
2 dead and at least 3 injured in Las Vegas gym shooting, police say
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A shooting inside a Las Vegas gym Friday afternoon left two people dead, including the suspect, and injured at least three others, police said. One person was killed at the Las Vegas Athletic Club on the city’s west side as gunfire erupted, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Undersheriff Andrew Walsh said. The suspect in the shooting was also confirmed dead at a local hospital, police said in a social media post. A heavy police presence was seen along North Rainbow Boulevard, a...
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- 2 dead and at least 3 injured in Las Vegas gym shooting, police say
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- At least 4 dead after tornado and severe storm batters St. Louis, mayor says
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Comey interviewed by the Secret Service over '86 47' social media post
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former FBI Director James Comey was interviewed by the Secret Service on Friday about a social media post that Republicans insisted was a call for violence against President Donald Trump. The interview was part of an ongoing Trump administration investigation and was expected to help authorities assess the purpose and intent of the post and whether Comey intended to communicate a threat to the president, which he has flatly denied. Any decision on whether charges should be...
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- Comey interviewed by the Secret Service over '86 47' social media post
- World Pride comes to Washington in the shadow of, and in defiance of, the Trump administration
- US claim of state secrets privilege in Kilmar Abrego Garcia case is 'inadequate,' judge says
- DHS asks for 20,000 National Guard troops for immigration roundups, Pentagon reviewing request
- Supreme Court rejects Trump bid to resume quick deportations of Venezuelans under 18th-century law
What the EPA's partial rollback of the 'forever chemical' drinking water rule means
On Wednesday, the Environmental Protection Agency announced plans to weaken limits on some harmful “forever chemicals” in drinking water roughly a year after the Biden administration finalized the first-ever national standards. The Biden administration said last year the rules could reduce PFAS exposure for millions of people. It was part of a broader push by officials then to address drinking water quality by writing rules to require the removal of toxic lead pipes and, after years of the...
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- What the EPA's partial rollback of the 'forever chemical' drinking water rule means
- Gene editing helped a desperately ill baby thrive. Scientists say it could someday treat millions
- EPA chief Zeldin faces bipartisan anger in Senate over funding freeze, grant cancellations
- How ancient reptile footprints are rewriting the history of when animals evolved to live on land
- Early human ancestors used their hands to both climb trees and make tools, new study shows