Home Blog Page 776

Mega Million Wins on 6/24/25: $326 million jackpot

0

play

The Mega Millions Jackpot rose to $326 million due to drawings on Tuesday, June 24th, as it did not match all the winning numbers in the painting on Friday, June 20th.

If someone matches all six numbers on Tuesday, they have the option of a one-time cash payment of $145.7 million.

There were three Mega Million winners this year, but the most recent winner won Ohio State with a $112 million jackpot. Prior to that, Illinois Lucky Lottery ticket holders took home a $344 million jackpot on March 25th, while another lucky person attacked the Mega Million Jackpot on January 17th for $113 million.

Here are the wins from Mega Millions drawings on Tuesday, June 24th, 2025:

Mega Millions win count on 6/24/25

The number of wins in the picture on Tuesday, June 24th 10, 11, 18, 24, 60. Megaball is 20.

To win a lottery number is as follows: Jack Pocket, the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Network.

Did everyone win the huge millions?

Mega Million winners announced by lottery officials will be posted here.

To view a list of past winners, Visit the Mega Millions website.

How to play Mega Million

To play Mega Million you will need to purchase a ticket. This can be done in a variety of places, including local convenience stores, gas stations, and even grocery stores. In some states, you can purchase millions of Mega tickets online.

Once you have your ticket, you will need to select six numbers. Five of these are white balls with numbers 1 to 70. Gold Megaballs range from 1 to 24.

You can ask for a “quick pick” or “easy pick” especially if you feel unlucky or don’t want to go through the hassle of picking. These options allow the computer to generate numbers at random.

Mega millions of tickets include built-in multipliers, increasing prizes other than jackpots by 2, 3, 4, 5, or 10 times. Previously, players had to pay extra dollars to add “Megaplier.”

Where can I buy the lottery ticket?

Tickets can be purchased directly at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.

You can also order tickets online Jack Pocket, the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Networkthese US and territories include Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Maine, Maine, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Washington, DC, and West Virginia. The Jackpocket app lets you select lottery games and numbers, order, look at tickets, and collect all your winnings using your mobile phone or home computer.

Jack Pocket is the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Network. Gannett may earn revenue from viewer referrals to Jackpocket Services. Must be over 18 in AZ, 21+, and 19+ in NE. It is not affiliated with the state lottery. Gambling issues? Call 1-877-8-Hope-Ny or Text Hopeny (467369) (NY). 1-800-327-5050 (MA); 1-877-mylimit (or); 1-800-981-0023 (PR); 1-800-Gambler (all other). visit jacketpocket.com/tos In perfect conditions.

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA Today. Contact him at fernando.cervantes @gannett.com and follow him at x @fern_cerv_.

Zoran Mamdani shocks New York’s primary democratic politics for mayor

0


Mamdani said his city was “governed as a Democrat model,” and would prioritize working class needs and fight Trump.

play

NEW YORK – Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old member of the Democratic Socialist National Council, disrupts mainstream democratic politics by taking command against expectations in the June 24th New York City mayoral primary.

Just after midnight he spoke to his supporters and said he and former governor Andrew Cuomo were moderate Democrats at the forefront and the largest city in the country needed to be put together.

“Tonight we made history,” Mamdani boasted to the blessed crowd in Queens.

With 96% of the vote counted, Mamdani led Cuomo from 44% to 36%.

Less than two hours after the poll ended on June 24th, 67-year-old Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he would already call Mamdani to congratulate him on the historic campaign.

“Tonight is his night,” Cuomo told supporters at the election night party. “He deserves it. He won.”

The subsequent immediate spills where other candidate supporters are redistributed to Mamdani or Cuomo based on who is lower in the vote are expected to only increase Mamdani’s lead. Third-place finisher New York City Director Bradlander had encouraged voters to rank Mamdani in second place.

When Mamdani declared victory, Lander joined him on stage.

“Together, we have shown one of the future politics, partnerships and integrity,” Mamdani said.

Cuomo was leading the vote for several months by a few digit margin. In the final vote, the day before the election, Mamdani won simply go to pick up Lander’s supporters in the final round of victory.

The race served as a pioneer of the massive Democrats as the coalition seeking to repel Coomos is trying to make it around the choices New Yorkers face between the party’s older moderate political establishment that lost the White House in November and the youthful progressive vision.

Mamdani compared her to fellow American democratic socialists, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. He sent Joe Crowley, chairman of the House Democrat Caucus in 2018, overlapping with the Mamdani Capitol. She supported Mamdani, as well as Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent progressive icon in Vermont.

Meanwhile, mainstream heavyweight Democrats supported Cuomo. Nationally, they included former President Bill Clinton and Rep. Jim Clyburn, who revived former President Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign. And New York’s political establishment also supported Cuomo, including Rep. Adriano Espirat and chairman of the Brooklyn Democrat Rodney Bicotte Hermelin.

“He gave us something to believe.”

Mamdani has found young voters on a platform centered around dealing with affordability in America’s largest cities. Cuomo aimed to draw out decades of government experience as a breakwater against Trump’s attack on his hometown. Voters gave Mamdani the opportunity to change their infamous, expensive homeland.

“We won with a vision of a city that all New Yorkers can afford,” Mamdani said.

Mamdani said his city was “governed as a Democrat model,” and would prioritize working class needs and fight Trump.

Rep. Nydia Velazquez, a left-leaning Democrat who represents the Brooklyn-based district, said Mamdani won with a simple message that was affordable for everyone.

“He gave us something to believe,” Velazquez said at an election night party. She said his campaign would threaten the power of the billionaires.

“But here it is: the city has changed,” Velazquez said. “Zoran knew that.”

If elected, Mamdani, born in Uganda and Indian ancestor, became the first Muslim and Asian American mayor of New York City, becoming the youngest mayor of a century.

He will represent a harsh ideological deviation from Mayor Eric Adams, a conservative Democrat and former Republican, who has become increasingly friendly with Trump since being indicted for corruption by the Justice Department under former President Joe Biden. (After Trump took office, the department dropped the charges, saying the case would hinder Adams’ ability to work with federal immigration enforcement.)

Cuomo led a wide margin in the primary, but votes narrowed for the days leading up to the election. Funded by former mayor of Mike Bloomberg, the Super PAC has drawn $24 million to President Donald Trump on Mamdani, portraying him as an extreme and anti-Semitic.

Mamdani will have the advantage as a Democratic mayoral candidate in an overwhelmingly democratic city where many feel besieged by President Donald Trump’s aggressive crackdown on undocumented immigrants, attacks on Columbia University and suggestions for cutting social welfare programs.

However, the race through November represents a more fractured, moderate democratic politics than previously seen.

But he still faces opponents in November, including Republican challenger Curtis Swawa, a conservative talk show host and longtime local activist. Adams is running for reelection as an independent, and Cuomo may do that too.

Mamdani’s opponents will continue to attack him because of his views on Israel, which drew criticism from several Jewish groups, and his relative experience as a third term MP with a very modest record of legislative achievements.

Mamdani ran a social media-savvy campaign featuring viral videos including talking to working-class voters on Bronx and working-class voters in Queens who voted for Trump on issues relating to cost-of-living. Mamdani campaigned on the promise of freezing rent in a rent-stabilized apartment – he made winter in the Atlantic, making the freeze literal in one video – freeing the bus and providing universal parenting. These proposals appeal primarily to tenants’ cities, many of whom struggle to stay in Gotham.

However, he also focused on the campaign with a vast canvas and door knocks across five districts. On the first night of the summer, Mamdani walked all over Manhattan Island, spanning around 13 miles, urging people to go out during early voting.

