
NYC mayor says Trump agreed to immediately release Columbia student detained by ICE
NEW YORK (AP) — A Columbia University student was arrested Thursday by federal immigration agents who claimed to be searching for a “missing person” in order to gain access to a campus apartment, according to her attorneys and the school’s president. Hours after she was taken into custody, though, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said in a social media post that he had discussed the arrest during an unrelated meeting with President Donald Trump, who agreed to release the student "The...
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- NYC mayor says Trump agreed to immediately release Columbia student detained by ICE
- The IRS broke the law by disclosing confidential information to ICE 42,695 times, judge says
- Crowds of Chicago mourners pay respects to Jesse Jackson at start of cross-country memorial services
- Prosecutor claims that delayed charges against Abrego Garcia were 'extraordinary' but justified
- Los Angeles Board of Education to discuss school superintendent after FBI searched his home
The IRS broke the law by disclosing confidential information to ICE 42,695 times, judge says
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge said Thursday that the IRS broke the law by disclosing confidential taxpayer information “approximately 42,695 times" to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. U. S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly found that the IRS had erroneously shared the taxpayer information of thousands of people with the Department of Homeland Security as part of the agencies’ controversial agreement to share information on immigrants for the purpose of identifying and people...
Read MorePolitics
- The IRS broke the law by disclosing confidential information to ICE 42,695 times, judge says
- Prosecutor claims that delayed charges against Abrego Garcia were 'extraordinary' but justified
- US military would only use Anthropic's AI technology in legal ways, Pentagon says
- Family of UN human rights investigator sues Trump administration over sanctions for Israel criticism
- Judge rejects request to block Trump White House from building its $400 million ballroom project
More organs are being donated after the heart stops, not brain death. Policies are changing too
WASHINGTON (AP) — The vast majority of organ donations once came from people who were brain-dead. Now they're increasingly coming from people who died when their heart stopped beating, a major shift that can boost transplants but also raises public confusion, researchers reported Thursday. What’s called donation after circulatory death, or DCD, jumped dramatically in a short period: It accounted for 49% of all deceased donors in the U. S. last year, up from 2% in 2000. Technology has to to...
Read MoreScience News
- More organs are being donated after the heart stops, not brain death. Policies are changing too
- Judge orders changes to Columbia and Snake river dam operations to help 'disappearing' salmon
- ByHeart infant botulism outbreak ends with 48 babies sickened
- Bird flu outbreak in California elephant seals prompts officials to cancel popular tours
- NASA moves its Artemis II moon rocket off the launch pad for more repairs

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