• In Taylor case, limits of law overcome calls for justice

    In Taylor case, limits of law overcome calls for justice
    The outcome in the case of Breonna Taylor demonstrates the vast disconnect between the public’s perception of what justice should look like and the limits of the law when police use deadly force. Activists, celebrities and others have been calling for months for the officers who shot at Taylor to be charged with murder. But in the end none of the officers were charged with Taylor’s killing, although one was indicted for wildly shooting into neighboring apartments. The long-awaited de
  • Appeal court denies review of ruling on transgender bathroom ban

    Appeal court denies review of ruling on transgender bathroom ban
    RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A federal appeals court has denied a request for a full-court review of a ruling that a Virginia school board’s transgender bathroom ban is unconstitutional.The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond on Wednesday rejected a request from the Gloucester County School Board for a rehearing to review a ruling that the board’s policy discriminated against transgender student Gavin Grimm, who was barred from using the boys bathrooms at Gloucester High Scho
  • Oregon misstated evacuation figures in chaos of wildfires

    Oregon misstated evacuation figures in chaos of wildfires
    SALEM, Ore. (AP) — As wildfires raged across Oregon, state officials sent out a statement saying 500,000 people had been evacuated to escape encroaching flames. But the figure was wrong – and by the next day the state had issued a clarification. The half-million figure initially cited on Sept. 10 represented the number of people under some level of evacuation notice, not the number of people who had actually fled their homes.  In its news release updating the figures. the state
  • eBay workers plead guilty to sending live spiders, cockroaches to couple

    eBay workers plead guilty to sending live spiders, cockroaches to couple
    BOSTON (AP) — Federal prosecutors say four former eBay employees have agreed to plead guilty to their roles in sending live spiders and cockroaches in an effort to intimidate a Massachusetts couple who ran an online newsletter critical of the auction site.The agreements to plead guilty Oct. 8 were announced Wednesday by the U.S. attorney's office in Massachusetts. Court records show the four expected to plead guilty are Brian Gilbert, Stephanie Popp, Stephanie Stockwell and Veronica Zea.Se
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  • Tucson Humanities Festival announces 2020 schedule

    Tucson Humanities Festival announces 2020 schedule
    The Tucson Humanities Festival, facilitated by the University of Arizona College of Humanities, will focus on justice and morality this year, with a wide range of events throughout October. Unsurprisingly, all of the events are virtual but are hosted on a variety of platforms and websites.…
  • Stocks close sharply lower as tech sector takes another hit

    Stocks close sharply lower as tech sector takes another hit
    U.S. stocks closed sharply lower as losses for technology companies dragged down the major indexes. Apple lost 4.2% and Amazon sank 4.1%. Wall Street is going through a tumultuous month, with the S&P 500 now down 7.5%. The benchmark index dropped more than 2% Wednesday in the latest erratic trading dominated by several shifts in momentum recently. The losses wiped out the market’s gains from the day before. The Dow and the Nasdaq also fell. Nike jumped to the biggest gain in the S&
  • Governor, secretary of state spar over election plans

    Governor, secretary of state spar over election plans
    PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey and Secretary of State Katie Hobbs are sparring over an effort by Hobbs to introduce more options for people to register or vote in certain limited circumstances. Ducey and some county election officials say the changes Hobbs seeks are illegal. Hobbs says the procedures are new but legal, and they’re necessary to ensure voters aren’t disenfranchised during the pandemic. Hobbs has told county recorders to help voters who are in the hospital
  • Trump works to win over Catholic voters on abortion issue

    Trump works to win over Catholic voters on abortion issue
    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump says he’ll be signing an executive order that would require health care providers to provide medical care to all babies born alive as he makes an election-year push to energize voters opposed to abortion. The White House did not release further details about the order, but Trump’s announcement follows numerous attempts by GOP lawmakers in Washington and in state capitals around the country to pass legislation that threatens prison for do
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  • VIDEO: Louisville officer indicted in Breonna Taylor case, AG explains charge

