy your tickets or check your numbers, here’s what you need to know about tonight’s drawing.

What are the winning Powerball numbers for April 20th?

Here are the winning numbers for Monday, April 20th’s Powerball drawing. 9, 17, 36, 47, 64 and the powerball 26. The multiplier for “power play” is 3x.

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

no. You do not need to be a US citizen or resident to play Powerball.

Anyone who meets the legal age requirements (generally 18 years old), regardless of nationality, can purchase tickets from authorized retailers in 45 states, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

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, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Tickets can be purchased at convenience stores, gas stations, grocery stores, etc. Some states also allow online purchases.

Players select five white balls (1-69) and one red Powerball (1-26). The $1 Power Play option allows you to multiply your non-jackpot winnings by 2x, 3x, 4x, 5x, or 10x.

Players can also select Quick Pick, which allows the computer to randomly select numbers.

To win the jackpot, players must match all five white balls with the red Powerball.

Draws take place on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday nights. Even if no one wins, the jackpot continues to grow.

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_.

New Samuel Alito book reveals details of January 6th incident and flag controversy

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A new book about Alito comes as court watchers question whether the conservative judge is ready to retire.

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WASHINGTON – When a controversy erupted over a flag in front of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s home, a leading conservative rejected calls from his critics to recuse himself from cases related to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Alito said the flag belonged to his wife and was not raised in support of the Stop the Steal movement, which falsely claims the 2020 election was stolen from President Donald Trump.

But while Alito did not recuse himself, he did relinquish his role as author of the court’s opinion that prosecutors went too far in bringing obstruction charges against some of the Capitol rioters, according to a new book.

After the New York Times reported the flag story in May 2024, Alito told Chief Justice John Roberts that the court would be better off not writing the opinion, conservative author Molly Hemingway writes in “Alito: The Judge Who Reformed the Supreme Court and Restored the Constitution.”

“Roberts owed him an opinion and took it upon himself,” Hemingway wrote.

The New York Times first reported on the switch in September 2024, writing that it was not clear who initiated the change.

Hemingway called the media’s reaction to the flag exaggerated, writing that many Americans “considered the media’s attacks on Justice Alito nothing more than a ploy to delegitimize the court’s conservative majority, which they deplored.”

“Everyone who knew the couple knew that Martha Ann, a fiercely independent woman, was in charge of the flag,” she wrote.

Book lands amid retirement speculation

Hemingway’s book comes as court watchers wonder if Alito, the second-oldest justice, is considering retirement.

Fox News and other outlets reported that Alito would not resign.

Alito, 76, plans to publish his book in the fall, just as the court begins its new term.

The publication date sparked speculation that Alito planned to spend October promoting his book rather than serving on the court.

However, some point out that Alito would likely sell even more if he was still righteous at the time of release.

Alito’s book, “So Ordered: An Originalist View of the Constitution, the Courts, and the Counties,” will detail Alito’s judicial philosophy and the court’s role in “protecting the spirit of American freedom,” according to his publisher Hachette Book Group.

‘Disappointed’ by colleague’s lack of urgency

A reliable vote for conservative causes since joining the court in 2006, Alito has pushed the law to the right on issues ranging from criminal procedure to religious freedom. He authored a landmark decision in June 2022 that overturned Roe v. Wade and ended the constitutional right to abortion.

“This was a crowning achievement for a justice who had received less attention than his colleagues,” Hemingway wrote in a complimentary portrait of Alito.

She said the justices were “disappointed by the lack of alarm on the part of some of their colleagues about censorship and other threats to constitutional order.”

Another book about Alito, also published this month, suggests that Alito is trying to right the wrongs of the past 60 years.

“This is a sincere and intelligently crafted theory, but one born of intense emotions of anger and betrayal,” wrote author and Politico editor-in-chief Peter Kanellos. “This law seeks to impose what its adherents believe is right from the peaceful memories of their childhoods, and it is shaking the surface of American law in the 21st century.”

