Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is your twenty four to seven use update.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
The latest use this hour in just four minutes. The
White House is attacking a federal judge who's trying to
stop President Trump from deporting alleged violent illegal immigrant street gangs.
It centers around allegations the Trump administration defied his order
that blocked the deportation of Venezuelan gang members under the
(00:25):
Alien Enemies Act of seventeen ninety eight. Weekend storms are
responsible for the deaths of at least forty two people
in the South and Midwest. Many states woke up this
morning to damage left behind by wildfires, rained tornadoes, and
dust storms. Reports say the majority of deaths occurred in Missouri,
where at least twelve were killed. President Trump says the
(00:46):
files related to the assassination of former President John F.
Kennedy will be released tomorrow. Speaking while touring the Kennedy
Center today, Trump set around eighty thousand pages will be released.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
I've instructed my people better responsible.
Speaker 4 (01:02):
Lots of different people put together by Telsey Gabbert.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
The President said, a lot of Americans have been asking
for this for a long time. An American is being
questioned by Dominican Republic police over his reported connection to
a University of Pittsburgh student who disappeared. Sudishka Konenki has
been missing for nearly two weeks after she was last
seen near her hotel walking with Joshua Rebe of Iowa.
(01:29):
The US has carried out new air strikes against Toothy
rebels in Yemen. Correspondent Matt Bradley reports that the Iran
backed group had been attacking shipping in the Red Sea
until January, when Israel and Hamas began a temporary ceasefire
in Gaza.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
It was just last week that the Houthi said, after
the Israelis cut off aid into the Gaza Strip, that
they said they were going to be renewing their attacks
against international shipping. That's what sparked this response from the
Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Huthi rebels say the US air strikes that began over
the weekend have claimed fifty three lives and injured more
than one hundred people. I'm Brian Shook. It's almost time
for a pair of astronauts stuck on the International Space
Station to come home.
Speaker 4 (02:12):
After a launch on Friday. The replacement crew dock to
the space station this weekend.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
You cannot be great without the greatness of others, and
I tell you the greatness of the ground control teams
have really shined through in the last few days getting
us up here safely.
Speaker 4 (02:25):
Commander Anne McClain, two astronauts stuck on the station since April,
Butch Wilmore and Sonny Williams, will join two others who
arrived in September for a return trip to Earth aboard
a SpaceX Dragon capsule. The four will undock overnight tonight
and splash down off the Florida coast just before six
pm Eastern time, if the weather cooperates. I'm rory O'Neil.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Wholesale egg prices are coming down. The US Department of
Agriculture is reporting that the national average wholesale price of
a dozen eggs dropped two dollars and seventy cents last week,
landing at four five fifteen. That marks three weeks of
declining prices. According to the USDA, if you've received suspicious
(03:07):
text messages about supposed unpaid tolls, it's because cyber criminals
have registered more than ten thousand domains for the scam
Tammy Trichio has more.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
That's according to a new report from the Threat Intelligence
arm at the cybersecurity firm Pallo Alto Networks, which says
those domains were registered for various smishing scams. Smishing comes
from the words SMS and phishing. It refers to scams
at target victims through text messages that try to get
them to click a malicious link. The domains identified have
names that suggest they're trying to pose as toll services
(03:39):
and packaged delivery services in at least ten US states
and Ontario, Canada. I'm Tammy Triheo.
Speaker 2 (03:45):
Apple's next iPhone will reportedly be completely port free. Bloomberg
reports that means the newer slimmer iPhone seventeen Air will
be losing the USBC connector and relying solely on wireless charging,
as well as sinking data with the cloud. I'm Brian Shook.