Cuomo enjoyed vast familiarity and loyalty, but he was also a vulnerable frontrunner due to bullying at the Capitol, which concealed sexual harassment accusations, COVID-19 deaths and helped him resign in 2021.

“We finished with him,” Lander, a progressive candidate who campaigned with Mamdani, told his supporters. “Andrew Cuomo is in the past. He’s not the present or future of New York City.”

The city’s ranked optional voting system requires candidates to win 50% of their first round votes. The Cuomo campaign saw him not being able to get a second or third vote from other candidates who could put him in the upper hand against Mamdani.

Still, votes will be tallied over next week as the system eliminates the lowest possible vote and rearranges subsequent votes to the remaining candidates. Given the Union, the vote is unlikely to support Cuomo, or at least he thought.

After the tally, the race continues in November.

Mamdani said his campaign renewed his belief in democracy. Voters can feel helpless in the face of government chaos and weakness, and desperately sacrifice freedom to basic needs, he said.

“We’ve given the city permission to believe again,” he said.

75th Anniversary of the Korean War: 6 things you may not know about this “forgotten war”

0



CNN

75 years ago this week, more than 135,000 North Korean troops invaded South Korea, claiming millions of lives, leaving scars that remain to this day.

However, the Korean War has been overshadowed forever by World War II. This is a much bigger conflict that ended five years ago. Even the US military calls South Korea a “forgotten war.”

Sixteen countries, including the United States, sent combat troops under the United Nations Command, with the assistance of South Korea. The Chinese military intervened on the North Korean side.

The war broke out on June 25, 1950, and North Korean troops were attacked in parallel, the 38th parallel, isolated from North Korea and South Korea. The armistice, signed on July 27, 1953, stopped the conflict, but the war did not officially end due to the absence of a peace treaty.

Today’s twists and turns of South Korea relations in the Northern United States shine a spotlight on the legacy of the Korean War, but it is still an overlooked conflict.

Here are six things you may not know about the Korean War:

It is almost impossible for Americans to travel to North Korea or its capital Pyongyang. US passport holders are not permitted to go there without special permission from the US Department of State.

However, for eight weeks in 1950, Pyongyang controlled the US military.

Soldiers from the 1st Cavalry Division in Pyongyang in 1950

On October 19th of that year, according to US Army history, the US Army’s 1st Cavalry Division and the South Korean soldiers unit captured the North Korean capital.

History shows that the US military was quickly at home.

By October 22nd, the US military had established its headquarters in the headquarters building of North Korean leader Kim Il Sung.

US Marines are hiding behind barricades as street battles are raging in Pyongyang. The background wall features images of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and North Korean leader Kim Il Sung.

Photos from the time show an American intelligence agent sitting at Kim’s desk, showing a portrait of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin hanging on the wall behind him.

However, the US military’s occupation of Pyongyang was short-lived. When the Chinese forces entered the war in late November 1950, they quickly pushed south and by December 5th they defeated the US forces from Pyongyang.

Most images of the Korean War are ground battles fought in places like Choshin Reservoir and Incheon. But much of the destruction was brought to North Korea by US forces, and was carried out in a relentless bombing campaign.

During the three years of the Korean War, US aircraft dropped 635,000 tonnes of bombs (both highly explosive and incited) on North Korea. This is more than the 500,000 tonnes of bombs that the US dropped into the Pacific Ocean throughout World War II, according to figures cited by Charles Armstrong of Asia-Pacific magazine.

The US Air Force B-29 Superfores dropped bombs during the Korean War.

Journalists, international observers and American prisoners of war in North Korea reported that almost every substantial building had been destroyed. By November 1950, North Korea had advised its citizens to dig holes in housing and shelters.

Although North Korea did not maintain official casualties figures from the bombing, information obtained from Russian archives by the Wilson Centre’s Cold War International History Project has exceeded 280,000.

General Curtis Lemey, the father of US strategic bombings and the architect of the fire raids that destroyed Japanese cities during World War II, spoke about North Korea’s American bombing.

“We went there, fought the war and eventually burned down all the towns of North Korea in some way.”

American soldiers roam the tile bleach of a Korean hamhan around 1950.

Armstrong said the North Korean bombing has had an impact to date.

“The DPRK government never forgot the lessons of North Korea’s vulnerability to American air attacks, and for half a century, after the armistice continued to strengthen reflexive defenses, constructed underground facilities, and ensured that nuclear weapons were in their position again.

North Korea persuaded the Soviet Union and Joseph Stalin to launch a war

When World War II ended, the rule of the Korean Peninsula – occupied by defeated Japanese forces – was divided between the Soviet Union in the north and the US in the south.

Wilson Centre records show that North Korean leader Kim Il Sung wanted to unite the two South Koreas under communist rule and forced the permission of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.

A portrait of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin is being prepared for a parade in Pyongyang in July 1947.

With Kim’s request to invade first in March 1949, Stalin was cautious and did not want to be drawn into a conflict with the United States, where South Korea still had occupying forces.

However, when those troops were pulled in the summer of 1949, Stalin’s opposition softened, and by April 1950 the Soviet leader was ready to hear Kim again when the North Korean leader visited Moscow.

Stalin told Kim that the Soviet Union would support the invasion, but only if Kim also approved the communist China.

Encouraged by the 1949 victory over China’s nationalist military – in a civil war that Washington did not intervene, Chinese leader Mao Zedong agreed and offered to be the North Korean military backup unit in the finality of the US intervening.

So Kim had a green light to break in.

In 1949, communist China had gathered troops along the coast to invade Taiwan, where Chen Kai Shek and his nationalist forces had fled after losing to Mao Zedong and the Communists in the Chinese civil war.

However, the outbreak of the Korean War caused it to get in the way of the US Navy, a communist Chinese plan. Fearing the South Korean battles spread across East Asia, President Harry Truman sent US warships to the seas between China and Taiwan.

The US State Department is now telling how close Taiwan is, the autonomous protest that Beijing still claims as part of China.

“In late 1949 and early 1950, American officials were prepared for Chinese (People’s Republic of China) forces to cross the strait to defeat Chen, but after the Korean War broke out in June 1950, the US sent a seventh fleet into the Taiwan Strait to prevent the Korean conflict from spreading south.”

“The appearance of the seventh fleet angered Chinese communists who had transported troops poised to invade Taiwan’s invasions on the South Korean front.”

By October 19, 1950, 12 Communist Chinese military divisions were in North Korea, according to Brookings Institutional accounts.

These Chinese forces brought terrible losses to the US and South Korean forces they faced, and were eventually driven out of North Korea entirely.

However, China also suffered massive losses. More than 180,000 troops were killed.

F-80 Shooting Star US Air Force's Korean War-era fighter plane at National Musuem

The Jet Fighters entered military service in World War II with the introduction of the German Messerschmitt 262. However, the jet’s fighter did not go head-on in a “Top Gun” style dogfight until the Korean War.

Records appear to agree that the first dog battle took place on November 8, 1950, near the Yaru River, near the Yaru River, near the Yaru River, and across the border with China. Flying the American F-80 shooting star jet was probably facing a Soviet-made jet, piloted by a Soviet pilot from a Chinese base.

According to a report from the US Air Force’s 51st fighter jet historian, 8-12 MIGs came after the American flights of four F-80s that day. In a 60-second encounter with one of these MIGs, Air Force’s 1st Annual Lt. Colonel Russell Brown became the first jet fighter pilot to hit a MIG-15 in a fire from a jet’s cannon, exploded in flames and earn a kill in a dogfight.

However, others have challenged the account, and in a report from the US Navy Institute (USNI), which states that Soviet records show that MIG was not lost that day.

