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Today in History: January 24, suicide bomber kills 37 at Moscow airport
Today is Saturday, Jan. 24, the 24th day of 2026. There are 341 days left in the year.
Today in history:On Jan. 24, 2011, a suicide bomber attacked Moscow’s busiest airport, killing 37 people; Chechen separatists claimed responsibility.
Also on this date:In 1835, a major slave rebellion began in Bahia, Brazil, leading to the deaths of dozens of enslaved people in clashes with troops, police and armed civilians in the provincial capital of Salvador. The uprising was seen as influential in helping to bring about an end to slavery in the country decades later.
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In 1848, James W. Marshall found a gold nugget at Sutter’s Mill in northern California, a discovery that sparked the California gold rush.
In 1945, Associated Press war correspondent Joseph Morton was among a group of captives executed by German soldiers at the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in Austria.
In 1965, Winston Churchill died in London at age 90.
In 1978, a nuclear-powered Soviet satellite, Kosmos 954, plunged through Earth’s atmosphere and disintegrated, scattering radioactive debris over parts of northern Canada.
In 1984, Apple Computer began selling its first Macintosh model, which boasted a built-in 9-inch monochrome display, a clock rate of 8 megahertz and 128k of RAM.
In 1989, confessed serial killer Ted Bundy was executed in Florida’s electric chair.
In 2003, former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge was sworn as the first secretary of the new Department of Homeland Security.
In 2013, President Barack Obama’s Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced the lifting of a ban on women serving in direct ground combat roles.
In 2018, former sports doctor Larry Nassar, who had admitted to molesting some of the United States’ top gymnasts for years under the guise of medical treatment, was sentenced to 40 to 175 years in prison.
In 2023, a farmworker killed seven people in back-to-back shootings in a case of “workplace violence” at two Northern California mushroom farms. It marked the state’s third mass killing in just over a week.
Today’s birthdays:- Cajun musician Doug Kershaw is 90.
- Singer-songwriter Ray Stevens is 87.
- Singer-songwriter Neil Diamond is 85.
- Singer Aaron Neville is 85.
- Physicist Michio Kaku is 79.
- Actor Daniel Auteuil is 76.
- Comedian Yakov Smirnoff is 75.
- Actor William Allen Young is 72.
- Musician Jools Holland is 68.
- Actor Nastassja Kinski is 65.
- Olympic gymnastics gold medalist Mary Lou Retton is 58.
- Actor Matthew Lillard is 56.
- Musician Beth Hart is 54.
- Actor Ed Helms is 52.
- Actor-comedian Kristen Schaal is 48.
- Actor Tatyana Ali is 47.
- Actor Carrie Coon is 45.
- Actor and rapper Daveed Diggs is 44.
- Actor Mischa Barton is 40.
- NFL coach Sean McVay is 40.
- Soccer player Luis Suárez is 39.
- Actor Callan McAuliffe is 31.
- Singer Johnny Orlando is 23.
Broward schools back down on plan to hold graduations in gymnasiums
The Broward School District has agreed to return most graduation ceremonies to rented venues after a plan to move them to three high school gymnasiums generated a firestorm of controversy.
Superintendent Howard Hepburn issued a memo to Broward School Board members late Friday announcing the change in plans.
The School Board heard from numerous students, parents and elected officials at a Wednesday meeting opposing the use of high school gyms.
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Public speakers questioned why some classes got to graduate in expensive venues such as Hard Rock Live at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood and Nova Southeastern University’s Don Taft Center, while most others were scheduled for high school gymnasiums.
District officials said a graduation at a high school gym cost about $3,000 per ceremony, compared with $25,000 for NSU and $50,000 for Hard Rock Live. The district had planned to use external venues for only the 11 largest graduating classes, which officials said would have reduced graduation costs by $500,000.
School Board members initially had agreed to the idea in October, but they were inundated with complaints once the list became public in mid-January. Board members directed Hepburn to explore other possible options.
“After receiving extensive feedback from Board members and the community during the January 21, 2026, Regular School Board Meeting, staff will publish a revised graduation schedule next week,” Hepburn wrote. “Funding has been secured to ensure that each school will host its commencement ceremony in the same venue, or a comparable venue, as used in 2025.”
He said each graduate will be guaranteed a minimum of four guest tickets, regardless of venue.
“Staff will continue to collaborate with schools and engage the community as we plan for graduation venues in future years,” Hepburn wrote. “We look forward to celebrating the accomplishments of the Class of 2026 and ensuring this milestone remains a meaningful and memorable experience for our students and their families.”
School Board member Adam Cervera, the most vocal advocate on the board for using outside venues, called the decision a “big win” for students and families.
“This victory isn’t just about graduation venues — it’s a testament to what we can achieve when neighbors come together, voices are heard, and elected officials listen to their constituents,” he told the South Florida Sun Sentinel via text. “We still have important work ahead to keep this District moving forward, but for now we should all celebrate this tremendous victory for the Class of 2026!”
