Viewing March 9, 2025, 13 found
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A small plane crashed into a residential area in Pennsylvania, but all five people on board survived and the National Transportation Safety Board has opened an investigation.
A Florida teen, Miranda Corsette, was allegedly kidnapped, killed, and dismembered after being lured through a social media app, police said.

Governor Kathy Hochul imposed new fire restrictions in Long Island after a brush fire near Westhampton burned hundreds of acres and was mostly contained.
Kristi Noem said she will use the broad powers of her role as Homeland Security secretary to carry out President Trump’s immigration and border agenda.

Selma marked the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday with memorials, calls to protect voting rights, and warnings that hard-won civil rights gains could be rolled back.

Inglewood police are investigating a CarMax crash in California as an intentional act after a customer drove into the store and injured at least eight people.

Panama released dozens of U.S.-deported migrants from a remote camp after human rights criticism, but gave them only 30 days to leave the country.
The article follows efforts to recover Nazi-looted art, as museums and governments reconsider old sales and returns tied to Jewish families and wartime persecution.

Andrew Tate sat cageside at UFC 313 in Las Vegas while he and his brother Tristan face human trafficking and other criminal charges.

Peter Mui’s Fixit Clinic is part of a growing right-to-repair movement that is winning more state laws and making it easier for people to fix their own products.

Russian strikes on Ukraine killed more than 20 people as President Donald Trump’s pause on U.S. intelligence support left Kyiv more vulnerable, while President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk warned the attacks showed the cost of appeasement.
A Las Vegas public official, Robert Telles, was accused of bullying workers and later convicted and sentenced for the murder of reporter Jeff German, who had exposed the workplace conflict.
The Department of Homeland Security is using polygraph tests on employees to find who may be leaking information about immigration raids, as Secretary Kristi Noem says the agency wants to stop leaks and hold people accountable.
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