What is certain is that the following day, November 9, 1950, U.S. Navy Lieutenant Colonel CMDR. William Amen, flying the F9F fighter from the aircraft carrier USS Philippine Sea, fired down the MIG-15 during an airstrike on the Yaru River bridge.

Soviet records confirm the loss of the MIG-15 that day, according to a USNI report.

Four F-80 jet fighters flew 30,000 feet on July 13, 1950 during flight from a Japanese base to a mission against a North Korean Kucomist Army column.

Later in the war, the US introduced the F-86 jet into the South Korean conflict. The plane, known as “Mig Alley,” along the South Korean-China border, where Soviet pilots leapt out of their Chinese bases, gained fame in their battle with the Mig-15.

The US Air Force Museum in Ohio describes Mig Alley in this way.

“A large amount of MIGS is to wait on the Manchuria side of the border. When UN aircraft enters MIG’s alleys, these MIGs will dive from high altitude and attack. If MIGS is in trouble, they will try to escape to communist China. The US Air Force Saber Pilot, who has earned a kill rate of about 8:1 against the MIG.”

Millions of lives were lost during the battles on the Korean Peninsula between 1950 and 1953, but they were technically victims of what they called “police actions.”

Under the US Constitution, only the US Congress can declare war with another country. But that hasn’t been done since World War II.

When North Korea invaded the South in 1950, US President Harry Truman intervened to intervene in the US military as part of a total effort approved by the UN Security Council.

“Fifteen other countries also sent troops under the UN Command. Truman did not seek a formal declaration of war from Congress. Officially, America’s presence in South Korea was nothing more than a “police action.”

1952: US military digs Korean hills during the Korean War

And those police actions have since become the norm for US military intervention. According to the website of the US House of Representatives, the Vietnam War, the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kosovo have all seen them join combat under Congress’ permission for the use of military force (AUMF).

Although the AUMF has been around since the beginning of the Republic, “after World War II… AUMFS is much broader and often allows the president to sweep the authority to engage with the US military around the world,” the US home website says.

“War was the first massive foreign US conflict without a declaration of war, setting a precedent for the one-sided presidential forces exercised today,” Emory University law professor Mary DeJacques wrote in a 2019 opinion column for the Washington Post.

“The Korean War helped to make the eternal war possible of this century,” Doziack wrote.

5 Pick store stores set up to close in Wisconsin: See list

0

play

With several Kroger-owned stores closed across the US, five pick-and-save stores are set to close in Wisconsin.

The grocery chain has confirmed that five locations in southeastern Wisconsin have been closed to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, part of the USA Today network.

“This closure is part of a larger company-wide decision to operate more efficiently and ensure the long-term health of our business,” the spokesperson said on June 23.

The closure will be underway as Pick n’Save’s parent company Kroger said it will close 60 locations nationwide over the next 18 months.

Kroger spokesman Erin Rolfes told USA that it would not publish a full list of closures on USA Today, but several locations have been identified through media reports from several states, including Illinois, Kentucky and Texas.

Pick N’Save did not immediately respond to a request for comment on USA Today on June 24th.

Here’s what you need to know.

Where will the Pick and Save Store be closed?

  • 1735 W. Silver Spring Drive, Glendale, Wisconsin, 53209
  • 3701 S. 27th St., Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53221
  • 2355 N. 35th St., Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53210
  • 2931 S. Chicago Avenue, South Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53172
  • 2320 W. Ryan Road, Oak Creek, Wisconsin, 53154

Contributions: Gabe Hauari and Jonathan Limehouse, USA Today

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA Today. Contact him at fernando.cervantes @gannett.com and follow him at x @fern_cerv_.

Pressure builds up on Kennedy’s vaccine panel before the first meeting

0

Ahead of the first meeting of newly appointed vaccine advisors to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lawmakers share new concerns about the membership and last-minute actions of the panel that could raise Covid-19 and the flu vaccine.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Massachusetts Democrat, wrote a letter Tuesday to US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. This announced the sudden layoffs of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Advisory Committee on Vaccination Practices, obtained solely by CNN, and the appointment of eight new members two days later.

Her letter comes hours after Sen. Bill Cassidy, a top Republican on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, demanded that officials be postponed to postpone the vaccine meeting amid concerns that could further erode Americans’ confidence in vaccine safety.

Kennedy appeared before the House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee Tuesday morning to testify to the administration’s proposed 2026 budget. The hearing began with committee Democrats also questioning his ACIP actions.

Rep. Frank Paron, a Democrat from New Jersey, has made clear that the layoffs of ACIP members are not going to support the commitment Kennedy made to the senators during the confirmation process that he would not rob Americans of access to the vaccine.

Palone, the committee’s highest ranked Democrat, asked to appear before the panel again “quickly” again for surveillance over the “unprecedented and troublesome chaos” created around vaccine panels and vaccine access.

Kennedy fired 17 vaccine committee members and said there was a conflict of interest with the pharmaceutical industry. “That committee was a template for medical malpractice,” he said. Previous committee members disputes are disclosed on the CDC website.

The committee has traditionally advised the CDC on recommendations on who should get the vaccine. The CDC directive shapes coverage of doctor recommendations and insurance company vaccinations.

After removing recent members, Kennedy couldn’t scrutinize safety concerns, saying the committee was “stricken by a sustained conflict of interest.”

However, the eight alternatives Warren wrote in her letter are filled with conflicts of interest in themselves – and the disclosure of the new ACIP members’ conflict of interest is not posted on the CDC site.

Warren’s letter mentioned Dr. Robert Malone, a new vaccine advisor who proposed for mRNA vaccines and COVID-19 measurements. Warren said in his letter that his substances promulgated these theories, “at one point it had raked around $31,200 in monthly revenue,” causing concerns of conflict of interest.

Warren also highlighted Dr. Martin Kruldorf, a longtime friend of Dr. Jay Battacharya, a longtime friend of the National Institutes of Health, and his co-author, Dr. Martin Kruldorf, on the great Barrington Declaration, who insisted relaxed lockdown measures for young people.

She said both Malone and Kruldorf have been paid witnesses to vaccine manufacturers in recent years, raising concerns about their own conflict of interest.

The senator also flagged Dr. Vicki Pebworth, appointee on the board of directors of the National Vaccine Information Center, who is critical of the vaccine, and Dr. James Pagano, “someone who appears to be untrained in infectious diseases or vaccine studies.”

Warren also questioned Dr. Michael Ross’ current position. Michael Ross said in his announcement that he works at George Washington University and Virginia Commonwealth University. Both universities tell CNN that obstetricians and gynecologists have not worked for the institution for several years. He recently worked for a private equity and Maryland-based biotech startup.

The senator wrote that Kennedy “hands-selected” these new members to further promote his anti-vaccine agenda.”

Warren has described Kennedy’s own conflict of interest as well as financial benefits in the vaccine lawsuit, as it is “not completely resolved.” Kennedy believes he will sell his interest in cases involving HPV vaccine Gardasil to his adult son.

In her new letter, Warren requested a response from Kennedy by July 8th.

Warren’s letters arrive as surprises rise about the panel’s scheduled meetings on Wednesday and Thursday. This will include discussions about the Covid-19 vaccine and revived discussions about thimeromonkeys in flu shots.

Preservatives are used in multi-dose vials of vaccines to prevent microorganism growth, but were removed from most shots decades ago due to concerns that they contain mercury forms. Subsequent studies showed that thimerosal was not associated with neurodevelopmental issues, including autism.

Cassidy, the chairman of the Senate Health Committee, also issued an alarm Monday night. The senator called on HHS to delay the ACIP meeting, writing that some of the new appointees “have no experience studying new technologies such as mRNA vaccines and may have preconceived notions about them.”