Prosecutors allege gang members tried to kill Indiana judge to derail domestic abuse trial
By TODD RICHMOND
Members of a motorcycle club and a street gang worked together in an attempt to kill an Indiana judge in hopes of derailing a domestic abuse case against one of their own, prosecutors alleged Friday, hours after police announced they had arrested five people in connection with the investigation.
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Steven Meyer, a Tippecanoe County Superior Court judge, and his wife, Kimberly Meyer, were injured Sunday afternoon in the attack at their Lafayette home. Steven Meyer suffered an injury to his arm and Kimberly Meyer an injury to her hip, according to authorities.
Probable cause affidavits unsealed Friday paint a sordid picture of a plan to attack the judge that unfolded over several weeks and how surveillance video, a trail of discarded clothing and a tip from a restaurant helped investigators piece the case together.
At the center of it all is 43-year-old Thomas Gregory Moss of Lafayette. The documents describe him as high-ranking member of Phantom MC, a Detroit-based motorcycle club with ties to the Vice Lords street gang.
Court records show Moss was charged in 2024 with beating his ex-girlfriend and firing a gun in her home. He was set to stand trial in that case Tuesday in front of Meyer.
A Lafayette woman named Amanda Milsap allegedly approached Moss’ ex-girlfriend at her home in Pennsylvania several weeks prior to Sunday’s attack. She told her that Moss and the Vice Lords wanted to pay her $10,000 not to testify against him.
Moss’ ex-girlfriend refused to accept the money. Raylen Ferguson, an affiliate of the Almighty Vice Lord Nation gang, and the woman he lives with, Zenada Greer, then traveled to Lafayette from Lexington, Kentucky, several days before the shooting, prosecutors allege.
Ferguson traveled to the Meyers’ home on Jan. 16 and knocked on the door saying he had a food delivery, but left, the records said. He returned to the home on Sunday afternoon, police said. The home’s surveillance video shows he was wearing and a mask and carrying a shotgun. Investigators later determined that another Phantom MC member, Blake Smith, had purchased the gun in early January, according to the records.
Ferguson knocked on the Meyers’ door and said he was looking for his dog. When Steven Meyer told him that he didn’t have his dog, Ferguson opened fire through the door, according to the records.
Police using a search dog later found the shotgun and Ferguson’s mask and clothes discarded near the Meyers’ home. Analysts matched DNA found on the mask to Ferguson.
Investigators used the home surveillance video to zero in on the food Ferguson brought to the Meyers’ house on Jan. 16 and tracked it to restaurant where Ferguson had bought it. The restaurant’s surveillance video showed a person who was dressed and walked like Ferguson leaving the restaurant.
Police from Indiana, Pennsylvania and Kentucky as well as U.S. marshals and the FBI worked on the case before the Lafayette Police Department finally announced late Thursday that Ferguson, Moss, Smith, Milsap and Greer all had been arrested.
Moss, 43, Ferguson, 38, and Smith, 32, each face attempted murder, conspiracy to commit murder, battery and intimidation counts. Milsap, 45, faces bribery and obstruction counts. Greer, 61, was charged with helping a criminal and obstruction.
Moss’ attorney in the domestic abuse case, Ben Jaffee, did not immediately return a message left at his office Friday. Court records did not list attorneys for the other four people facing charges in connection with the judge’s shooting.
Steven Meyer issued a statement thanking police and saying that it’s important to allow the judicial process to move forward.
Indiana Chief Justice Loretta Rush also released a statement saying a special judge appointment is expected Monday.
Threats against judges have been on the rise in recent years.
Rush noted in a news release that more than 150 of 214 judges who responded to a 2023 security survey said they had been threatened.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court recorded 188 threats against judges in that state in 2024, the most recent year data was available. That compares with 232 threats in 2023 and 74 threats in 2022. Retired Wisconsin state Judge John Roemer was shot and killed in 2022 by a man he had sentenced to prison for burglary.
The head of the U.S. Marshals Service said in congressional testimony in 2024 that the number of threats against federal judges had more than doubled over the last three years.
Judge rules US Justice Department filed a lawsuit over Georgia voter data in the wrong city
By JEFF AMY and CHARLOTTE KRAMON
ATLANTA (AP) — A federal judge in Georgia on Friday dismissed a U.S. Justice Department lawsuit seeking voter information from the state, ruling the federal government had sued in the wrong city.
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U.S. District Judge Ashley Royal found the government should have sued Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in Atlanta, and not in a separate federal judicial district in Macon, where the secretary of state also has an office.
Royal dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice, meaning the Justice Department can refile it. The department declined to comment Friday.
The Justice Department has now filed lawsuits against 24 states and the District of Columbia seeking voter information as part of its effort to collect detailed voting data, including dates of birth and driver’s license and Social Security numbers. A federal judge in California rejected the lawsuit against that state on privacy grounds, while a judge in Oregon has suggested he may dismiss the case there.
