Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is your twenty four to seven use update. The
latest use this hour in just four minutes. The San
Diego area is dealing with the aftermath of a five
point two earthquake. The USGS says it struck at ten
oh eight am local time northeast of San Diego in
the city of Julian. Authorities say there are reports of
(00:22):
minor damage, but there are no injuries. Elizabeth Cochrane with
the USGS says residents should stay on alert for the
time being.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Folks should just realize that there is some chance of
a larger earthquake occurring.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Several after shocks were reported. El Salvador's president is refusing
to return a mistakenly deported man to the US. NAI
bu Kelly told reporters he would not return a man
the Justice Department said it mistakenly deported to his country.
While sitting next to President Trump in the Oval Office today,
bu Kelly said, we're not very fond of releasing terrorists.
(00:56):
The DOJ has admitted the man from Maryland should not
have been sent to L Salvador. Stocks are closing higher
after a chopping session to start the week. On Wall Street,
tech stocks bounced as investors cheered President Trump's exemption of
smartphones and computers, along with other electronic devices, from reciprocal tariffs.
(01:17):
A former NCUBA Woman of the Year is among the
six people killed in a plane crash in New York
State Saturday.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
The NTSB said the crash investigation is in its early stages.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
It's important that the public have trust and the investigator process,
and that we've not only ruled in, but moved out
everything that could have been a contributing factors.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
Former MIT soccer player and twenty twenty two NCUBA Woman
of the Year Corona Groff died in the crash, along
with Groff's boyfriend, her father, mother, brother, and her brother's partner.
The plane carrying the victims took off from White Planes
and crashed near the Massachusetts border.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
Ainle Sa Taylor, one man is facing charges after an
early morning fire at the Pennsylvania governor's mansion yesterday. According
to the Pennsylvania State Police, fire fighters responded to the
Harrisburg residents of Governor Josh Shapiro at about two am.
I'm Brian Schuk. Harvard University is rejecting the Trump Administration's
proposed conditions for continued federal funding. The university announced Monday
(02:15):
it would not accept an agreement to keep billions in
federal funding in exchange for implementing changes proposed by the administration.
The university said it will not surrender its independence. A
man allegedly wielding a fourteen inch knife is dead after
being shot by NYPD officers in New York City. Natalie
(02:36):
Miglioroi has the details.
Speaker 3 (02:39):
Nypdchief of Department John Shell says numerous people in a
story of Queens reported a man acting erratically with a knife,
worried he was going to stab someone. Please responded to
thirtieth Street and thirty first Avenue, where Shell says the
sixty one year old man advanced towards them.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
The office is during a fifty six second dialogue. We're
asking the person metal stress, to drop the knife.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
He would not.
Speaker 3 (03:01):
Their attempts to chase the man more unsuccessful before the
man was shot and taken to a nearby hospital, where
he was pronounced dead. Shell says the man had at
least two previous mental health encounters with the NYPD.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
I Natalie Magliori real ID enforcement begins in just weeks.
Correspondent Maggie Vespa.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Has more the federal government still stigging to that long
delayed May seventh deadline requiring travelers using a driver's license
to board domestic flights to have a real ID.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
But travelers who don't have a real ID, compliant driver's
license or state issued ID will still be able to
fly using other documents, including a passport or certified birth certificate,
and more travel changes may be on the way. The
Times of London reports that international officials are looking to
roll out a plan similar to a TSA pilot program
(03:53):
that would allow travelers to upload passport information to their
phones and use a face scan to check again, eliminating
the need for paper boarding passes. I'm Brian Shuck.