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Gunfire, chaos and a defiant Trump: How White House Correspondents’ dinner shooting unfolded

President Donald Trump has called for unity after a suspect was arrested for attempting to storm a White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, armed with multiple knives and a gun.
“I ask that all Americans recommit with their hearts in resolving our difference [sic] peacefully,” he said at a press conference in the aftermath of the incident, still dressed in his tuxedo from the meal.
The incident took place at the Washington Hilton on Saturday evening, where the annual event was being held. Journalists and press who cover the White House and the president are invited to attend the fundraiser and awards ceremony every year.
Mr Trump has previously not attended the dinner, which usually involves poking fun at the US administration in power, and the US leader and businessman was famously the butt of a joke at the event in 2011 made by then-president Barack Obama.
President Trump thanked the Secret Service and law enforcement for their swift action to detain the gunman, 31-year-old..

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Trump calls ‘third rate’ ABC News anchor morning after correspondents’ dinner shooting with two things on his mind

ABC’s Jonathan Karl detailed a phone call from President Donald Trump on Sunday morning — just hours after the shocking White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting — and said that the president, who’d once derided him as a “third-rate” journalist, had called to check if he was OK.
Karl, a White House correspondent and former president of the White House Correspondent’s Association, described the conversation with the president on ABC’s This Week to host George Stephanopoulos. Saturday evening’s annual dinner at the Washington Hilton was disrupted by gunshots when officials say suspect Cole Allen charged through a security perimeter armed with multiple weapons.
“My phone rang shortly after 7am, my landline, George, actually a number that few people call, and it was President Trump calling … At first he was calling to see if I was OK, with what happened last night; ‘Are you OK?’” Karl recalled Trump asking.
Trump also “reiterated many of the things he said in his press conference last ..

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Trump to attend first White House Correspondents’ Dinner as president amid ongoing feud with press: Live updates

FBI Director Kash Patel vows to file defamation lawsuit against The AtlanticPresident Donald Trump will head to the Washington Hilton hotel this evening for the annual White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner, his first time at the glitzy gala as president.
The Republican broke longstanding norms by skipping the event multiple times in his previous years as president.
Trump suffered a memorable roasting by then-President Barack Obama at the dinner in 2011, and this year’s iteration won’t feature a comedian as MC, as has been typical in past years. Instead, mentalist Oz Pearlman will host the event. Arrivals to the dinner are scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. Eastern time.
Trump’s return to the Correspondents’ Dinner comes as his administration continues to lock horns with the press.
Earlier this week, FBI Director Kash Patel filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic over a bombshell exposé alleging he drinks excessively and has performed erratically in the job, cla..

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31 sloths die in warehouse en route to Orlando exhibit, officials say

A Florida lawmaker said he was “appalled” after learning that more than two dozen sloths died in an Orlando warehouse en route to a conservation attraction in the state.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission says the 31 sloths died between December 2024 and February 2025 while being held at a warehouse facility tied to the upcoming Sloth World Orlando, which has yet to open. The deaths were detailed in a FWC incident report.
“I am appalled to hear about the 31 sloths who died under the ‘care’ of the not yet opened Sloth World in Orlando,” Rep. Maxwell Alejandro Frost, who represents Central Florida and Orlando, said in a social media post.
“These sloths — naturally solitary animals — were put in the worst conditions possible. They were taken from their natural habitats to a packed warehouse that wasn’t properly heated and allowed for the spread of deadly viruses, leading to a stress-induced death,” he continued, adding that his office is investigating the situation.
I..

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People facing food crisis around globe doubles as foreign aid plummets to 10-year low

The share of people facing a “food crisis” in dozens of countries around the globe has doubled across the past decade, a new report finds – with the new data coming in the wake of figures that show that foreign aid has also fallen to a ten-year low.
The annual report, co-published by aid partners including the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) and the EU, also notes that for the first time in its ten-year history, two territories – Sudan and Gaza – were classified as being in a state of famine last year.
“Food crisis” is defined by the integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) as when households experience “significant food consumption gaps” that result in high levels of malnutrition. The percentage of people across the world facing such crisis, or worse, was 11.3 per cent in 2016, but this has risen to to 22.9 per cent in 2025
“It’s been a decade since this report shed light on the alarming state of hunger worldwide. Unfortunately, the situation has only worsened,” said WFP e..