The Trump administration characterizes the lawsuits as an effort to ensure election security, and the Justice Department says the states are violating federal law by refusing to provide voter lists and information.
Raffensperger has been the rare Republican to decline the demand, saying Georgia law prohibits the release of voters’ confidential personal unless certain qualifications are met. Raffensperger argues the federal government hasn’t met those conditions. He says he shared the public part of the voter roll and information about how Georgia removes ineligible or outdated registrations in December.
“I will always follow the law and follow the Constitution,” Raffensperger said in a statement Friday. “I won’t violate the oath I took to stand up for the people of this state, regardless of who or what compels me to do otherwise.”
The refusal to hand over the records has become an issue in Raffensperger’s 2026 run for governor. Raffensperger in January 2021 famously refused a demand from President Donald Trump in a phone call to “find” enough votes to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s win in Georgia’s 2020 presidential election. Many Trump-loving Republicans still hold a grudge against Raffensperger.
The issue flared just Thursday in a hearing by a state Senate committee where multiple Republican state senators slammed Raffensperger for failing to comply, saying he legally could do so. The committee voted along party lines to advance a resolution calling on Raffensperger to hand over the data and calling it the “latest example of a pattern of behavior by the secretary and his office to refuse oversight of his administration of Georgia’s elections.”
State Sen. Randy Robertson, a Republican from Cataula who filed the resolution, said the dismissal is “frustrating” because even if the Justice Department refiles the lawsuit, the problem will take longer to resolve.
“As public officials we all should participate in any investigation done by a law enforcement agency,” Robertson told The Associated Press Friday.
Robertson is one of many Republican lawmakers backing Lt. Gov. Burt Jones over Raffensperger for the GOP governor nomination. Jones, who already has Trump’s endorsement for governor, was one of 16 state Republicans who signed a certificate that Trump had won Georgia and declaring themselves the state’s “duly elected and qualified” electors.
California sues the Trump administration over plans to restart oil pipelines along the coast
By SOPHIE AUSTIN
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California sued the federal government Friday for approving a Texas-based company’s plans to restart two oil pipelines along the state’s coast, escalating a fight over the Trump administration’s removal of regulatory barriers to offshore oil drilling for the first time in decades.
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The administration has hailed the project by Houston-based Sable Offshore Corp. to restart production in waters off Santa Barbara damaged by a 2015 oil spill as the kind of project President Donald Trump wants to increase U.S. energy production.
The state oversees the pipelines that run through Santa Barbara and Kern counties, said Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta.
“The federal administration has no right to usurp California’s regulatory authority,” he said at a news conference. “We’re taking them to court to draw a line in the sand and to protect our coast, beaches and communities from potentially hazardous pipelines.”
But the U.S. Transportation Department agency that approved Sable’s plan pushed back on the lawsuit.
“Restarting the Las Flores Pipeline will bring much needed American energy to a state with the highest gas prices in the country,” said a spokesperson with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.
Sable did not respond for comment on the lawsuit.
Trump signed an executive order on the first day of his second term to reverse former President Joe Biden’s ban on future offshore oil drilling on the East and West coasts. A federal court later struck down Biden’s order to withdraw 625 million acres of federal waters from oil development.
The federal administration in November announced plans for new offshore oil drilling off the California and Florida coasts, which the oil industry has backed for years.
But critics say the plans could harm coastal communities and ecosystems.
Bonta said one of the pipelines Sable wants to restart burst in 2015, spilling oil along the Southern California coast. The event was the state’s worst oil spill in decades. More than 140,000 gallons (3,300 barrels) of oil gushed out, blackening beaches for 150 miles from Santa Barbara to Los Angeles. It polluted a biologically rich habitat for endangered whales and sea turtles, killing scores of pelicans, seals and dolphins, and decimating the fishing industry.
FILE – A worker removes oil from sand at Refugio State Beach, north of Goleta, Calif., May 21, 2015. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)The drilling platforms were subsequently shuttered.
Sable has faced a slew of legal challenges but has said it is determined to restart production, even if that means confining it to federal waters, where state regulators have virtually no say. California controls the 3 miles nearest to shore. The platforms are 5 to 9 miles offshore.
“It’s crazy that we are even talking about restarting this pipeline,” said Alex Katz, executive director of the Environmental Defense Center, a Santa Barbara group formed in response to a catastrophic 1969 California oil spill.
The federal government’s approval to restart the pipelines ignores painful lessons the community learned from the 2015 oil spill, said California Assemblymember Gregg Hart, a Democrat representing Santa Barbara.
“California will not allow Trump and his Big Oil friends to bypass our essential environmental laws and threaten our coastline,” he said in a statement.
California has been reducing the state’s production of fossil fuels in favor of clean energy for years. The movement has been spearheaded partly by Santa Barbara County, where elected officials voted in May to begin taking steps to phase out onshore oil and gas operations.
Meta pauses teen access to AI characters
Meta is halting teens’ access to artificial intelligence characters, at least temporarily, the company said in a blog post Friday.