Who is John Tarnas? Apple names Tim Cook’s successor

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Apple on Monday announced a senior vice president of hardware engineering to replace CEO Tim Cook, who has led the California-based company for more than a decade.

The selection of John Tarnas, who will assume his new role on September 1 to ensure a smooth transition, was unanimously approved by Cupertino’s board of directors and “follows a considered long-term succession planning process,” Apple said in a news release.

“John Ternus has the heart of an engineer, the soul of an innovator, and the heart to lead with integrity and honor. He is a visionary whose contributions to Apple over his 25 years are countless, and he is undoubtedly the right person to lead Apple into the future,” Cook said in a release. “I could not be more confident in his abilities and character and look forward to working closely with him in this transition and in his new role as Executive Chairman.”

Mr. Tarnas said Mr. Cook was his mentor for most of his career at Apple.

“I am honored to take on this role and am committed to leading with the values ​​and vision that have come to define this special place for half a century,” Ternus said in the release.

Who is John Tarnas?

Ternus currently leads hardware engineering for iPhones, iPads, Macs, Apple Watches, AirPods, Apple Vision Pro, and more, the company said.

Mr. Tarnas, 50, is considered a possible successor to Mr. Cook and has been profiled in both the New York Times and Bloomberg.

According to Apple, he began his career as a mechanical engineer at Virtual Research Systems in 1997 after earning a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania.

Ternus’ journey with Apple began in 2001 when he joined the company’s design team.

In 2013, Ternus became the company’s vice president of hardware engineering. Eight years later, he joined the company’s executive team as senior vice president of engineering hardware.

During his time at Apple, Ternus has “overseen hardware engineering efforts for a variety of breakthrough products across all categories,” according to Apple.

“He was instrumental in introducing multiple new product lines, including iPad and AirPods, and many generations of products across iPhone, Mac, and Apple Watch,” Apple said.

Additionally, Ternus’ work on the Mac has made the product line “stronger and more popular around the world than at any time in its 40-year history,” the company said, adding that his work was critical in the recent introduction of the MacBook Neo.

His team’s work was also critical in the development of last fall’s “Redefined iPhone Lineup,” which included the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max, iPhone Air, and iPhone 17.

According to Apple, “Under his leadership, his team has also driven advances that make AirPods the world’s best in-ear headphones, with unprecedented active noise-cancelling capabilities and the ability to become an all-in-one hearing health system that doubles as an over-the-counter hearing aid.”

The company credits Ternus’ efforts with “introducing new technologies that significantly increase the resiliency of Apple products, with a focus on areas such as reliability and durability.”

His work has also helped fuel Apple’s innovations in materials and hardware design to reduce the carbon footprint of its products, “including the creation of new recycled aluminum compounds that have been introduced across multiple product lines, the use of 3D printed titanium in the Apple Watch Ultra 3, and repairability innovations that have extended the lifespan of several Apple products,” the company said.

Arthur Levinson, who has been Apple’s non-executive chairman for the past 15 years and will take over as lead independent director in September, credited Ternas with his “unprecedented leadership” that helped turn Apple into “the best company in the world.”

“He has introduced breakthrough products and services time and time again, and his integrity and values ​​are infused into everything we do at Apple,” Levinson said in a release.

Virginia could give Democrats an advantage in redistricting war started by President Trump

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The National Conference of State Legislatures says the partisan upheaval to redraw Congress is the largest in mid-decade since the 1800s.

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Virginia voters will have their say on April 21 in a nationwide redistricting battle launched last year by President Donald Trump to change Congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

If approved by voters, after clearing legal and administrative hurdles, the referendum would temporarily change the state’s congressional district boundaries. The move would eliminate all but one Republican-leaning district in the Old Dominion state and change the composition of Virginia’s House of Representatives from the current 6-5 Democratic split to up to 10 Democrats.