The panel’s meeting should be postponed until fully staffed, “including those with more robust and balanced expressions as required by the law, and with more direct and relevant expertise.”

During a House Subcommittee hearing Tuesday, Rep. Kim Schlie, a Democrat from Washington, asked Kennedy if he “lied” to Cassidy about his commitment to vaccine safety. Cassidy said in a floor speech to the senator on Feb. 4 that Kennedy, among other assurances, “promised to maintain the recommendations of the Disease Control and Prevention Practices Advisory Committee on vaccination practices without modification.”

Cassidy’s prepared remarks, as posted on his website, said the Secretary “will maintain the Disease Control and Prevention Advisory Committee on Vaccination Practices without change.”

Kennedy did not see Cassidy’s statement, but said, “I am in compliance with all the agreements I have given to Senator Cassidy.”

A Cassidy spokesman told CNN: “As Senator Cassidy publicly said, commitment is about the ACIP process, not staffing.” A spokesman for HHS also pointed out Cassidy’s floor remarks.

When will the customer be paid?

0

play

Current and previous AT&T customers may be eligible for payments from the $177 million settlement related to two data breaches.

On June 20, a US judge granted preliminary approval for a settlement that resolves cases against AT&T over 2019 and 2024 cases.

In July 2024, the company announced that almost every customer’s phone call and text message records would be made public. In March of the same year, AT&T said it was investigating the dataset released on “Dark Web.”

AT&T said in a statement to Reuters it denied allegations that it was “liable for these criminal activities.”

“We have agreed to this settlement to avoid the costs and uncertainties of long-term litigation,” the company added.

Here’s what you need to know about AT&T data breach payments:

How much can I claim from the AT&T settlement?

AT&T has agreed to pay up to $2,500 or $5,000 to customers who suffered a “pretty traceable” loss on the incident, depending on who has affected the customer.

The company will allocate $149 million to those affected by the 2024 violation and $28 million to those affected by the 2019 violation, according to court documents.

After the direct loss payment is made, the remaining funds will be distributed to customers with access to the personal information.

The company told Reuters it expects payments to be issued early next year.

When will you be paid from the AT&T Settlement?

Court documents show that the Settlement Notice Program will begin on August 4th and complete on October 17th.

The deadline for filing the claim form will be listed on November 18th, with a final approval hearing taking place on December 3rd.

What happened with the AT&T violation?

In its 2024 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company learned that customer data was illegally downloaded from its third-party cloud platform AT&T Workspace in April.

AT&T revealed that the call log was copied from the workspace on the Snowflake Cloud Platform.

An analysis of the incident released in March by the company suggests that around 7.6 million account holders at the time and 65.4 million former account holders posted information on “Dark Web.”

Information including address, social security number and passcode appeared to have been around for before 2019, the BBC reported at the time of its announcement.

Contributions: Gabe Hauari, USA Today; Reuters

Tensions in the Middle East have flare up and 11 Iranians have been arrested in the US

0


Those arrested included a former Iranian Army sniper and a man sentenced to 10 years in prison for a drug conviction. Some say arrests are political.

play

Federal agents have arrested 11 Iranians who have lived in the United States over the past few days, Homeland Security officials announced Tuesday.

Almost every arrest was made on Sunday after US military planes bombed a vital Iranian nuclear presence. President Donald Trump said he ordered a strike to stop the nuclear threat posed by the “world’s number one national sponsor of terrorism.”

The arrest also comes among Americans who fear violence in the US amidst the conflict with Iran. The mayors from New York City to Los Angeles say they see every threat to public safety.

Among those arrested, officials said: Mehran Makari Saheli, 56 years old, convicted of illegal possession of a firearm, is a former member of Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard. Libbar Karimi, a former Iranian Army sniper, was unable to adjust his immigration status. And Yousef Mehridehno was labelled by Homeland Security as “a suspected terrorist” who lied to his Visa application. Karimi was in possession of an Iranian Army Identification Card at the time of his arrest, federal officials said.

“We’ve said we’re getting the worst and worst, and we’re,” said Tricia McLaughlin, deputy secretary for homeland security. “We will not wait until a military operation is carried out. We will actively provide President Trump’s mission to secure our hometown.”

The arrests took place across the country. Ice Buffalo arrested the 65-year-old on Monday and was convicted of “detective impersonation and practicing as a lawyer,” federal officials said. Ice San Francisco arrested the 62-year-old, 62, on Sunday, officials said.

An Iranian-American group condemned the obvious crackdown in light of the war, saying the White House “weaponizes” immigration authorities in order to chase their political enemies.

“We are deeply concerned about the Department of Homeland Security’s response to racial profiling that undermines the civil liberties of individuals in Iran’s heritage in the United States and geopolitical tensions overseas,” said Ryan Costello, policy director for the American Council of Iran, based in Washington, D.C., to improve American relations to improve American relations. “That’s wrong, it’s not Americans. It’s threats and legal intelligence that need to promote this kind of enforcement action, not security theatres.”

It is fairly rare for Iranians living in the US to violate immigration authorities, according to data. Of the approximately 113,500 people arrested by immigration and customs enforcement authorities in 2024, 68 were from Iran. The 47 people arrested were subsequently criminally convicted. The rest were immigration violations, according to federal data.

Federal government data shows that the number of Iranians arrested by immigration customs recently reached 16% of the total number of Iranian citizens arrested in all 2024 fiscal year.

The CDC advisor presentation appears to cite non-existent studies to support claims about the risks of vaccine preservatives

0

A presentation to be shared at a vaccine advisor meeting with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week, argued that animal studies suggested that the use of the vaccine preservative thimerosal “may have long-term consequences for the brain.

However, there appears to be no research.

Lynn Redwood, former leader in Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccine group that lists US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as founder, is scheduled to give a presentation at the CDC’s Vaccination Practices Advisory Committee meeting on Thursday.

A slide posted online Tuesday called the 2008 neurotoxicology study by Berman RF, et al. “Low-level neonatal thimeromonal exposure: long-term brain outcomes.” The presentation argues that the results of studies in neonatal rats suggest long-term “neuroimmune effects” from vaccine preservatives.

The quote appears to refer to Dr. Robert F. Berman, professor emeritus at the University of California, Davis, whose research focuses on brain damage and neurodevelopmental disorders.

But “I don’t have a neurotoxicology publication by that title,” Berman told CNN. “As far as I know, no references to the slide set exist together with me, at least as a co-author.”

Berman published his paper It had a similar title in 2008, but it was in different journals and involved different animals. It also led to a dramatically different conclusion.

“My research was published in Toxicological Sciences and found no evidence of thimerosal exposure at the vaccine level in mouse behaviors that we thought were related to autism,” Berman said. He “had been bothered and offended” that his research appears to be cited like this on a slide in Redwood.

The Redwood presentation was removed from the CDC website on Tuesday and replaced by a version that does not include Berman’s quote.

The citation was first flagged by Dr. David Boulewor, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Minnesota. He told CNN:

Neither Redwood nor HHS responded immediately to CNN’s request for comment presentation.

The presentation was already controversial, as Thimerosal is the focus of supporters who argue that it can cause autism because it contains the form of mercury. Preservatives were taken from most vaccines as a precaution about 25 years ago, and multiple studies found no evidence of neurodevelopmental effects.

However, Redwood said last month in a video posted on the Children’s Health Defense website that he believes the pediatric vaccine thimerosal has led to his son’s autism.

This topic sparked concern among public health experts this week that it was a last-minute addition to the vaccine advisor agenda, which would expose claims about vaccine safety. Kennedy dismissed all 17 previous experts on the influential vaccine panel, claiming that they had a conflict of interest and was added after replacing them with eight new members a few days later.