Meta Platforms Inc., which own Instagram and WhatsApp, said that starting in the “coming weeks,” teens will no longer be able to access AI characters “until the updated experience is ready”
This applies to anyone who gave Meta a birthday that makes them a minor, as well as “people who claim to be adults but who we suspect are teens based on our age prediction technology.”
The move comes the week before Meta — along with TikTok and Google’s YouTube — is scheduled to stand trial in Los Angeles over its apps’ harms to children.
Teens will still be able to access Meta’s AI assistant, just not the characters.
Other companies have also banned teens from AI chatbots amid growing concerns about the effects of artificial intelligence conversations on children. Character.AI announced its ban last fall. That company is facing several lawsuits over child safety, including by the mother of a teenager who says the company’s chatbots pushed her teenage son to kill himself.
Powdered whole milk could be a culprit in the ByHeart botulism outbreak, tests show
By JONEL ALECCIA
Powdered whole milk used to make ByHeart infant formula could be a source of contamination that led to an outbreak of botulism that has sickened dozens of babies, U.S. health officials indicated Friday.
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Testing by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration found the type of bacteria that can cause the illness in two samples linked to the formula, officials said.
The agency found that bacteria in an unopened can of formula matched a sample from a sick baby — and it also matched contamination detected in samples of organic whole milk powder used to make ByHeart formula and collected and tested by the company.
FDA testing also found contamination in a sample of whole milk powder supplied to ByHeart — and it matched the germ in a finished sample of the company’s formula.
The findings are not conclusive, and the investigation continues “to determine the source of the contamination,” the agency said in a statement.
A ByHeart official said the finding helps shed light on what has become a “watershed moment” for the company.
“We are focused on the root cause and our responsibility to act on what we’ve learned to help create a safer future for ByHeart and infant formula,” said Dr. Devon Kuehn, ByHeart’s chief scientific and medical officer.
Neither FDA nor ByHeart named the supplier of the powdered whole milk.
At this time, there is no indication of a broader problem in the infant formula supply, the FDA said.
New York-based ByHeart has been at the center of a food poisoning outbreak that has sickened 51 babies in 19 states since December 2023. The problem was identified in November after officials with the California program that supplies the sole treatment for infant botulism detected a surge in cases in babies who consumed ByHeart formula.
No new cases in the outbreak have been identified since mid-December, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
ByHeart initially recalled two lots of formula, but it expanded the recall to all products days later. Federal health officials later said they could not rule out contamination of all products made since the company launched in March 2022.
That followed company testing, announced in November, that found six of 36 samples of formula from three different lots contained the dangerous type of bacteria that causes infant botulism.
Illnesses caused by botulism bacteria in infant formula are rare, and the size and scope of the ByHeart outbreak is unprecedented, food safety experts said.
Some formula companies do test raw materials and finished formula for evidence of the contamination, but such testing should be required, said Sarah Sorscher, director of regulatory affairs for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group.
“FDA has not announced a plan to do testing, and that’s what we really want to see them do,” she said.
Even if the contamination was traced to a milk supplier, the company remains responsible for the harm caused by its product, said Bill Marler, a Seattle food safety lawyer who represents more than 30 families of babies who fell ill.
“Just because they are able to point the finger at dried powder as the ingredient that may have been contaminated, it doesn’t take any of the legal or moral responsibility away from ByHeart,” Marler said.
ByHeart, which accounted for about 1% of the U.S. infant formula market, previously sold about 200,000 cans of the product per month. It was marketed as an option close to human breast milk, one that used “organic, grass-fed whole milk.” Parents of babies sickened in the outbreak said they chose the formula, which cost about $42 per can, because of its touted health benefits.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Spanish prosecutors drop sexual assault complaint against Julio Iglesias
MADRID (AP) — Spanish state prosecutors said Friday they were shelving an initial investigation into accusations of sexual assault by Julio Iglesias in the Bahamas and the Dominican Republic after concluding that Spain’s National Court lacked jurisdiction to judge the matter.
Earlier this month, Spanish prosecutors had opened an investigation studying allegations that the 82-year-old Grammy-winning global singing star had sexually assaulted two former employees at his residences in the Dominican Republic and the Bahamas.
Iglesias denied the accusations, writing on social media that: “With deep sorrow, I respond to the accusations made by two people who previously worked at my home. I deny having abused, coerced or disrespected any woman. These accusations are absolutely false and cause me great sadness.”
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An email seeking comment sent to a Florida attorney whose website says Iglesias is among his clients was not immediately answered.
The two women had presented a complaint to the Spanish court earlier this month, according to Women’s Link Worldwide, a nongovernmental organization that represents them. The group said that the women were accusing Iglesias of “crimes against sexual freedom and indemnity such as sexual harassment” and of “human trafficking for the purpose of forced labor and servitude.”
The women also said Iglesias regularly checked their cellphones, barred them from leaving his house and demanded that they work up to 16 hours a day, with no contract or days off.