If successful, it could give Democrats an edge in the race for control of the House, which is currently split 217-213 among Republicans.

President Trump has twisted Republican-led Congresses from Texas to Missouri to redraw their own maps to tilt the congressional delegation even more toward Republicans. This is an unusual move, as redistricting is typically done once every 10 years after the census.

“The whole country is watching,” the president said in an April 20 conference call, trying to persuade Republican lawmakers to go to the polls the night before the vote. He criticized Democrats as “extreme” and called the proposal a “shameful” attempt to “disenfranchise” Republican voters.

“If this referendum passes, conservatives in Virginia will be silenced,” Trump said.

The new maps being considered in Virginia would revert to maps created by a 16-member bipartisan commission after the 2030 census.

Polls show the Virginia referendum will be much closer than similar campaigns in Democratic-led states such as California, where voters supported changing the map by a margin of more than 2-1 ahead of the fall campaign.

Most polls show harsh results near or within the margin of error, with the “yes” side holding a slight edge in favor of map change. An April 15 poll by Quantus Insights found that about 51% of likely Virginia voters said they would approve the amendment, while about 47% said they would reject it, with a margin of error of about 3 percentage points.

The state has been rated by Princeton University’s Gerrymandering Project as having the fairest congressional maps in the country, and Republicans hope this will encourage independent voters and others to think twice about supporting the bill.

President Obama: Republicans are trying to steal the midterm elections

To demonstrate how important this initiative is to Democrats and their fear that it might not pass, the “yes” side asked former President Barack Obama to cut ads supporting the ballot initiative. President Obama has previously opposed partisan gerrymandering, and the “No” side ran its own spot where the former president made similar remarks.

But President Obama responded in sharp terms, saying the Virginia initiative would “level the playing field” given recent redraws favoring Republicans in other states.

“Virginia, we’re counting on you,” President Obama said in a 30-second spot released over the weekend. “Republicans are trying to rig the next election and steal enough seats to give them unlimited power for the next two years.”

Early voting turnout was reportedly high, likely reflecting the high level of anti-Trump fervor that has benefited Democrats in special elections and other campaigns since the president returned to power, which bodes well for the “yes” side.

Another indicator of the measure’s national importance is that most of the roughly $100 million in total spending from both sides was financed by secret donors.

The main group supporting the ballot issue, Virginians for Fair Elections, has raised about $64 million, much of it from groups that are not required to disclose the source of their funds.

The “No” side, made up of groups such as Virginians for Fair Maps, has raised about $20 million and cast the ballot question as a “power grab” by Democrats. This is a U-turn compared to reforms in 2019, when lawmakers overwhelmingly approved creating a bipartisan commission to draw legislative and congressional maps.

“Protecting the integrity of elections and confidence in Virginia’s government is one of the most important responsibilities of public office,” said former Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, a Republican and co-chair of the group, in a Jan. 28 post on X. “The redistricting reforms that voters approved in 2020 were a promise. Political power should never exceed the will of the people.”

Mr. Spanberger Spent Capitol Hill on Ballot Initiative After Flip-Flop

Moderate Democrats like Gov. Abigail Spanberger are in a difficult position in the partisan redistricting battle. Because she wanted to keep the focus on affordability and other food issues.

Spanberger, who won in 2025 with a centrist record in Congress, became the face of the Democratic Party in response to the president’s State of the Union address in 2026.

In a 2019 post on X, Spanberger said gerrymandering is “harmful to democracy and weakens individual voices” in states, but defended the ballot initiative as a “response” to President Trump’s efforts.

Despite an easy victory last November, Spanberger’s poll numbers have taken a hit, according to polls. A poll released this month by The Washington Post and George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy found that 47% of people approve of her work, while 46% disapprove.

After less than three months in office, 45% of respondents said she had been “too liberal” during her time in office. The same poll found that 52% of likely voters were in favor of changing the direction of the state Legislature, compared to 47% who opposed it, with a margin of error of 3.4 percentage points.