    VIDEO: Louisville officer indicted in Breonna Taylor case, AG explains charge
    UnmutePlayRemaining Ad TimeAd - 00:00
    A Grand Jury indicted one Louisville police officer on criminal charges after the killing of Breonna Taylor.
    Officer Brett Hankison now faces three charges of first-degree wanton endangerment. The charges are not related directly to Taylor’s death.
    According to Kentucky law, “A person is guilty of wanton endangerment in the first degree when, under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life, he wantonly engages in c
  • Celebs, long vocal about Breonna Taylor case, decry decision

    Celebs, long vocal about Breonna Taylor case, decry decision
    NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — For months, actors, sports stars, musicians and other celebrities have been using their platforms to call for justice in the police shooting death of Breonna Taylor. After a grand jury Wednesday indicted one of the Kentucky police officers on criminal charges, but not for her death, celebrities reacted to the news mostly negatively. Actor Kerry Washington urged people to vote, while actor and recording artist Common used quotes from James Baldwin to express his feel
  • US appeals court in Denver eyes American Samoa citizenship

    US appeals court in Denver eyes American Samoa citizenship
    DENVER (AP) — A U.S. appeals court in Denver is weighing whether residents of American Samoa should automatically be granted citizenship. Three judges from the 10th Circuit Court of Appeal heard arguments on Wednesday challenging a Utah judge’s ruling that people born in the U.S. territory are citizens. Much of the online hearing focused on whether people who live in territories controlled by the United States automatically become citizens even if they do not want to be under the 14t
  • Appeals court rejects rehearing in transgender bathroom case

    Appeals court rejects rehearing in transgender bathroom case
    RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A federal appeals court has denied a request for a full-court review of a ruling that a Virginia school board’s transgender bathroom ban is unconstitutional. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond on Wednesday rejected a request from the Gloucester County School Board for a rehearing to review a ruling that the board’s policy discriminated against transgender student Gavin Grimm, who was barred from using the boys bathrooms at Gloucester High Sch
  • What the Photos of Wildfires and Smoke Don’t Show You

    What the Photos of Wildfires and Smoke Don’t Show You
    The West will need “good fire” — controlled, managed fire that balances the ecosystem — to stave off deadly, out-of-control fire.…
  • Police order Breonna Taylor protesters to disperse

    Police order Breonna Taylor protesters to disperse
    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Protesters in downtown Louisville have been ordered by police to disperse hours after officials announced a grand jury’s decision to not indict police officers on criminal charges directly related to Breonna Taylor’s death. Police on Wednesday afternoon declared the gathering to be “unlawful” and threatened to use chemical agents and make arrests if people did not disperse. Curfew in the Kentucky city is set for 9 p.m.The post Police order Bre
  • Missouri governor, opponent of mandatory masks, has COVID-19

    Missouri governor, opponent of mandatory masks, has COVID-19
    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, a Republican who has steadfastly refused to require residents to wear masks, tested positive for the coronavirus. His office confirmed the positive test Wednesday. Parson was tested after his wife, Teresa, tested positive earlier Wednesday. Teresa Parson had experienced mild symptoms, including a cough and nasal congestion. Gov. Parson postponed several events through the remainder of the week. Parson is 65. He has repeatedly urged resi
  • Restrictions may be loosened even further for John Hinckley

    Restrictions may be loosened even further for John Hinckley
    The man who tried to assassinate President Ronald Reagan may soon get the most freedom he’s had since since the 1981 shooting outside a Washington hotel. A lawyer for John Hinckley Jr. is discussing a possible agreement with U.S. attorneys that would substantially reduce conditions imposed on him after his release from a mental hospital in 2016. That’s according to discussions at a federal court hearing Wednesday. Hinckley has been living full time with with his mother and brother in
  • Police declare unlawful assembly before Louisville curfew, say chemical agents may be used if protesters don’t disperse

    Police declare unlawful assembly before Louisville curfew, say chemical agents may be used if protesters don’t disperse
    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Police declare unlawful assembly before Louisville curfew, say chemical agents may be used if protesters don’t disperse.The post Police declare unlawful assembly before Louisville curfew, say chemical agents may be used if protesters don’t disperse appeared first on KVOA.
  • Too much candy: Man dies from eating bags of black licorice

