• Marine from Riverside identified as one of two killed in vehicle rollover during deployment to border

    Marine from Riverside identified as one of two killed in vehicle rollover during deployment to border
    A 22-year-old from Riverside and a 28-year-old from Fresno were identified Thursday, April 17, as the two Marines killed earlier this week when their vehicle rolled over on a road in New Mexico during a convoy movement to El Paso, Texas.
    Lance Cpl. Albert A. Aguilera, of Riverside, and Lance Cpl. Marcelino M. Gamino of Fresno, both combat engineers, died in the morning crash on Tuesday, April 15. They were among Camp Pendleton Marines deployed as part of the Joint Task Force-Southern Border, the
  • Settlement abruptly ends Tyler Skaggs wrongful-death trial against Angels, halts jury deliberations

    Settlement abruptly ends Tyler Skaggs wrongful-death trial against Angels, halts jury deliberations
    A tentative settlement was announced in the Tyler Skaggs wrongful-death trial against the Los Angeles Angels on Friday morning, Dec. 19 — abruptly ending jury deliberations in the civil case that has grabbed national headlines.
    The details of the settlement have not been divulged.
    But jurors, based on the notes they had sent the judge during several days of deliberations, appeared to indicate they had been strongly considering potentially costly financial penalties against the ball cl
  • Pedestrian killed after being hit by 2 vehicles in Santa Ana; 1 driver doesn’t stop

    Pedestrian killed after being hit by 2 vehicles in Santa Ana; 1 driver doesn’t stop
    A pedestrian who “walked into traffic” died after being struck by two vehicles on Friday in Santa Ana, police said, and one of the drivers failed to stop.
    The crash occurred at 5:34 a.m on Main Street between Dyer road and Alton Avenue, Santa Ana Police Department Officer Natalie Garcia said.
    The woman “walked into traffic,” Garcia said. Her name and age was not immediately available. She was pronounced dead at the scene.
    The driver whose vehicle initially struck the pede
  • Impatience, frustration with attorneys push some Eaton fire survivors to SCE compensation program

    Impatience, frustration with attorneys push some Eaton fire survivors to SCE compensation program
    Days after the Eaton fire destroyed the home she rented in Altadena, Liz Huston hired an attorney — a decision she now regrets.
    Frustrated by the attorney’s alleged lack of service, Huston fired the lawyer, asked to be dropped from the lawsuit against Southern California Edison and submitted a claim on her own to SCE’s wildfire compensation program.
    The attorney responded by slapping a lien for services on whatever she gets from SCE, Huston said.
    “I feel really screwed in
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  • Supreme Court sides with immigration judges in speech case for now, rebuffing Trump administration

    Supreme Court sides with immigration judges in speech case for now, rebuffing Trump administration
    By LINDSAY WHITEHURST, Associated Press
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court sided with immigration judges on Friday, rebuffing the Trump administration for now in a case with possible implications for federal workers as the justices weigh expanding presidential firing power.
    The decision is a technical step in a long-running case, but it touches on the effects of a series of high-profile firings under President Donald Trump. The justices let stand a ruling that raised q
  • Rubio fields questions on Russia-Ukraine, Gaza and Venezuela at wide-ranging news conference

    Rubio fields questions on Russia-Ukraine, Gaza and Venezuela at wide-ranging news conference
    By MATTHEW LEE and DAVID KLEPPER
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State Marco Rubio weighed in on Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Hamas peace efforts and defended the Trump administration’s increasing military pressure on Venezuela during a rare, end-of-year news conference Friday.
    In a freewheeling meeting with reporters running more than two hours, Rubio also defended President Donald Trump’s radical overhaul in foreign assistance and detailed the administration’s work to reach
  • Elizabeth McCracken recalls being first to read Ann Patchett’s ‘Bel Canto’

    Elizabeth McCracken recalls being first to read Ann Patchett’s ‘Bel Canto’
    Elizabeth McCracken is the author of eight books, including the National Book Award finalist, “The Giant’s House.” She’s been on the faculty at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and holds the James A. Michener Chair in Fiction at the University of Texas at Austin. Here, she talks about her new book, “A Long Game,” and her reading life.
    Q. Your new book, “A Long Game: Notes on Writing Fiction,” is a joy. I grabbed it as I took my dog to the vet, 
  • In-House Opinions: Local representatives on lowering healthcare costs

    In-House Opinions: Local representatives on lowering healthcare costs
    Health care and how to pay for it has been one of the hottest topics in American politics — and around American dinner tables — seemingly since the world was young.
    Certainly since the Affordable Care Act was argued over and then passed into law and signed by President Barack Obama on March 23, 2010.
    Obamacare aimed to expand health insurance coverage to more Americans and to lower costs. (One of those happened; the other didn’t.) During the COVID-19 pandemic, government subsid
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  • Paris court rejects bid to suspend Shein platform in France