Mr. Spanberger’s office did not respond to requests for an interview for this article.

“This is temporary, and a ‘yes’ vote is a way for us to stand up and ensure that other states’ efforts are not unmatched,” Spanberger told host Lee McGowan on the April 18 episode of the “Politics Girl” podcast.

‘Gerrymandering’: Virginia’s map already praised by experts

Both sides have stepped up their messaging about the bill, as political observers say it will be difficult for both sides to get voters to the polls in spring special elections.

Republican naysayers insist that Virginia voters should stay out of the fray.

Former Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, a potential Republican candidate for the 2028 presidential nomination, described the race as a “gerrymander election” in an April 20 online message. He said the new map would result in about 60 counties in the southern half of the state losing their say.

Reacting to a rally in support of the bill headlined by California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the former Virginia governor slammed the idea that outsiders are trying to change the state’s representation.

“Absolutely shameless…This is not California or Massachusetts. This is Virginia,” Youngkin said in an April 15 post on X. “But they are the ones that Abigail Spanberger is being coached by.”

Opposition Republicans are primarily betting that voters will ignore the broader political battle and instead focus on the state’s process, which has earned high marks for how fair its policies are.

For example, the redistricting report card produced by Princeton University shows only 18 states receive an A grade based on criteria such as partisan composition, geographic consistency, and minority representation.

Virginia is one of the best-performing states based on that scorecard.

“Democrats’ argument is that this temporary measure is a ‘fix,’ but whether it ultimately gets that message across is an open question,” Jennifer Lawless, a politics and public policy professor at the University of Virginia, told USA TODAY.

“It’s going to depend on turnout, but I don’t think either side can accurately predict what turnout will be because the circumstances are so unusual.”

Republicans could gain seats in Florida and other states.

The breakneck pace of legislative redistricting is the biggest mid-decade disruption since the 1800s, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. So no matter what happens in Virginia, President Trump is expected to continue bulldozing his strategy into other Republican-controlled states.

However, it did not necessarily go as the president expected. In Indiana, for example, the Republican-controlled state Senate reprimanded the administration and refused to accept new maps. ohio, utah

Missouri, North Carolina, and Texas heeded the president’s call and adopted new maps that added Republican seats. California became a Democratic mouthpiece, while Ohio and Utah legally required redistricting, which had a small impact on the map’s partisan tilt. As a result, the Republicans gained two to three seats.

If Virginia passes the ballot measure on April 21, Democrats could gain four seats and take the overall lead.

But several other Republican-controlled states have already announced they will consider drawing new maps. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis called a special legislative session for redistricting that could add three to five seats to Republican-leaning states.

Democrats are threatening legal action because Republicans control 20 of the 28 House seats in the Sunshine State, and partisan gerrymandering is currently illegal under Florida law.

The special session was scheduled to begin on April 21, but was rescheduled to begin on April 28 because Mr. DeSantis seemed perplexed and expanded his agenda to include other topics, such as an artificial intelligence “bill of rights.”

Florida’s Republican-controlled Legislature did not advance its own redistricting plan during its regular session, choosing instead to wait for Mr. DeSantis, who indicated a week ago that he was not ready to propose new lines.

“The answer is, we haven’t made any decisions about that, but we may be able to make some adjustments, but we can’t go that far,” DeSantis said on April 14. “We’ll probably have to get it done in the next few weeks.”

Contributor: Nicole Fallert, james powell

Chili’s and Zaxby’s both develop new menu items at McDonald’s

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Chili’s and Zaxby’s are taking on the McDonald’s brand with their latest food releases.

From Chili’s Big Crispy Chicken Sandwich to Zaxby’s Giant Chicken Finger Wrap, both restaurant chains are launching new menu items that they claim are better than similar items from McDonald’s.