    Too much candy: Man dies from eating bags of black licorice
    Doctors say a Massachusetts construction worker’s love of black licorice wound up costing him his life. Eating a bag and a half every day for a few weeks threw his nutrients out of whack and caused the 54-year-old man’s heart to stop, according to a report Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine. The problem is a substance found in black licorice and in many other foods and dietary supplements containing licorice root extract. Eating as little as 2 ounces of black licorice a
  • eBay workers who sent spiders to couple to plead guilty

    eBay workers who sent spiders to couple to plead guilty
    BOSTON (AP) — Federal prosecutors say four former eBay employees have agreed to plead guilty to their roles in sending live spiders and cockroaches in an effort to intimidate a Massachusetts couple who ran an online newsletter critical of the auction site. The agreements to plead guilty Oct. 8 were announced Wednesday by the U.S. attorney’s office in Massachusetts. Court records show the four expected to plead guilty are Brian Gilbert, Stephanie Popp, Stephanie Stockwell and Veronica
  • Missouri Republican Gov. Mike Parson, opponent of mandatory masks, tests positive for COVID-19

    Missouri Republican Gov. Mike Parson, opponent of mandatory masks, tests positive for COVID-19
    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Republican Gov. Mike Parson, opponent of mandatory masks, tests positive for COVID-19.The post Missouri Republican Gov. Mike Parson, opponent of mandatory masks, tests positive for COVID-19 appeared first on KVOA.
  • French defense chief misled nation on troops’ virus safety

    French defense chief misled nation on troops’ virus safety
    PARIS (AP) — France’s defense minister has admitted to misleading the nation about virus protections for air force personnel who evacuated French citizens from the hard-hit Chinese city of Wuhan in January. The military personnel have been suspected of links to France’s first confirmed COVID-19 cluster. The revelation by Defense Minister Florence Parly is a further blow to the credibility of President Emmanuel Macron’s government as it battles rebounding virus infections.
  • Florida seeks investigation on Bloomberg donation on voting

    Florida seeks investigation on Bloomberg donation on voting
    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Florida’s attorney general is asking state and federal law enforcement to investigate possible election law violations after billionaire and former Democratic presidential candidate Mike Bloomberg helped raise more than $16 million for Florida felons to pay their debts so they can vote. Attorney General Ashley Moody sent a letter to the FBI and Florida Department of Law Enforcement on Wednesday. She said Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis asked her to look into whe
  • Navy releases documents from Cold War loss of submarine

    Navy releases documents from Cold War loss of submarine
    PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — The Navy has begun releasing documents from the investigation into the deadliest submarine disaster in U.S. history. A judge ordered the release of the documents pertaining to the sinking of the USS Thresher 57 years ago, and the first batch was made public Wednesday. The Navy will release more information in coming months but doesn’t believe the documents will shed any new light on the cause of the sinking. The nuclear-powered submarine and all 129 men aboard
  • US experts vow ‘no cutting corners’ as vaccine tests expand

    US experts vow ‘no cutting corners’ as vaccine tests expand
    WASHINGTON (AP) — A huge study of a single-dose COVID-19 vaccine is getting underway as top U.S. health officials seek to assure a skeptical public they can trust any shots the government ultimately approves. President Donald Trump is pushing for a fast decision. But Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration’s chief pledged to a Senate committee that the decision will be based on science, not politics. Hopes are high that answers about at least one of several candidates could come
  • Canada’s Trudeau vows to do ‘whatever it takes’ in pandemic

    Canada’s Trudeau vows to do ‘whatever it takes’ in pandemic
    TORONTO (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government says it will do “whatever it takes” to support the economy during the coronavirus pandemic. The commitment came in a speech Wednesday that outlines the government’s priorities for a new session of Parliament.  The government says the economic impact of COVID-19 on Canadians has already been worse than the 2008 financial crisis. If the three main opposition parties vote against the speech an elec
  • World leaders criticize haphazard response to pandemic

    World leaders criticize haphazard response to pandemic
    UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Leaders from across the world are criticizing the haphazard global response to a microscopic virus that unleashed economic havoc and took nearly 1 million lives in its march across the globe. Kazakhstan’s president called it “a critical collapse of global cooperation.” The coronavirus pandemic and its consequences topped the list of concerns on the second day of prerecorded speeches by world leaders Wednesday at the General Assembly’s first vir
  • Virus uptick in Hasidic NYC neighborhoods causes concern