These members raised concerns from the public health world and the entire political spectrum. Sen. Bill Cassidy chairs the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee and calls for the meeting to be postponed this week.

It is also not the first time that a report in Kennedy’s realm has been found to be flawed in citations. The first version of the Trump administration, released last month and focused on child health, also cited several nonexistent studies. A HHS spokesperson calls them “minor quotes and formatting errors.”

During a hearing before the House Energy and Commercial Health Subcommittee on Tuesday, Kennedy was questioned by Rep. Raul Lewis, a California Democrat and doctor, about Maha’s reporting error.

“Why did the report include quotes to sources that do not exist?” asked Lewis. “How does that happen under your leadership?”

Kennedy argued that “all of the basic claims in that report are accurate,” and that the misquoting was “corrected within 24 hours.”

Carney says Trump is no longer interested in annexing Canada

0



CNN

Canada doesn’t think it’s any longer interested in President Donald Trump turning it into a 51st state, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday.

Asked bystanders of the NATO conference in the Netherlands by CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, Carney replied, “No, he’s not.”

“He praises Canada,” Carney told Amanpool. “I think it’s fair to say that maybe (he) is craving Canada.”

This is not the first time an official has declared a concomitant term. On May 22, Canadian US ambassador Peter Hawkstra told CNN’s broadcast partner CBC, “Donald Trump isn’t talking.” (A few days later, Trump posted on social media that Canada should become the 51st state to benefit from the president’s proposed missile defense system.)

Kearney frequently declares the old, close partnership between Canada and the US as “too much.” He courted his European partners in the UK and France, and even began his term, working with Australia on a new radar system in the Canadian Arctic.

Still, Carney believed Trump met the defense spending benchmark, especially for NATO members, as Canada pushed Canada towards higher defense spending.

“The president is focused on changing a series of bilateral relations,” Carney told Amanpool. “We are at NATO, and he is focused on making sure that all members of Canada are included.

Trump is currently “potentially crucial” in the Middle East situation, Carney also told Amanpool. While wider peace in the region is the ultimate goal, the current priority should be to acquire the “basics.”

“He uses his influence and our power in other circumstances. We have just seen it in Iran. It creates the possibility of moving forward and has a moral obligation to move forward,” Carney added.

Canadian leaders also believed that Iran was a “proportional” response to the United States, which bombed three nuclear beings.

“The military action was also a diplomatic move by Iran. Clearly, we didn’t welcome hostility and reaction, but it was proportional, but it seemed exclusive and previewed,” Carney said.

See the list of closures in 5 locations

0

play

Five Harris Teeter stores will close three states as part of a larger list of Kroger-owned stores across the US.

The grocery store chain confirmed its closure on Tuesday, June 24th, saying it will come after “careful consideration and strategic market review.”

The company said that about 100-120 staff members work in each of the closed locations, and workers have the opportunity to move to other stores.

The company said stores will be closed by the end of the summer, with the latest ones closing on August 4th. The closure said Kroger, the parent company of Harris Teaser, will close 60 locations across the country over the next 18 months.

Here’s what you need to know.

Where is the Harris Teeter store closed?

Three Harris Teaser stores in Virginia, one in Maryland and one in North Carolina are expected to close this summer.

  • 5563 Western BLVD, Raleigh, NC, 27606- Closed by July 20th
  • 11845 Old Georgetown Rd. Rockville, Maryland, 20852- Closed by July 20th
  • 8200 Crestwood Heights, Dr. McLean, VA, 22102- Closed by July 20th
  • 950 S. George Mason, Dr. Arlington, VA, 22204- Closed by July 20th.
  • 3600 S. Glebe Rd. , Suite W100 Arlington, VA, 22202- Closed by August 4th

Kroger is set up to close other locations

Erin Rolfes, a spokesman for Kroger, who owns Harris Teeter, said USA Today would not release a full list of closures, but said several locations have been identified through media reports from several states, including Illinois, Kentucky and Texas.

Interim CEO Ron Sargent said during a conference call on Friday, June 20th that unclosed stores are spreading across the United States.

Kroger operated 2,731 stores at the beginning of the fiscal year. In other words, closures account for around 2% of all locations.

Click here for a complete list of store closures owned by Kroger.

Gabe Hauari and Jonathan Limehouse of USA Today contributed to this report.

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA Today. Contact him at fernando.cervantes @gannett.com and follow him at x @fern_cerv_.

Gabriel Jesus Salmiento: Venezuelan influencer shot gangs and police during Tiktoc livestream

0



CNN

Authorities say a Venezuelan influencer who criticised both gangs and corrupt policemen, who allegedly shot and killed a corrupt police officer on Monday.

Venezuela’s Ministry of Public Safety said in an Instagram statement that influencer Gabriel Jesus Salmiento has passed away in the city of Malacay.

Salmiento often criticised criminal groups, law enforcement corruption online, and law enforcement corruption online, adding that his death died shortly after reporting “a threat posed against him by suspected GEDOS (organized crime structured group in Spanish) and police officers.”

Malacai is the capital of Aragua and is the area that is named by the infamous Tren de Aragua Gang, but there is no known connection between Tiktalker’s death and criminal groups.

CNN contacted police in Aragua for comment.

The ministry also said it was assigned to the 69th Prosecutor’s Office for organized crime to “investigate, identify and prosecute” the person responsible for Sarmiento’s death.

In the recording of the live stream of Salmiento seen by CNN, a woman can be heard screaming offscreen, but the man asks why she is screaming.

“What happened, what happened?” The man screams in the recording, followed by a massive explosion of gunfire.

“They shot me!” the man cried out. The video ends with images of two unidentified armed men. After a few seconds, the live stream will stop and the video will end.

Salmiento’s death comes for just over a month after another Latin American influencer was killed during live streaming. Mexican beauty influencer Valeria Marquez was shot dead at a salon in Jalisco in May, sparking outrage over the high rates of murder in the area.

A few days before Marquez’s death, another woman – a mayoral candidate from Veracruz – was shot and killed during a live stream along with three others.

CNN is making an effort to contact Salmiento’s family and Venezuela Attorney General Tarek William Saab.

What does that mean for home buyers?

0

play

When it comes to housing finance reform, there are few, if any, more important, topics than Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s future. GSE, which supports these government-sponsored businesses, or nearly half of US mortgage loans, was a silent engine that promoted mortgage accessibility, affordability and market stability. With the current administration now privatizing these institutions, the conversation is no longer theoretical and it is impossible to ignore the impact on buyers, sellers and homeowners.

Founded by Congress, Fannie May (Federal National Mortgage Association) and Freddie Mac (Federal Mortgage Mortgage Corporation) were founded to promote liquidity and stability in the mortgage market. They buy mortgages from lenders, bundle them into securities, sell them to investors, and provide capital that allows lenders to issue more mortgages. This framework helps you set the standard on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage and supports affordable lending for millions of Americans.

During the financial crisis, both agencies were placed under federal reserves, with the government investing nearly $200 million in the form of preferred stocks to provide the necessary liquidity. Since then, the GSE has generated dividends to the Ministry of Finance far more than that amount, leading to public/private discussions. Some suggest that taxpayers saved the bailout, others suggest that they should continue to benefit from the activities of the GSE, while others believe that the debt should be private again, as they believe it is more than fully repaid. Although technically owned by shareholders, GSE remains tightly controlled by the government with implied guarantees. Shareholders, a hedge fund, believe their investments are undermined.

Now, the landscape is changing again as recent comments from President Trump and reports from Bloomberg, JP Morgan and others show that there is a new push for privatization. The proposed goal suggests that the administration is exploring several options to bring the GSE back to the open market. Potentially, the initial public offering (IPO) is to close the gap in capital funds needed while maintaining shelters.