When the complaint was filed in Spain, the organization said it had not reached out to authorities in the Bahamas or the Dominican Republic and didn’t know whether investigations had begun in those Caribbean nations.
Iglesias has been among the world’s most successful singers in the decades since his 1969 debut album, “Yo Canto.” He has sold more than 300 million records in more than a dozen languages.
After making his start in Spain, Iglesias won immense popularity in the U.S. and wider world in the 1970s and 1980s, partly due to duets with U.S. artists including Willie Nelson and Diana Ross.
He received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019 and in 1988 won a Grammy for Best Latin Pop Performance for his album “Un Hombre Solo.”
He’s also the father of pop star Enrique Iglesias.
Vance touts the Trump administration’s record against abortion at a Washington rally
By MEG KINNARD, Associated Press
Vice President JD Vance on Friday encouraged anti-abortion activists to “take heart in how far we’ve come” on the quest to limit the practice, listing the Trump administration’s accomplishments including an expansion of a ban on U.S. foreign aid for groups supporting abortion services.
“There is still much road ahead to travel together,” Vance told attendees at the annual March for Life demonstration, which draws tens of thousands of people annually to Washington. Attendees rallied on the National Mall before heading to the Supreme Court.
Vance, a Republican, has spent years passionately advocating for Americans to have more children. He repeatedly expressed alarm about declining birth rates as he launched his political career in 2021 with a successful bid for the U.S. Senate in Ohio, and as vice president he has continued on that mission.
“I want more babies in the United States of America,” Vance said in addressing last year’s March for Life.
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Earlier this week, Vance and his wife, second lady Usha Vance, announced in a social media post they are expecting a son, their fourth child, in late July.
“Let the record show, you have a vice president who practices what he preaches,” Vance said Friday.
Vance cited the Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade, calling it “the most important Supreme Court decision of my lifetime.” He said President Donald Trump’s leadership and appointment of conservative jurists “put a definitive end to the tyranny of judicial rule on the question of human life.”
He also lauded the “historic expansion of the Mexico City policy,” the broadening of a ban on U.S. foreign aid for groups supporting abortion services, to include assistance going to international and domestic organizations and agencies that promote gender identity as well as diversity, equity and inclusion programs.
“We believe that every country in the world has the duty to protect life,” Vance said, to a sea of supporters waving signs reading “Choose Life,” “Make More Babies” and “I am the Pro-Life Generation.”
“It’s not our job as the United States of America to promote radical gender ideology,” he said. “It’s our job to promote families and human flourishing.”
From the Vatican, Pope Leo XIV — the first U.S.-born pope — sent a message of support to participants in the march.
“I would encourage you, especially the young people, to continue striving to ensure that life is respected in all of its stages,” Leo wrote in a letter shown on a video at the march. “May Jesus, who promised to be with us always, accompany you today as you courageously and peacefully march on behalf of unborn children.”
On Thursday, an official said the Trump administration was implementing new rules, halting foreign assistance from going not only to groups that provide abortion as a method of family planning but also to those that advocate “gender ideology” and DEI. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity ahead of the rules’ publication in the Federal Register on Friday.
First established under President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, the policy was rescinded by subsequent Democratic administrations and was reinstated in Trump’s first term.
With its origins in the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that nationally enshrined federal protection for abortion rights, the March for Life developed an entrenched presence among conservatives arguing against abortion. In 2017, Trump addressed the march by video, becoming the first sitting U.S. president to make live remarks. Three years later, he attended the event in person, further cementing its role in conservative politics.
In a video address to this year’s crowd, Trump recounted his administration’s “unprecedented strides to protect innocent life and support the institution of the family like never before,” enumerating his appointment of “judges and justices who believed in interpreting the Constitution as written” and “reflecting on the Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade.
Since the June 2022 Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe, the march has become more celebratory, with organizers relishing a state-by-state fight in legislatures around the country and urging a continued fight until abortion is eliminated.
Meg Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP.
Daily Horoscope for January 24, 2026
Feelings test our plans, but patience helps. With the Moon squaring expansive Jupiter at 4:36 PM EST, impulses could clash with expectations. The morning favors slow starts, nudging us to notice needs early and respond without wasting time. Midday may bring ruffled feelings as we’re forced to adapt to changing circumstances. As long as we keep checking in with each other, we should be able to handle any mismatches. We’re balancing courage with care. Keep progress modest and grounded to let small wins stack up.
AriesMarch 21 – April 19
Speak from the heart, but let your brain mull over the exact wording first! The emotional Moon is in your sign, electrifying your intuition. Today, it squares auspicious Jupiter in your 4th House of Family, so big feelings at home may press on your plans. If a relative asks for a favor, name your bandwidth and offer an honest timeline. You’re allowed to help others, but you must respect your own need for rest at home. Aim for transparency, since clear limits invite support.