    Virus uptick in Hasidic NYC neighborhoods causes concern
    NEW YORK (AP) — A spike in COVID-19 cases in a handful of Brooklyn and Queens neighborhoods with large Orthodox Jewish populations is raising alarm bells even as New York City’s overall infection rate remains low. The neighborhoods including Borough Park and Williamsburg accounted for 20% of city’s the COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, according to city Health Department numbers. Mayor Bill de Blasio said Wednesday that the city is addressing the uptick with “a very aggress
  • Prosecutor: Bar owner wanted to ‘ambush’ people stealing

    Prosecutor: Bar owner wanted to ‘ambush’ people stealing
    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A special prosecutor says a white Nebraska bar owner who killed himself after being charged with manslaughter for fatally shooting a Black man during May protests had been waiting to “ambush” people who were breaking into businesses. Special Prosecutor Frederick Franklin on Wednesday detailed more of the evidence against Jake Gardner. Gardner killed himself Sunday, days after a grand jury indicted him in the May 30 death of 22-year-old James Scurlock. The evi
  • Crowds protest Taylor decision; police make arrests

    Crowds protest Taylor decision; police make arrests
    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Police have detained some people during protests in Louisville in response to a grand jury’s decision to not indict police officers on criminal charges directly related to Breonna Taylor’s death. After the decision Wednesday, protesters in Injustice Square” chanted, “No justice, no peace!” and began marching through the streets. Some sat quietly and wept. Police later cordoned off a street with yellow tape, telling protesters to move bac
  • Republicans sue Texas governor over expanded early voting

    Republicans sue Texas governor over expanded early voting
    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Republicans in Texas are suing Gov. Greg Abbott over extending early voting by a week for November’s election amid the coronavirus pandemic. The lawsuit filed Wednesday escalates the backlash Abbott is facing from his own party over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic that has claimed the lives of nearly 15,000 people in Texas. Conservatives activists in Texas have fumed for months over Abbott’s statewide mask order and not allowing businesses to fully
  • The Latest: Trump confident in Senate approval of court pick

    The Latest: Trump confident in Senate approval of court pick
    UnmutePlayRemaining Ad TimeAd - 00:00
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on the Supreme Court and the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (all times local):
    4:20 p.m.
    President Donald Trump is expressing increasing confidence that a Republican-controlled Senate will approve whichever Supreme Court nominee he chooses to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
    Trump went so far as to suggest on Wednesday that the Senate Judiciary Committee “doesn’t even have to hold a hearing,&r
  • Actor Ryan Reynolds looking to invest in Welsh soccer club

    Actor Ryan Reynolds looking to invest in Welsh soccer club
    WREXHAM, Wales (AP) — Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney could be getting into the soccer business. Wrexham is a Welsh team which plays in the fifth tier of English soccer. It has revealed that Reynolds and McElhenney are the “two extremely well-known individuals” the club has previously said are interested in investing 2 million pounds ($2.5 million). Reynolds is a Canadian-born actor best known for starring in the “Deadpool” movies. McElhenney is a f
  • This is how voting by mail will look in Arizona in November

    This is how voting by mail will look in Arizona in November
    PHOENIX – Nationally and in Arizona, as Nov. 3 approaches, many Arizonans still have concerns about getting their mail-in ballots returned on time – and counted. …
  • BBB Warns: Online retailer amasses complaints of non-delivery and misleading ads

    BBB Warns: Online retailer amasses complaints of non-delivery and misleading ads
    (KVOA) -The Better Business Bureau (BBB) reported it's experiencing an increase in complaints related to online retail purchases. It's warning consumers to be aware of the pitfalls of shopping on unfamiliar websites.According to the BBB,Balma Home, purportedly based in Dallas, Texas, currently has an “F” rating with BBB Serving North Central Texas due to its failure to respond to 62 complaints filed against the business and its failure to resolve 3 complaints. The BBB said
  • Retired commander named interim Tempe police chief for year