Supporters argue that returning Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to private ownership will reduce government footprint in the housing market, promote innovation and allow GSEs to develop more flexible mortgage products. This change can also reduce taxpayer risk, free capital for other public priorities, and increase market confidence.

However, critics recognize the complexity of real-world impacts on home buyers. Without the implicit government support, investors could recognize greater risks in mortgage securities, which could result in higher costs being taken over by home buyers. As a result, interest rates can rise, put a heavy burden on borrowers, and push homeownership even more out of reach for many. Privacy can come with stricter lending standards, making securing a loan more difficult for those with limited modest income and credit history.

Nationwide, home buyers could face rising interest rates and tougher loan eligibility. Those looking for a refinance can find higher rates and fewer options. Popular loan products such as 30-year fixed-rate mortgages can be less common or expensive if they are no longer supported by GSES.

Recognizing these stocks, some within the housing industry advocates a balanced approach. Rather than fully privatized or ongoing guardians, hybrid models have been proposed. This maintains limited federal guarantees while ensuring greater autonomy in GSES. For example, the Mortgage Bankers Association helps maintain investors’ trust and protect market liquidity without putting the full weight of the mortgage system on the government’s shoulders.

The conversation surrounding Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s future is as complicated as it would be, and the journey to privatization, if done, gradually becomes. There are risks and benefits to privatizing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. No matter where you stand in this problem, attention is a word.

Budge Huskey is the CEO of Premier Sotheby’s International Realty.

RFK Jr. testifies before the House Health Committee

0

play

On June 24, the House of Representatives grilled Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for about three hours at the hearing and sparred with the Department of Health and Human Services Chief on a variety of topics.

Kennedy testified before the House Energy and Commercial Medical Subcommittee on the Department of Health’s 2026 budget. The House of Representatives called for answers on funding for key programs and his stance on vaccine surveillance, addiction recovery, emergency abortion, HIV prevention and dietary guidelines.

Additionally, Kennedy faced pointed questions about plans to integrate several agencies, including the Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services and the Office of the Institute for Health and Environmental Health Sciences.

Kennedy also garnered praise from House Republicans for defending the moves needed to attack the country’s chronic disease outbreak and the speed of federal health spending.

There are five important moments from Kennedy’s testimony.

Palone trades for Kennedy and Barb

Rep. Frank Palone Jr. of D-New Jersey cited concerns about Kennedy’s leadership during the opening months of his scientists as the country’s top health authorities.

“It’s this anti-science agenda that gets me the most,” Palone said.

Palone said most scientists and medical experts believe Kennedy’s views on vaccines are “dangerous and not supported by scientific evidence.”

“I really think people will die as a result of your actions and the Republican actions in Congress,” Palone said.

Palone added that despite Kennedy’s pledge to “radical transparency,” he has not answered his questions about cutting workforce and programs. Palone added that Kennedy refused to refuse to release the vaccine, including his decision to include an overhaul of the vaccine advisory board known as the Advisory Committee on Vaccination Practices (ACIP).

Kennedy said he fired an ACIP member “in conflict with the pharmaceutical industry.”

He later added that when he met Palone 15 years ago, the House members sympathized with those who suffered from vaccine injuries.

“You were a key member of Congress on that issue,” Kennedy said. “Since then, our customers have accepted $2 million from the pharmaceutical company with donations, more than the rest of the committee.”

Kennedy added: “And the enthusiasm for supporting the old ACIP committee appears to be completely caught up in and widespread in the drug dispute, but it appears to be the result of those contributions.”

Kennedy said he retracted his words after other committee members raised concerns about his comments.

AOC aims to provide insurance for RFK, UnitedHealthCare

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of D-New York asked Kennedy if he knew of reports that the Department of Justice is investigating UnitedHealthcare for Medicare Advantage payments.

“Don’t you know that the Trump Department of Justice is investigating America’s biggest insurance company?” Ocasio-Cortez said.

Kennedy is unaware of such investigations, and urged him to point out that the AOC will oversee the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

She then asked why his department approved a more favorable payment next year for Medicare plans managed by private insurers such as UnitedHealthcare.

Louisiana Democrat Carter raises questions about HIV funding cuts

Rep. Troy Carter, D-Louisiana, asked the Center about Kennedy and the reduction in disease control and prevention in HIV research.

Carter cited a report from the American Association of Medical Colleges, which found that research funded by HIV and AIDS national health facilities had been deeply reduced.

Carter said one study focusing on HIV and adolescents has stopped due to funding cuts. Carter added that funding will cut research into the HIV vaccine.

Kennedy retorted that HHS has 27 HIV-focused divisions, whose agents spend $7.5 billion a year.

When Carter said that HIV funding cuts would reduce momentum for life-saving research, Kennedy said, “Show me one life.”

“They are humiliated for suggesting that there is no lost life. People die every day,” replied Carter.

Kennedy: “We need to be smarter.”

Several Democrats criticized him for firing federal employees and cutting research funding, but Kennedy defended the move when necessary. Several House Republicans reflected the need to direct funding in ways that would improve American health.

He said, “We spend $4.5 trillion per year on healthcare — more than 2-3 times more comparable countries per person, but the US is “the most diseased developing country.”

He said the budget maintains funding for Medicare and Medicaid. He did not address the Medicaid cuts proposed in the tax cuts and spending bills of homes waiting for Senate votes, but said HHS’ budget cuts were aimed at bureaucracy.

He said that national health care spending would “will miffify our children with bankruptcy, slavery and disastrous health effects.”

“We won’t solve this problem by throwing more money into it,” Kennedy said.

Ohio State Rep. Ruri praises RFK for its focus on derailing trains

Rep. Michael Rulli of R-Ohio praised Kennedy for focusing on the 2023 train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio. The NIH will spend $10 million to fund a five-year study on the long-term health impacts of people living in nearby communities.

During the Biden administration, Ruli said health officials denied the possibility of long-term health effects from train derailment.

Kennedy said he visited East Palestine shortly after the crash and spoke to people who complained of breathing, stomach and eye problems.

“I promised to do everything I could to help them,” Kennedy said.

“We’ll fully disclose what we find and let the tip fall where they can,” Kennedy said.

The Internet responds to “oppressive” US heat waves

0

play

Everyone feels the heat.

The slow, record-breaking heat wave stretching from the Midwest to the East Coast of Midwest, enjoys summer, a time of leisure and fun. Fire warnings are mostly issued over the weekend and are effective in most parts of the country.

Relief for certain areas is imminent or already occurring, but most people, particularly those living in the Mid-Atlantic and East Ohio Valley, must compete with “sequential oppressive heat,” according to a June 23 forecast by the National Weather Service.

There’s little to do, but essentially I don’t wait to see the heat pass, but some people are forced to be unhappy about the unpleasant (and dangerous) weather. It has become a recent social media buzz due to the lack of better terminology as we are all trying to keep things cool on our own.

Here’s how some Americans feel about the heat:

When will the heat wave pass?

It all depends on where you live.

Relief will be seen in some areas, including Iowa, Wisconsin, northern Michigan, and other Great Lakes, northern New England, and most of the northeast, including Boston and New York City.

However, the worst heat is expected to last until Wednesday, June 25th or Thursday, June 26th in the Mid-Atlantic and Appalachian regions. As for Central Mississippi and Ohio Valley, it will be unpleasantly hot and sultry for the rest of the week.

The Internet responds to us heat waves

The heat (some) Americans become wild.

Many people go to social media to talk about the weather, as well as post weather-related content, especially photos and memes. Regular social media users, federal and state agencies, and even politicians, offer “hot” take in light of all the unpleasant weather.