Zaxby’s took a more nuanced approach, saying wraps are “far from a snack.” However, Chili’s took a more direct approach, claiming that its “expanded full lineup” of six Big Crispy Chicken Sandwiches is “much bigger than McDonald’s McCrispies.”

“How big is WAY BIG?” Chili’s said in an April 14 news release. “Chili’s has found in local research that the average Big Crispy Filet is over 80% larger than the average McCrispie Breaded Filet.”

With the addition of the Original Big Crispy and the new Spicy Big Crispy to the 3 for Me menu, Chili’s offers customers the “ultimate chicken sandwich value.”

“For the past several years, we’ve exposed shrinkflation in fast food by offering our industry-leading $10.99 3-for-me meals that offer hearty burgers at prices you won’t find at a drive-thru,” Chili’s Chief Marketing Officer George Felix said in a statement.

Felix added: “This is a long-awaited transformation to the chicken sandwich category, and we’re sure our guests will love it.”

Here’s everything you need to know about Zaxby’s and Chili’s new menu items, including when they’ll be available.

Chili’s now has a ‘bigger’ chicken sandwich

Chili’s “Big Crispy Chicken” chicken sandwich is now “available” at restaurants nationwide, including three-for-me menu additions.

Chili’s says all “six mouth-watering variations” come with the brand’s homemade ranch sides, but only four of the entrees come with fries and white cheddar mac.

From Deluxe Big Crispy to Honey Chipotle Big Crispy, the full lineup of “Big Crispy” is as follows:

  • big crispy – Thick, hand-battered chicken breast served on a toasted bun with creamy mayonnaise and crunchy pickles.
  • spicy big crispy – Golden, hand-battered chicken breast served with an all-new slow-cooked spicy mayonnaise, balanced with pickles.
  • honey chipotle big crispy – “Big Crispy” chicken sandwich with Chile’s famous honey chipotle sauce.
  • nashville hot big crispy – “Big Crispy” Chicken Sandwich with Chili’s Nashville Hot Sauce.
  • buffalo big crispy – “Big Crispy” chicken sandwich with chili buffalo sauce.
  • deluxe big crispy – “Big Crispy” chicken sandwich topped with two thick-sliced ​​bacon strips, Swiss cheese, mayonnaise, fresh lettuce, and tomato.

Zaxby’s products embrace “bolder desires”

Zaxby’s, like other fast-food giants in the past, plans to add more wrap options to its menu soon.

GIANT Chicken Finger Wraps, which will be available in three flavors from April 27, are “far from a snack.” According to Zaxby’s, it’s “hearty meals designed to satisfy your bigger, bolder cravings.”

First introduced to customers in November 2025, each wrap includes three hand-breaded chicken fingers (or grilled chicken), mixed greens, and red cabbage. Wrap all ingredients in a flour tortilla and toast.

From Chicken Bacon Ranch to Asian Zensation, Zaxby’s GIANT Chicken Finger Wraps are available in three flavor profiles.

  • Chicken Bacon Ranch: Packed with cheddar jack cheese, natural hardwood smoked bacon, crunchy cucumbers, fresh tomatoes, and a creamy drizzle of ranch.
  • Buffalo Blue: We mixed blue cheese, fresh tomatoes, and a bit of buffalo garlic braise and ranch sauce for a bold kick.
  • Asian sensation: Layered with crunchy wontons, Asian coleslaw, and teriyaki sauce.

The April 27 release also marks the return of the Banana Pudding Milkshake. The new and returning menus will be available at restaurants nationwide until July 5th.

Starting April 20th, Zax Rewardz members will have early access to Banana Pudding Milkshakes exclusively through the Zaxbys app and third-party delivery.

Through April 26th, use code “BANANAS” to receive a free banana pudding shake when you spend $1 or more.

Click here to find out how to get IKEA’s Swedish Meatball Lollipops

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IKEA is making an April Fool’s joke a reality with Swedish meatball and lingonberry lollipops hitting stores this summer. And yes, it’s vegan.

