
CDC shooter died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Georgia investigators say
ATLANTA (AP) — The man who fired more than 180 shots with a long gun at the headquarters of the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention broke into a locked safe to get his father's weapons and wanted to send a message against COVID-19 vaccines, authorities said Tuesday. Documents found in a search of the suspect’s home “expressed the shooter’s discontent with the COVID-19 vaccinations,” Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Chris Hosey said. White had written about make a...
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- CDC shooter died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, Georgia investigators say
- Uvalde County leaders release video, records showing response to school shooting that left 21 dead
- Video shows steel workers scrambling into wreckage left by explosion that killed 2 in Pennsylvania
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth belongs to an archconservative church network. Here's what to know
- Man admits trying to smuggle 850 protected turtles valued at $1.4 million to Hong Kong
Trump's Washington, DC, takeover begins as National Guard troops arrive
WASHINGTON (AP) — Some of the 800 National Guard members deployed by President Donald Trump began arriving in the nation's capital on Tuesday, ramping up after the White House ordered federal forces to take over the city's police department and reduce crime in what the president called — without substantiation — a lawless city. The influx came the morning after Trump announced he would be activating the guard members and taking over the department. He cited a crime emergency — but to a...
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- Trump's Washington, DC, takeover begins as National Guard troops arrive
- Trump's rhetoric on DC echoes a history of racist narratives about urban crime
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth belongs to an archconservative church network. Here's what to know
- US designates Baloch separatists as a terror group over role in attacks in Pakistan
- US and China extend trade truce another 90 days, easing tension between world's largest economies
Scientists search for DNA of an endangered salamander in Mexico Citys canals
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Sixty years ago, residents of a canal-crossed borough in Mexico City could pluck axolotls — the large salamander reminiscent of a tiny dragon — out of the water with their hands because they were so plentiful. Now it’s almost impossible to find them in the wild. That's why scientists from Mexico’s National Autonomous University are filtering Xochimilco’s murky waters for traces of the endangered creature’s DNA. “We all shed DNA along our path across the world...
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- Scientists search for DNA of an endangered salamander in Mexico Citys canals
- Venus and Jupiter appear close in the sky as summer's best meteor shower peaks soon
- Artist drowns sculpture in plastic waste in front of the UN during plastic pollution treaty talks
- Feel sticky this summer? That's because it's been record muggy East of the Rockies
- Apollo 13 moon mission leader James Lovell dies at 97