    Paris court rejects bid to suspend Shein platform in France
    PARIS (AP) — A Paris court on Friday rejected a government request to suspend Chinese fast-fashion platform Shein in France after authorities found illegal weapons and child-like sex dolls for sale on the fast-fashion giant’s website.
    Shein welcomed the decision, saying it remains committed to strengthening its control processes in cooperation with French authorities.
    “Our priority remains protecting French consumers and ensuring compliance with local laws and regulations,&rdqu
  • States faces a choice on whether to embrace Trump’s tax cuts on tips, overtime and more

    States faces a choice on whether to embrace Trump’s tax cuts on tips, overtime and more
    By DAVID A. LIEB
    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — To tax tips or not? That is a question that will confront lawmakers in states across the U.S. as they convene for work next year.
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  • Mystery as YouTube creator’s finance livestream appears on White House website

    Mystery as YouTube creator’s finance livestream appears on White House website
    By MICHELLE L. PRICE
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The livestream of a YouTube content creator talking about investments mysteriously appeared to take over a White House website, raising questions about whether the site was hacked.
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  • Young conservative women find a home in Turning Point with Charlie Kirk’s widow at the helm

    Young conservative women find a home in Turning Point with Charlie Kirk’s widow at the helm
    By SEJAL GOVINDARAO
    PHOENIX (AP) — Camdyn Glover used to be a quiet conservative. She worried what her teachers would think or if she would lose friends over her convictions. But she said something changed when Charlie Kirk was assassinated in September, and she started crying in her classroom at Indiana University while other students cheered and clapped.
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  • Own vs. rent: Buying is no longer a California financial slam dunk

    Own vs. rent: Buying is no longer a California financial slam dunk
    By Ben Christopher | CalMatters
    It’s the benchmark of success, a milestone of responsible adulthood, a time-tested way to amass wealth for you and your progeny. Homeownership, we’re told again and again, is a status that every right-thinking person should aspire to — the white-picket-fence-fronted embodiment of the American Dream.
    But what if it’s also a little overrated?
    For generations it has been taken as a near article of faith across the country that ownership is bo
  • Federal judge weighs Trump’s claim he is immune from civil litigation over Capitol attack

    Federal judge weighs Trump’s claim he is immune from civil litigation over Capitol attack
    By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorneys for President Donald Trump urged a federal judge on Friday to rule that Trump is entitled to presidential immunity from civil claims that he instigated a mob’s attack on the U.S. Capitol to stop Congress from certifying the results of the 2020 election.
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  • Army sergeant to appear before a military judge on charges that he shot 5 people at Georgia base

    Army sergeant to appear before a military judge on charges that he shot 5 people at Georgia base
    By RUSS BYNUM
    FORT STEWART, Ga. (AP) — An Army sergeant charged with attempted murder in the shootings of five people at a Georgia base last summer faces arraignment Friday before a military judge.
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  • Army sergeant pleads not guilty to charges that he shot 5 people at a Georgia base

    Army sergeant pleads not guilty to charges that he shot 5 people at a Georgia base
    By RUSS BYNUM
    FORT STEWART, Ga. (AP) — An Army sergeant appearing before a military judge Friday pleaded not guilty in the shootings of five people, including his romantic partner, at a Georgia base where he faces a trial by court-martial in June.
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  • Wisconsin Republicans demand Judge Dugan resign or face impeachment after felony conviction

    Wisconsin Republicans demand Judge Dugan resign or face impeachment after felony conviction
    By TODD RICHMOND and SCOTT BAUER
    MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Republicans threatened Friday to impeach embattled judge Hannah Dugan if she doesn’t resign immediately after she was convicted of obstruction for helping an immigrant evade federal officers, saying her time serving the people of the state is over.
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  • Artist makes stickers to cover Trump’s face on National Parks passes — and the orders are flying in

    Artist makes stickers to cover Trump’s face on National Parks passes — and the orders are flying in
    It took less than a week for Colorado artist Jenny McCarty’s new project to evolve from good-hearted “micro-activism” to a national phenomenon that’s tapped widespread anger with recent changes to the National Parks Service.
    “With the design that came out for the 2026 National Parks passes, they took away people’s ability to vote on the photographs they love most,” said McCarty, a Boulder, Colorado, water-resource manager who’s been painting images
  • ‘6-7,’ Dubai chocolate, Labubu: You took 2025, now scat!