TaurusApril 20 – May 20
You don’t need to turn up the volume this morning. With the intuitive Moon drifting through your 12th House of Solitude, relaxation and reflection carry extra value. Luna squares jovial Jupiter in your 3rd House of Distractions, so brace for interruptions to your calm. If a neighbor drops by or your phone pings, feel free to wait to return any calls until you feel grounded. These quiet moments strengthen your patience, which helps later talks stay friendly and productive. Get some rest!
GeminiMay 21 – June 20
What turns a chat into shared momentum? The Moon and Jupiter, that’s what! With Luna squaring Jupiter across your aspirational 11th house and your resourceful 2nd house, vague group ideas might actually come to fruition. Keep everyone’s budget in mind — if friends suggest an expensive dinner, you could instead pitch a cozy, low-cost spot. Your natural curiosity becomes leadership when you ask questions and keep everyone focused on what matters: spending time together. Guide the plans gently to keep these connections flowing freely.
CancerJune 21 – July 22
Recognition grows when your effort stays focused. With Luna highlighting your 10th House of Goals, you’ve got the strength to start building your dreams in reality. The Moon also pokes lucky Jupiter in your very own sign, which pushes you to show up boldly without overextending yourself. If a supervisor adds a new task, negotiate the scope and timeline rather than accepting unnecessary work. Share wins warmly and give credit where it’s due. These small moments all add up to an amazing reputation!
LeoJuly 23 – August 22
Big dreams ask for gentle pacing. The moody Moon in your 9th House of Journeys is squaring Jupiter in your quieter 12th house. Even as your mind reaches for bigger ideas and places, the stars are asking you to balance exploration with rest. If you’re studying or planning a trip, schedule regular breaks and protect buffers around bedtime. You shine when you stretch with wisdom, not strain, because an energized mind makes growth joyful. Plan pauses, since pacing keeps your fire bright.
VirgoAugust 23 – September 22
This afternoon favors delicate money talks. The temperamental Moon energizes your 8th House of Intimacy, while extravagant Jupiter emboldens your 11th House of Community. Their square today tests how you handle group expenses and promises. When you’re covered by someone else, be sure to show your gratitude. In a similar vein, if a friend owes you for tickets, ask kindly for repayment and suggest a system for next time. Keeping receipts isn’t a bad thing! Unambiguous money talks are a great way to build trust.
LibraSeptember 23 – October 22
Certain connections may not fit as well as they once did. You’re more equipped to notice these imbalances during this Moon-Jupiter square, especially when it comes to close personal or professional partnerships. There may also be some pressure around public decisions and visible promises. If someone presses for an answer about timing, offer only what you can realistically commit to. Your diplomatic nature brings grace to tough talks because you listen before you decide. Seek fair terms to obtain the most long-term benefits.
ScorpioOctober 23 – November 21
Detours, shmetours — you can handle any twist or turn in your path today. You can thank Luna and Jupiter for that! They’re colliding in an energetic square, emphasizing your 6th House of Habits and your 9th House of Learning. Conversely, it also means that big ideas may distract you from everyday necessities. Do your best to work with your brain, not against it. Look for tasks you can do while pondering philosophy or imagining the perfect comeback for potential debates. Thoughtful pacing is everything!
SagittariusNovember 22 – December 21
Where are you pouring your heart? The nurturing Moon in your inspired 5th house is nudging upbeat Jupiter in your earnest 8th house, reminding you to nourish your soul, wherever it lives. Look for ways to indulge in joy without splurging. For example, a couple of markers and scratch paper are all you need to draw something, and a phone is all you need to listen to new music. Your optimism shines when you lead with generosity while honoring agreements about money. Express yourself freely!
CapricornDecember 22 – January 19
Home repairs — literal or emotional — are on the table today. The Moon and Jupiter are clashing, which could cause some tension, but could also benefit your energy levels. Family ties may need some mending, and once they’ve been handled, those bonds could be immensely helpful. If a partner or ally needs your time, share your to-do list and agree to meet up when you both have time. Sharing time and effort is currently the best way to improve your time at home.
AquariusJanuary 20 – February 18
Conversations may seem to move faster than your thoughts. The temperamental Moon is visiting your 3rd House of Neighborhoods, where it squares Jupiter in your 6th House of Practice. Your local environment will probably keep you pretty busy today! If traffic snarls or a sibling vents, slow the pace so you can keep track of the topic without losing your own train of thought. Your innovative mind shines when you reframe delays as chances to improve the system. Ready, set, go!
PiscesFebruary 19 – March 20
Treat your resources with care. The thoughtful Moon moves through your 2nd House of Values, spotlighting money choices and the worth you assign to your possessions. It squares lucky Jupiter in your 5th House of Originality, asking you to honor a limit and still welcome joy. If an art class or outing would stretch your budget, consider scheduling it for a more affordable future and staying in for the time being. Caring for your wallet is caring for yourself! Today is about lightening burdens.
Homicide rate declines sharply in dozens of US cities, a new report shows
By CLAUDIA LAUER
Data collected from 35 American cities showed a 21% decrease in the homicide rate from 2024 to 2025, translating to about 922 fewer homicides last year, according to a new report from the independent Council on Criminal Justice.