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Family sues after 62-year-old man fell asleep in theater and died days after falling on his way out

A 62-year-old man fell in a darkened movie theater and later died in an incident his family has described as “avoidable,” according to a report.
Jack T. Smerecky, from Crystal Lake, Illinois, fell on November 25, 2025, at a Classic Cinemas theater in Woodstock. In a lawsuit obtained by Fox 32 Chicago, the family has accused the theater’s owners of negligence.
Smerecky’s son, Jack R. Smerecky, told the outlet that it was not uncommon for his father to venture out to the theater alone. Days before Thanksgiving, he had done just that but fell asleep during the movie. When he woke up, he was alone in the auditorium, and the credits had already rolled, according to the family’s attorney, Kevin Justen. The theater was also pitch black, with even the lighting along the stairs being switched off.
“The normal lighting that everyone experiences when they're exiting a theater was gone,” Justen said, adding that Smerecky tried to call for help but his cellphone would not work.
As he tried to ..

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ICE is cutting back on cuffing immigrants in courthouses and warrantless arrests: report

Donald Trump’s administration has reportedly instructed immigration enforcement officers to cut back on arrests inside courthouses and to no longer enter homes without a warrant, backing off two controversial policies that have sparked violent and chaotic scenes in the president's mass deportation campaign.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement field offices across the country were verbally instructed by their superiors that they should no longer enter homes unless they have a judicial warrant, two Homeland Security officials told NBC News.
Last year, ICE’s then-acting director Todd Lyons told officers to rely on the agency’s own permissions to enter a person’s home — rather than seek a warrant from a judge. Homeland Security then issued a lengthy press release defending the policy.
ICE’s alleged instructions also led to a sharp drop in the number of arrests inside immigration courthouses. Last month, a top federal prosecutor admitted that the government was wrongly relying on polic..

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Cricket is returning to Olympics after 128 years. But many hope the sport will finally crack America

Cricket, the world's second most-watched sport, is set to make its Olympic return in 2028, 126 years after its last appearance.
This significant comeback is being heralded by the commencement of construction for a new 10,000-plus capacity cricket stadium in Pomona, eastern Los Angeles County.
This premier venue, designed to host both men's and women's matches, is located within the Fairplex fairgrounds.
It will serve as the home of the Los Angeles Knight Riders, a Major League Cricket team owned by Mumbai-based Knight Riders Sports, a company co-led by Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan.
The groundbreaking ceremony included a 'bhumi pujan', a Hindu ritual traditionally performed to seek divine blessings and forgiveness before disturbing the earth for construction.
Cricket already holds significant cultural sway within US diaspora communities, particularly those from South Asia, where it is followed with fervent dedication.
For American fans, coaches, and pl..

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Mystery spike of snake attacks in California has already killed three as researchers scramble to find cause

A Northern California woman has died after being bitten multiple times by a venomous snake, marking the third snakebite death in California this year amid an unusual rise in fatalities statewide.
The 78-year-old woman, who lived in Redwood Valley, was walking on a rural property on April 8 when she was bitten three times, Quincy Cromer, a spokesperson for the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office, told SFGate. Family members transported her to a hospital, but she later died from her injuries. An autopsy on April 15 determined the cause of death was envenomation from the bites, and officials ruled the incident accidental. The snake species involved has not been identified.
Her death marks the third snakebite-related fatality in California in 2026, which is well above the state’s typical average of no more than one a year, SFGate reports. A 25-year-old mountain biker died in Orange County in February, followed by a 46-year-old hiker in Ventura County in March, both after rattlesnake bites. ..

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‘Fuel theft has cost my petrol station £2,000 since Iran war started – my family can’t carry on like this’

“If someone steals £100 worth of fuel… It’s absolutely a straight loss for us,” Goran Raven said.
Speaking from his Shell garage in Romford, east London, Mr Raven said he’s lost around £2,000 to fuel theft since the war between Iran and the US broke out on 28 February.
Higher pump prices in the wake of the Iran war have meant his fourth-generation family-run business has suffered a significant blow as more people take off without paying.
He said his site saw the highest rates of petrol theft in the first two weeks of the conflict. Mr Raven added: “It was as though the criminal element of society were preparing themselves for the worst.
“There was a point where I was thinking to myself, if prices keep rising, thefts keep rising, and this goes on for much longer, I have to start looking at redundancies.
“It has a really big impact, because it’s coming at a time when the prices are rising, and fuel sales are declining and slowing down.”
open image in galleryGoran Raven has lost around ..