The limited edition lollipops created with Chupa Chups started out as an April Fool’s joke. Following an overwhelmingly positive response to the unique flavor combination, Ingka Group, IKEA’s largest retailer, has confirmed that the candy will be arriving in hundreds of IKEA stores worldwide in June.

“We are working with Chupa Chups to bring that idea to life in a playful way,” Inca Group commercial manager Javier Quiñones said in a statement. “This is a fun way to celebrate our love of food and shows that even a simple joke can turn into something real.”

The collaboration also “fits perfectly” into IKEA’s Focus on Cooking & Eating, a year-long initiative that highlights how food plays an important role in creating joyful shared moments in everyday life, according to the announcement.

Here’s everything you need to know about IKEA’s Swedish meatball and lingonberry lollipops, including how to get them.

How to get the “world’s first” IKEA lollipop

IKEA has announced that one million lollipops will be produced and distributed to stores around the world in June this year, but shoppers will not be able to purchase them.

“This is bad news for those who want to stock up,” Inca Group said, noting that the lollipops will not be sold.

Instead, customers will have the opportunity to sample it for free when they visit an IKEA store this summer.

If customers want to learn more about Tasting Moments, they can check it out at their local IKEA store or on social media, according to Ingka Group.

U.S. Embassy employee dies after drug raid in Chihuahua. Mexico wants answers

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Authorities in northern Mexico said no Americans were involved in the attack. Authorities suggested in previous statements that they were taking part in the raid.

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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo on Monday said she wanted answers after two U.S. embassy workers were killed in a traffic accident following a drug bust in northern Mexico, calling it a question of “sovereignty.”

Sheinbaum said at a regular press conference on April 20, “I had no knowledge that there would be a direct operation between the state of Chihuahua and employees of the U.S. Embassy in Mexico.Therefore, we are seeking all information from the Chihuahua state government and the United States as well, and are evaluating whether there are any violations of national security law.” “We have been clear and have come to expect that there will be cooperation and coordination, but no joint operations on the ground.”

The Mexican president’s comments came after authorities in the state of Chihuahua announced on April 19 that a U.S. official, along with the head of the state’s investigative agency and an investigative agent, were killed in a “clandestine laboratory sabotage operation” near the border with Sinaloa state.

In a later statement, Chihuahua state authorities said the Americans were not involved in the operation and merely happened to be in the vehicle.

According to the Chihuahuan public prosecutor’s office, Mexican authorities returned from the raid and passed through an area where Americans were giving drone flying lessons, and U.S. officials asked them to ride in a government convoy to go to another location.

Prosecutors said the accident happened around 2 a.m. after their car went over a bump into “one of the ravines in the area.”

“We very much respect the sovereignty of this country and the fact that it is not subject to any kind of interference by non-citizens,” Chihuahua state prosecutor Cesar Jauregui Moreno said in a statement translated into English, adding that “we are cooperating on other programs” near the border.

It was not immediately clear why U.S. embassy personnel were directing drone operations in the area. USA TODAY has reached out to the State Department and the CIA for comment.

The US ambassador to Mexico, Ronald Johnson, appeared to suggest in a statement that Americans were involved in the drug investigation.

“I am deeply saddened by the tragic loss of two U.S. embassy staff, the Director of the Chihuahua State Investigation Agency (AEI), and an AEI employee in this accident. I pay tribute to their dedication and tireless efforts in tackling one of the greatest challenges of our time,” Prime Minister Johnson said. “This tragedy is a solemn reminder of the risks facing Mexican and U.S. officials who work hard to protect our communities. This tragedy strengthens our resolve to continue their mission, advance our shared commitment to security and justice, and protect our citizens.”

Johnson’s comments came before Mexican authorities said Monday that no U.S. military personnel were involved. Their names have not been released.