This is what people all over the country are saying about the heat.

Contributions: Doyle Rice and Gabehauari, USA Today

The UK will purchase 12 nuclear-powered F-35A jets from the US and participate in the NATO nuclear mission

0


Nordwik, Netherlands
CNN

The UK plans to purchase 12 F-35A jets from the US that can carry nuclear weapons.

British Prime Minister Kiel Starmer will make an announcement during NATO summit on Wednesday. He calls on NATO members to do more to support the alliance.

“The UK’s commitment to the UK is unquestionable, just like the Alliance’s contribution to keeping the UK safe and secure,” says Stage, according to Downing Street.

“But we all have to step up for future generations to protect the Euro-Atlantic region.”

The announcement follows repeated criticisms by US President Donald Trump that NATO countries are not spending enough money on their defense.

The fifth generation fighter jet, built primarily by US manufacturer Lockheed Martin, is one of the most advanced fighters on the planet, but one of the most expensive fighters.

The decision to acquire an aircraft capable of carrying nuclear weapons also represents a major strengthening of the UK’s nuclear stance.

This means that, in addition to the UK’s existing seawater nuclear deterrent, the country will now participate in NATO’s dual-capacity aircraft nuclear mission.

“In an age of fundamental uncertainty, we can no longer make peace a norm,” says the star.

According to the UK government, the decision will support 20,000 jobs in the UK F35 programme and will earn 15% of the UK-based Jets’ global supply chain.

McDonald’s and Krispy Kreme is the part after the donut partnership

0

The original glass-enclosed donuts soon become a dessert option alongside Oreo McFleurley and Hot Fudge Sunday.

McDonald’s and Krispy Kreme announced the end of the partnership on Tuesday, June 24th.

Earlier this year, the fast food giant began offering three different types of Krispy Cream Treats at around 2,400 McDonald’s locations, including original glass-covered donuts, sprinkled doutsunuts and chocolate ice cream-filled donuts. Unfortunately, the company is unable to succeed and will soon be discontinued.

“The two companies partner very closely, each supporting execution, marketing and training, providing a great consumer experience,” Krispy Kreme CEO Josh Charlesworth said in a joint news release. “In the end, our efforts to arrange our costs to unit demand failed, making our partnership unsustainable for us.”

Krispy Kreme now bids farewell and prioritizes increasing the availability of donuts while McDonald’s focuses on building a success in the breakfast business.

When did Krispy Kreme and McDonald’s start their partnership?

Fast food enthusiasts noticed a short-lived corporate partnership in late 2023 as a staged test rollout of donuts began at 160 McDonald’s restaurants in Lexington and Louisville, Kentucky.

In October 2024, McDonald’s restaurant in the Chicago area began selling original glazed donuts and other fresh donuts. In the same month, Krispy Kreme locations began offering free donuts to customers if they showed McDonald’s paper or digital receipts dated October 10-14, 2024.

The two companies initially aimed to be available nationwide at participating restaurants by the end of 2026.

“By partnering with McDonald’s nationwide, fans and donut enthusiasts will provide daily access to fresh donuts and a joy for Krispy Kreme,” Charlesworth said in a March 2024 news release.

Testing at 160 McDonald’s restaurants in Lexington and Louisville “successfully succeeded” as “consumer excitement and demand exceeded expectations.”

Contributions: Gabe Hauari, USA Today

USA Today answers your questions

0


After President Donald Trump approved a military strike at three Iranian nuclear sites, USA Today is answering your questions about the conflict.

play

  • On June 13, Israel began attacking Iran and attacking nuclear facilities and other targets.
  • On June 21, the US began strikes against three nuclear sites using a large bunker buster. bomb
  • USA Today readers have asked a lot of questions about the attack. Here are some answers.

The US bombed three Iranian nuclear facilities on June 21, with negotiations not reaching a contract for Tehran to end its nuclear program.

USA Today readers have asked a lot of questions about the attack and what’s coming next.

Some answers are listed below. Check for updates when you’re covering your questions more.

Why is the US involved?

President Donald Trump repeatedly warned that Iran should never be allowed to build nuclear weapons. However, the White House recently said Iran is “close” to developing nuclear weapons and could do so within weeks.

The US stormed three Iranian nuclear facilities on June 21, using the military’s most powerful traditional weapon, the GBU-57 bunkerbuster, a 30,000-pound bomb that digs holes deep into the earth before it explodes.

The attack came after Israel began bombing Iran’s nuclear and military infrastructure on June 13th. The reserve Pentagon Intelligence Assessment concludes an air attack that has retreated for several months, according to the intelligence agency, U.S. government sources. The White House pushed back the ratings.

White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt called the rating “flat out wrong” in a statement posted to X.

– Michael Collins, Cybele Mayes-Osterman Tom Vanden Brook

Why is Congress not responsible for its actions?

As commander of the military chief, Trump claims he had the discretion to bomb Iran to prevent nuclear weapons from occurring. But lawmakers point out that the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war.

At least three resolutions are pending in Congress to curb Trump’s use of troops in Iran amidst the conflict between the legislative and administrative sectors that hold the key to US attacks on other countries.

However, Republicans are pretty much in their support of Trump, so none of the measures could pass as GOP holds a majority in both rooms.

– Defeat Janssen

What other countries support Iran?

Russia, China and North Korea are Iran’s biggest allies.

Russia warns that the US’s direct actions against Iranian soils amount to “a dangerous escalation.” Russian President Vladimir Putin met with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Arakich in Moscow on June 23, stating that the US attack was unjustified and that he called the aggression against Iran an unfounded attack. China and North Korea strongly condemned the US attack on Iran.

– Michael Collins And Natalie Neisa Aland

Will Iran close the Strait of Hormuz?

The Hormuz Strait is the main oil transport route and ferries around 20% of the world’s oil and gas flows.

The narrow channel has at one point narrowed down to just 21 miles, connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the wider Arabian Sea. The choke point of the waterway is sandwiched between the Iranian coastline on one side and the small Oman Peninsula on the other.

Iran has recently threatened to mine the channel to effectively block oil transport. Iran’s Congress approved the measure the day after the US airstrikes were hit by three nuclear facilities, supporting the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, making it a possible option for retaliation, but the decision to close the channel ultimately belongs to Iran’s highest national security council.

-Kathryn Palmer and Janet Loehrke

How will war affect the US economy and oil prices?

After Israel attacked Iran’s nuclear enrichment facility and the US continued to take on more harmful strikes with its nuclear program, economists worried that Iran could close the Strait of Hormuz, which handles about a quarter of global oil shipped to sea.

ING Chief International Economist James Knightly Such a scenario was worried about bringing oil prices to $120, driving gasoline to $5 per gallon, and adding 1.5 percent points to inflation. However, US oil prices fell 7% after Iran launched a limited retaliatory strike at a US military base in Qatar this week, further downturning after President Trump announced a ceasefire between Israel and Iran.

Israel accused Iran of violating the ceasefire, but Trump said it remains in effect. Capital Economics said the ceasefire is likely to prove vulnerable, but added that it appears that all sides have an incentive to spare key energy infrastructure. In that case, crude oil prices should continue to fall, the research company said.

– Paul Davidson

US Strikes set up Iran’s nuclear program every few months: Pentagon Report

0


Defense Secretary Pete Hegses denied the report, saying the US bomb “defeated Iran’s ability to build nuclear weapons.”

play

WASHINGTON – A U.S. government source on the intelligence report said the reserve Pentagon Intelligence Assessment discovered US strikes over three Iranian nuclear facilities that repeated Iran’s nuclear programmes by months.