The report, released on Thursday, tracked 13 crimes and recorded drops last year in 11 of those categories including carjackings, shoplifting, aggravated assaults and others. Drug crimes saw a small increase over last year and sexual assaults stayed even between 2024 and 2025, the study found.
Experts said cities and states beyond those surveyed showed similar declines in homicides and other crimes. But they said it’s too early to tell what is prompting the change even as elected officials at all levels — both Democrats and Republicans — have been claiming credit.
Adam Gelb, president and CEO of the council — a nonpartisan think tank for criminal justice policy and research — said that after historic increases in violence during the COVID-19 pandemic, this year brought historic decreases. The study found some cities recorded decades-low numbers, with the overall homicide rate dropping to its lowest in decades
“It’s a dramatic drop to an absolutely astonishing level. As we celebrate it we also need to unpack and try to understand it,” Gelb said. “There’s never one reason crime goes up or down.”
The council collects data from police departments and other law enforcement sources. Some of the report categories included data from as many as 35 cities, while others because of differences in definitions for specific crimes or tracking gaps, include fewer cities in their totals. Many of the property crimes in the report also declined, including a 27% drop in vehicle thefts and 10% drop in shoplifting among the reporting cities.
The council’s report showed a decrease in the homicide rate in 31 of 35 cities including a 40% decrease or more in Denver, Omaha, Nebraska, and Washington. The only city included that reported a double-digit increase was Little Rock, Arkansas, where the rate increased by 16% from 2024.
Gelb said the broad crime rate decreases have made some criminologists question historic understandings of what drives trends in violent crime and how to battle it.
“We want to believe that local factors really matter for crime numbers, that it is fundamentally a neighborhood problem with neighborhood level solutions,” he said. “We’re now seeing that broad, very broad social, cultural and economic forces at the national level can assert huge influence on what happens at the local level.”
Republicans, many of whom called the decrease in violent crime in many cities in 2024 unreliable, have rushed to say that tough-on-crime stances like deploying the National Guard to cities like New Orleans and the nation’s capital, coupled with immigration operation surges, have all played a roll in this year’s drops.
However, cities that saw no surges of either troops or federal agents saw similar historic drops in violent and other crimes, according to the Council’s annual report.
Democratic mayors are also touting their policies as playing roles in the 2025 decreases.
Jens Ludwig, a public policy professor and the Director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab, stressed that many factors can contribute to a reduction in crime, whether that’s increased spending on law enforcement or increased spending on education to improve graduation rates.
“The fact that in any individual city, we are seeing crime drop across so many neighborhoods and in so many categories, means it can’t be any particular pet project in a neighborhood enacted by a mayor,” Ludwig said. And because the decrease is happening in multiple cities, “it’s not like any individual mayor is a genius in figuring this out.”
He said while often nobody knows what drives big swings in crime numbers, the decrease could be in part due to the continued normalization after big spikes in crime for several years during the pandemic. A hypothesis that stresses the declines might not last.
“If you look at violent crime rates in the U.S., it is much more volatile year to year than the poverty rate, or the unemployment rate; It is one of those big social indicators that just swings around a lot year to year,” Ludwig said. “Regardless of credit for these declines, I think it’s too soon for anybody on either side of this to declare mission accomplished.”
Ask a real estate pro: We bought house together, but it’s in only one name. What rights do I have?
Q: I purchased a house with my girlfriend, but because she had better credit, we put it in just her name. Besides splitting the down payment, I’ve been helping pay all the bills, including the mortgage, and I even paid to have the roof repaired. Now, she’s saying it’s her house, and I have no say in it. Is there anything I can do? — Michael
A: Buying a house together can be an exciting milestone, but when the legal ownership is in one person’s name, the situation can become complicated if the relationship takes a turn.
Although you’ve contributed to the mortgage, bills, and repairs, the law prioritizes whose name is on the deed when determining ownership. Still, you do have rights in this situation.
The first step is to gather all your documentation. Make a record of every payment you made, especially those for the mortgage, utilities, and repairs. Receipts, bank statements, and any written agreements and communications, such as texts and emails, that show the expectation that the home was for both of you are very helpful.
Of course, you should speak with your girlfriend and try to work something out. If you and your girlfriend are open to discussing the matter but are having difficulty working through it, consider mediation. A neutral third party can help you both reach an agreement without a lengthy court battle.
However, if she’s unwilling to negotiate, legal action may be your only option.
Courts may recognize your financial contributions under the legal concepts of “constructive trust” or “equitable interest.” This means that even if your name is not on the deed, you may be able to claim a share of the property based on your significant financial contributions.
Even if the court doesn’t award you a share of the property, it might order her to reimburse you for those contributions.
Finally, moving forward, it is important to protect yourself in similar situations. If you find yourself contributing to a property again, make sure your name is on the deed or that you have a written agreement outlining your rights.
While it’s easy to assume that love and trust will carry the day, having legal protections in place can save you a lot of heartache down the road. There’s no reason loving, caring partners cannot have written agreements to help avoid misunderstandings.