    ‘6-7,’ Dubai chocolate, Labubu: You took 2025, now scat!
    By LEANNE ITALIE
    NEW YORK (AP) — With Labubus hanging from our bags, Dubai chocolate in our bellies and “6-7” ringing in our ears, it’s almost time to bid farewell to a few things that went hard in 2025.
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  • Military lawyer swiftly fired from immigration bench after defying Trump deportation push

    Military lawyer swiftly fired from immigration bench after defying Trump deportation push
    By JOSHUA GOODMAN
    MIAMI (AP) — A U.S. Army Reserve lawyer detailed as a federal immigration judge has been fired barely a month into the job after granting asylum at a high rate out of step with the Trump administration’s mass deportation goals, The Associated Press has learned.
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  • Warm weather and low snowpack bedevil Western ski resorts

    Warm weather and low snowpack bedevil Western ski resorts
    By MEAD GRUVER and BRITTANY PETERSON
    EDWARDS, Colo. (AP) — Ski resorts are struggling to open runs, walk-through ice palaces can’t be built, and the owner of a horse stable hopes that her customers will be satisfied with riding wagons instead of sleighs under majestic Rocky Mountain peaks. It’s just been too warm in the West with not enough snow.
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  • Alexander: It’s December … and a lot of people miss baseball

    Alexander: It’s December … and a lot of people miss baseball
    The world according to Jim:
    This may be a hint of what’s really at stake as baseball’s owners and its Players Association prepare to battle over a new collective bargaining agreement.
    Remember the immediate aftermath of the classic Dodgers-Toronto Blue Jays World Series last month? Large numbers of people posting social media messages about baseball, and about that Series, many of which seemed to be people who either had rekindled their interest in the sport or had been drawn in by t
  • Man suspected in Brown University shooting and MIT professor’s killing is found dead, officials say

    Man suspected in Brown University shooting and MIT professor’s killing is found dead, officials say
    By KIMBERLEE KRUESI, ALANNA DURKIN RICHER, ERIC TUCKER and HANNAH SCHOENBAUM
    A frantic search for the suspect in last weekend’s mass shooting at Brown University ended at a New Hampshire storage facility where authorities discovered the man dead inside and then revealed he also was suspected of killing a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor.
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  • Stocks rise on Wall Street and pull closer to weekly gains as AI stocks climb

    Stocks rise on Wall Street and pull closer to weekly gains as AI stocks climb
    By DAMIAN J. TROISE
    NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks rose in morning trading on Wall Street Friday and further trimmed losses from earlier in the week for several major indexes.
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    The S&P 500 jumped
  • Ford recalls more than 270,000 electric and hybrid vehicles due to roll-away risk

    Ford recalls more than 270,000 electric and hybrid vehicles due to roll-away risk
    Ford is recalling more than 270,000 electric and hybrid vehicles in the U.S. because of a parking function problem that could lead to them rolling away.
    The Detroit automaker said that the recall includes certain 2022-2026 F-150 Lightning BEV, 2024-2026 Mustang Mach-E, and 2025-2026 Maverick vehicles. At issue is the integrated park module, which may fail to lock into the park position when the driver shifts into park.
    Ford said that it will implement a park module software update for free.
    Vehi
  • 4 months in, activists say Trump’s operation in Washington targets immigrants

    4 months in, activists say Trump’s operation in Washington targets immigrants
    By GARY FIELDS and ALANNA DURKIN RICHER
    WASHINGTON (AP) — When President Donald Trump launched a law enforcement operation in Washington, D.C., four months ago, he billed it as a mission to fight rampant crime.
    But activists and local leaders say that description belies what has emerged as a simultaneous crackdown on immigrants, who have grown increasingly concerned for their status and safety in the city.
    One-third of all arrests made during the operation were immigration-related, accordi
  • No. 4 UCLA women host Long Beach State striving for more

    LOS ANGELES — While Sienna Betts and Lauren Betts playing on the court together may have been the focus of Tuesday evening, coach Cori Close turned to another aspect of her UCLA women’s basketball squad.
    Postgame, Close brought up assistant coach Tasha Brown speaking to the Bruins, attempting to play to what the UCLA head coach called championship standards just over a month into the season.
    “March is happening now,” Close said Brown remarked. “Do not deceive yourse
  • $2.5 billion Disneyland Paris makeover starts with new Frozen land

    $2.5 billion Disneyland Paris makeover starts with new Frozen land
    Disneyland Paris will once again try to get its second park right after decades of misfires with a $2.5 billion makeover that will add Frozen and Lion King lands, a new entry promenade and an aquatic drone spectacular around a central lake.
    The World of Frozen themed land will debut on March 29 when the Disneyland Paris theme park resort in France officially rechristens the Walt Disney Studios Park as Disney Adventure World.
    The Adventure Way entry promenade, Adventure Bay central lake, “C
  • November US homes sales rose from the previous month, but down from 2024 as prices climb

    November US homes sales rose from the previous month, but down from 2024 as prices climb
    By ALEX VEIGA, AP Business Writer
    Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes rose in November from the previous month, but slowed compared to a year earlier for the first time since May despite average long-term mortgage rates holding near their low point for the year.
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  • Spread of famine in Gaza Strip averted but Palestinians there still face starvation, experts say

    Spread of famine in Gaza Strip averted but Palestinians there still face starvation, experts say
    By SAM MEDNICK
    TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — The spread of famine has been averted in the Gaza Strip, but the situation remains critical with the entire Palestinian territory still facing starvation, the world’s leading authority on food crises said Friday.
    The new report by The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, comes months after the group said famine was occurring in Gaza City and likely to spread across the territory without a ceasefire and an end to humanitarian ai

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