According to a second US official, early evidence shows that the bombing did not reach the depth needed to destroy the facility buried deep underground.

The June 21 air strike by the US Air Force B-2 stealth bomber used the military’s most powerful traditional weapon, the GBU-57 bunkerbuster. The 30,000-pound bomb digs a hole deep inside the Earth before it explodes.

However, the initial assessment shows that it did not reach depth to completely destroy Iran’s nuclear capabilities, said another US official who is well-versed in intelligence but was not permitted to speak publicly.

A third US official confirmed the findings of the Defense Intelligence Agency report, first reported by CNN.

Some members of Congress have seen the DIA ratings.

Asked about the assessment, the Pentagon shared a statement from Defense Secretary Pete Hegses, who is rebutting the findings.

“Based on everything we saw and I’ve seen it all – our bombing campaign has wiped out Iran’s ability to make nuclear weapons,” Hegus said.

“Our massive bombs hit the right spot on each target and it worked perfectly,” Heggs said. “The effects of these bombs are buried under a mountain of Iranian tile rubs, so anyone who says the bombs were not devastating will only undermine the president and their successful mission.”

White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt called the rating “flat out wrong” in a statement posted to X.

“Everyone knows what happens when you completely drop 14 30,000 pound bombs on your target: a complete erase.”

At the White House address since the bomb was withdrawn on June 21, President Donald Trump argued that the strike “eliminates” three key nuclear facilities: Fordou, Natanz and Isfahan.

Hegus told reporters the next morning that “Iran’s nuclear ambitions have disappeared.”

Trump administration cancels classified Iranian briefing

Democrats said the White House on June 24 classified Iran’s House and Senate briefings and denounced the Trump administration for not keeping Congress in the loop.

The briefing included Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, General Dan Caine, Chairman of Co-State Chief of Staff, and other officials.

Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., said the senators need “real information” and that the attendance of cabinet members should not be maintained.

“Perhaps by chance Trump cancelled the Senate classification briefing this afternoon,” D-Conn said. Senator Chris Murphy said in X.

Senator Pat Ryan, a former combat veteran and West Point alumnus, accused Trump of canceling the briefing and canceling the Trump administration.

“Trump just canceled a briefing for a classified house on Iran’s strike with zero explanations,” Ryan said in a series of X’s posts.

What does Intelligence Reports show?

Democrats Tim Kane and Mark Kelly told USA Today they saw an information report classified by the Confidential Disparity Information Facility (SCIF) on June 24th.

They refused to discuss the details of the report, but Kelly said “we believe we can trust the intelligence we gain from the intelligence agency.”

The ratings of intelligence can change as “not always perfect,” Kelly added, but “they put a lot of time and effort into trying to provide us with unpleasant information.”

Kelly said that while the location of the bombing has been “deteriorated”, he pushed back Trump’s comments in a televised speech that the location of the bombing has been “completely and completely wiped out.”

“You’re going to say it isn’t,” Kelly said.

Kelly said the bunkerbuster bombs have never been used before and the Fordausite is “deeply buried.”

“There’s rocks, there’s dirt, there’s concrete,” he said. “It’s difficult to get something like that underground.”

Sen. R-Wisconsin, Sen. Ron Johnson told USA Today he hopes that the bombed location was not destroyed was “wrong” but he would not change his opinion on the mission if the intelligence report is correct.

“It will likely raise the question that further action is necessary to deny that ability,” Johnson said, adding that if the facility remains intact, he will support additional action.

R-Florida Sen. Rick Scott said he was in the White House on June 23 and spoke with Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

“They’re very comfortable destroying the Fordow and the other,” Scott said.

Victims of French Music Festival Syringe Attack felt “numbness” after a jab

0



CNN

It was about 1:30am after the crowd faded from the streets of Bordeaux.

“Someone smacked my left forearm. I began to feel paralysis in my muscles, like when I got the vaccine. About 30 minutes later, the injection mark appeared,” she recalled to CNN.

She said, “I don’t want to panic,” despite not knowing what she had been injected with or what she did.

Manon, 22, was one of almost 150 people in France who reported being stabbed with a syringe at a national street music festival over the weekend. According to the Ministry of Home Affairs, it remains unclear whether date rape drugs such as Rohypnol and GHB have been used in “needle spikes” attacks that appear to involve multiple perpetrators.

Feminist influencers had warned that women were called on social media to target syringes ahead of the festival, which attracted millions of people on the streets.

After spending 7.am from 4am in the emergency room on Sunday, Manon shared a video of his experience at Tiktok.

“I had never seen testimony from people who were injected, so it was important to raise awareness,” said Manon, who refused to give her last name for safety reasons.

“We were told to be careful on social media, but people want to know more. How it happens, the symptoms, how does it unfold, it made me feel more at ease to talk about it.

After she returned home from the hospital, Manon filed a police report. “Because if we’re too loose, if we say, ‘Oh, others will file a complaint,’ nothing will change.

Since Saturday, French police have detained 14 men between the ages of 19 and 44, including both French citizens and foreigners, police spokeswoman Agate Foucault told Radio France on Tuesday, but have not arrested them in connection with needle spikes.

“The police have not identified the perpetrator behind the injection, but the incident has been confirmed,” Justice Minister Gerald Derman told CNN’s affiliate BFMTV on Tuesday.

The minister said the authorities would also pursue those who called for the attack online.

“We are implementing a criminal policy to prosecute the responsible person on social media for these very unhealthy injection games targeting women,” Dharmanin said.

Abreth Soul, a feminist influencer who had warned on social media that men had planned such an attack before the festival, told CNN that the perpetrator “is not just drug women.”

“When people start saying there’s a needle attack, it spreads in the form of rumors. Some mention it in group chats, they just pick it up and it’s amplified,” she said.

Faced with three weeks waiting for her toxicology outcome, Manon says she “slept barely in the last few days”, but she refuses to be caught up in her experience.

“Fete de la Musik is meant to be a time of good atmosphere, music, dancing and having fun. Someone wanted to ruin the moment and kill that spirit.

Where to find “SquishPillow”

0

play

There’s no need to sleep with your squish marrow as you can find the squish pillow here.

Jazwares, the toy company behind the Squishmallows brand, is now available for purchase with the release of Squishpillow’s “Making Dreams Come” with the release of a new line of “Ultra-Cozy” pillows specifically designed for sleep.

According to Jazwares, the product combines “Squishmallows’ Proprietary Supersoft Fill with a dreamy, super soft pillowcase made from the brand’s signature velvet-like material.

“The company said to the company,” said Laura Zebersky, president and chief commercial officer of Jazwares, in a statement.

“The Squish Pillow is the ultimate blend of comfort, functionality and fis. Perfect for home or on the go. We are excited to launch this exciting new extension to the Schishmallows brand in time for a comfortable night back to school,” says Zebersky.

“At Jazwares, we’ve always listened to our fans and when we learned that many people already use Squishmallows as pillows, we knew that unlike the rest, we had to develop branded pillows and destroy the household goods category.”

Here are some things you need to know about squish pillows, including how and where you can get them.

How to get SquishPillows under the Schishmallows brand

Released on June 22nd, SquishPillows can be found at Target stores nationwide. Pillow covers are included with each purchase of pish pillows.

“Designed to provide personalized support while keeping things comfortable all night, the squish pillow features two different stiffness levels, standard ($29.99) and king size ($39.99, Target.com exclusive) options.

Jazwares has also released six Squishmallows-themed pillowcase styles (sold separately starting at $9.99), with additional styles coming out later this year, allowing consumers to “personalize their nap setup.”

For more information about Squishmallows or SquishPillows, please visit the company’s social media page or the official Schishmallow website.