    Retired commander named interim Tempe police chief for year
    TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — A retired Tempe police commander has been chosen to serve as the city’s interim police chief for one year beginning Oct. 12. Jeff Glover had retired in February after a 20-year career with the department. Tempe City Manager Andrew Ching announced Glover’s selection Wednesday. He says Glover will bring expertise, enthusiasm and a desire to collaborate with the community to the new role. Glover will be Tempe’s first Black police chief. Sylvia Moir, the c
  • Family of man shot by police expected to push for charges

    Family of man shot by police expected to push for charges
    ASBURY PARK, N.J. (AP) — Relatives of a man fatally shot by police last month are expected to hold a rally to call for criminal charges against officers, a day after authorities released bodycam video of the shooting. Thirty-nine-year-old Hasani Best was shot last month in Asbury Park after he refused to relinquish a knife he was holding. Best had barricaded himself in his apartment after police responded to a 911 call about a domestic dispute. Best looked at one of the officers and said,
  • International law enforcement operation targeting opioid traffickers on the Darknet results in hundreds of arrests

    International law enforcement operation targeting opioid traffickers on the Darknet results in hundreds of arrests
    WASHINGTON, D.C. (KVOA) – An international law enforcement operation that targeted opioid traffickers on the Darknet resulted in over 170 global arrests and the seizure of weapons, drugs and over $6.5 million.On Tuesday, the Department of Justice, through the Joint Criminal Opioid and Darknet Enforcement team, joined Europol to announce the results of Operation DisrupTor, a coordinated international effort to disrupt opioid trafficking on the Darknet. The operation was conducted acros
  • Wall Street closing sharply lower as tech sector takes hit

    Wall Street closing sharply lower as tech sector takes hit
    U.S. stocks are closing sharply lower as losses accelerated in afternoon trading Wednesday. Technology stocks dragged major indexes down as Wall Street’s tumultuous month continues to churn. Apple lost 4.2% and Amazon sank 4.1%. The S&P 500 gave up 2.4% in the latest erratic trading dominated by several shifts in momentum recently. The Dow and the Nasdaq also fell. Nike jumped to one of the biggest gains in the S&P 500 after reporting stronger profit than analysts expected. Airline
  • Media picks Alabama to top Florida in SEC championship game

    Media picks Alabama to top Florida in SEC championship game
    BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Alabama is the media favorite to win the Southeastern Conference title while Florida is the pick to win the Eastern Division. Alabama received 77 votes to win the championship game on Dec. 19 in Atlanta, while Georgia and LSU each were picked on seven ballots. The SEC released results of voting Wednesday from reporters covering the league.The post Media picks Alabama to top Florida in SEC championship game appeared first on KVOA.
  • Black attorney general chokes up during Taylor announcement

    Black attorney general chokes up during Taylor announcement
    Kentucky’s Black state attorney general choked up when answering questions at a news conference about why no police officers are facing criminal charges directly related to Breonna Taylor’s death. Attorney General Daniel Cameron said Wednesday that as a Black man he understands how important it was to make sure justice was done in the case. He paused and held back tears when he said his “heart breaks for the loss of Miss Taylor,” and said that if something happened to him
  • New Year’s Eve in Times Square incorporates virtual elements

    New Year’s Eve in Times Square incorporates virtual elements
    NEW YORK (AP) — Organizers say New Year’s Eve in Times Square will incorporate virtual elements and be scaled down and socially distant on site in response to the coronavirus. The Times Square Alliance, Jamestown Properties and Countdown Entertainment said Wednesday in a news release that the annual event will have an extremely limited group of in-person honorees. They say a virtual experience will be created to allow people to take part in the countdown to 2021 from wherever they ar
  • Egypt: 3 police killed as 4 convicts attempt prison bust

    Egypt: 3 police killed as 4 convicts attempt prison bust
    CAIRO (AP) — Egypt says three guards were killed when four men, convicted on terror-related charges and awaiting their death sentences, attempted to escape from a notorious Cairo prison. The Interior Ministry says security forces killed the four convicts while they were trying to flee the Tora Prison complex on the southern outskirts of the Egyptian capital on Wednesday. The four were sentenced to death in separate terror-related cases. Egypt has for years been struggling to contain an Isl
  • Lawyers eye neo-Nazi website founder’s assets for $14M award

    Lawyers eye neo-Nazi website founder’s assets for $14M award
    A Montana real estate agent’s attorneys are eyeing the assets of a neo-Nazi website operator to collect a $14 million court judgment against the man for an anti-Semitic harassment campaign that he orchestrated online against the Jewish woman and her family. More than a year has passed since a federal judge in Montana entered a default judgment against Andrew Anglin, the Daily Stormer’s founder and publisher. In recent court filings, plaintiffs’ lawyers say the Ohio native has f
  • Trudeau vows to to do ‘whatever it takes’ during pandemic

    Trudeau vows to to do ‘whatever it takes’ during pandemic
    TORONTO (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government says it will do “whatever it takes” to support the economy during the coronavirus pandemic. The commitment came in a speech Wednesday that outlines the government’s priorities for a new session of Parliament.  The government says the economic impact of COVID-19 on Canadians has already been worse than the 2008 financial crisis. If the three main opposition parties vote against the speech an elec
  • FBI raises reward for info on Navajo Nation double homicide

    FBI raises reward for info on Navajo Nation double homicide
    PHOENIX (AP) — The FBI now is offering up to a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever is responsible for a double homicide on the Navajo Nation six months ago. The bodies of 39-year-old Matthew Reagan and his 29-year-old brother Philip Reagan were found on March 21 in Sawmill, Arizona. FBI officials say the two men were traveling from Ohio to California and were passing through Sawmill at the time of their deaths. They say it appears the brothers&rsq
  • Utility equipment eyed as possible source of fire near LA

    Utility equipment eyed as possible source of fire near LA
    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Federal investigators are looking into whether a huge wildfire near Los Angeles was sparked by Southern California Edison utility equipment. Edison says it has turned over a section of an overhead conductor from the utility’s facility near a dam in the area where the Bobcat Fire started Sept. 6. The initial report of fire was near Cogswell Dam at 12:21 p.m. Sept. 6. The utility says five minutes earlier, at 12:16 p.m., a circuit at the substation experienced a poss
  • Investigators looking into whether huge wildfire near Los Angeles was sparked by utility equipment

    Investigators looking into whether huge wildfire near Los Angeles was sparked by utility equipment
    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Investigators looking into whether huge wildfire near Los Angeles was sparked by utility equipment.The post Investigators looking into whether huge wildfire near Los Angeles was sparked by utility equipment appeared first on KVOA.
  • Celebrities decry decision in Breonna Taylor case

    Celebrities decry decision in Breonna Taylor case
    NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — For months, actors, sports stars, musicians and other celebrities have been using their platforms to call for justice in the police shooting death of Breonna Taylor. After a grand jury Wednesday indicted one of the Kentucky police officers on criminal charges, but not for her death, celebrities reacted to the news mostly negatively. Actor Kerry Washington urged people to vote, while actor and recording artist Common used quotes from James Baldwin to express his feel
  • French media: Top chef Pierre Troisgros dies aged 92

    French media: Top chef Pierre Troisgros dies aged 92
    PARIS (AP) — French media say Pierre Troisgros, one of France’s top chefs who helped reinvent the country’s traditional cuisine, has died. He was 92. The French press quoted the head of the Maison Troisgros, Patrice Laurent, saying the chef died Wednesday at his home in Coteau, near Roanne in the Loire region where his restaurant is located. Troisgros learned his craft at the family hotel-restaurant in Roanne before heading for Paris where he refined his skills under Lucas Cart
  • DOJ nearing antitrust action on Google; Trump eyes tech curb

    DOJ nearing antitrust action on Google; Trump eyes tech curb
    WASHINGTON (AP) — As the Trump administration moves toward antitrust action against search giant Google, it’s campaigning to enlist support from sympathetic state attorneys general across the country. And President Donald Trump is pushing his campaign against Big Tech on Wednesday, touting curbs on legal protections for social media platforms he denounces as biased against conservative views. The anticipated lawsuit against Google by the Justice Department could be the government&rsq

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