Board-certified real estate lawyer Gary Singer writes about industry legal matters and the housing market. To ask him a question, email him at gary@garysingerlaw.com, or go to SunSentinel.com/askpro.
Miss Manners: One rude woman is ruining my grandmother’s get-togethers
DEAR MISS MANNERS: Once a month, my grandmother hosts a group of friends at her house for a chat and an afternoon tea.
She loves the company and the catch-up, as they are all older and can’t get out much, especially since COVID.
I noticed one guest is very snippety and degrading to the rest of the group, but my grandmother says it isn’t her place to say anything.
I noticed the group declining in numbers and coming up with reasons not to come. My grandmother is angry at her friends for not coming over. I gently hint that if someone is being rude, and the hostess does not ask them to be more mindful, then yes, people will stop coming.
However, she tells me I am wrong and that a hostess doesn’t tell anyone to, in my generation’s words, “stay in their lane.”
How can I get my grandmother to understand this before she loses the friends altogether?
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GENTLE READER: Forgive this grandmother for not understanding what you are asking yours to do.
Miss Manners hopes it is not to commit the unpardonable rudeness of calling out a guest’s rudeness to her face. (The guest’s face, that is. Once the guest is gone, you are free to try to convince your grandmother that this guest is scaring away her other friends.)
You might be more successful if you say that that person is not to everyone’s taste, and perhaps Grandmama can socialize with her one-on-one and convene a more like-minded group for afternoon teas.
DEAR MISS MANNERS: Elevators have been in existence, I believe, for more than 150 years, but there does not seem to be a system of accepted manners related to them.
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It is true that we no longer dance around in the elevator so as to allow all the women to get out before the men. There is, however, pandemonium on first floors, when people wishing to board will not wait for occupants to get off. The expressions on their faces indicate they are astonished to find that the machine contains passengers!
I am going to give you my solution and petition you for approval of my actions, which I believe will correct the problem over time.
I am a 6-foot man, and when I stick out my elbows, I pretty much fill the space between the doors. When the doors open, if I note any inclination for those outside to crowd in, I spread my arms and say in a loud voice, “It is not polite to crowd in when people are coming out.”
Do I have your approval for this behavior, and do you think it will prove to be effective?
GENTLE READER: You do not — firstly, because you are going to elbow some unsuspecting person in the face, and secondly, because it is rude to correct another’s manners.
Both problems can be avoided if you instead say, “Excuse us, people coming out, please.” If the announcement is made in a booming voice, it will be surprising enough to render the physical barrier of sticking out your arms unnecessary.
Even so, Miss Manners does not see this solving the problem everywhere and for all time, unless you plan to spend an awful lot of time in elevators.
Please send your questions to Miss Manners at her website, www.missmanners.com; to her email, gentlereader@missmanners.com; or through postal mail to Miss Manners, Andrews McMeel Syndication, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.
Watch the video again. Good was no rioter | Letters to the editor
According to the Jan. 18 letter to the editor from Mark Goldstein, Renee Good was not a victim, she was a rioter.
The 37-year-old mother, despite being polite to ICE agents, was shot at least three times — once at close range to her head.
Mr. Goldstein blames “the mainstream media” for portraying Good as the victim. Maybe he should watch news stations that state facts — or just maybe, watch the video with his own eyes.
I don’t need any news outlet — real or fake — to tell me what happened. I saw it.
MAGAs will make up all sorts of stories to fit whatever narrative they want to believe — and what they want others to believe.
Between President Trump’s declining mental faculties and physical ailments, his inept Cabinet is putting every citizen in harm’s way. ICE agents under the cosplaying Kristi Noem didn’t need to terrorize the people of Minnesota, and Good did not use her car as a weapon.
So write to the White House and tell them to start working for the American people, rather than writing letters to the newspaper labeling a deceased innocent woman a rioter.
She was an everywoman, driving home to her family.
Ellen Brown-Menges, Port St. Lucie
A protester is detained by federal agents near the scene where Renee Good was fatally shot by an ICE officer last week, Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Adam Gray) ICE was the perpetratorLetter writer Mark Goldstein of Boca Raton wrote about the “rioters” facing ICE in Minnesota.
But the only violence that was perpetrated on that day was by ICE.
Anyone who saw the videos knows that Renee Good at no time threatened an agent.
Moreover, she told her assailant “I don’t hate you” before he shot and killed her.
I wonder if Goldstein felt the same way about the “peaceful protesters” involved in the Jan. 6, 2021 storming of the U.S. Capitol, who assaulted police officers?
Bob Chaban, Boynton Beach
‘The real bad guys’ in MinnesotaHave you watched the video of what the “peaceful” protesters were doing to ICE agents in Minnesota? If you call that peaceful, I have a bridge in Brooklyn I’d like to sell you.
Instead of working with ICE to rid their state of criminals and illegals, the mayor, governor and state attorney general ratcheted up so-called peaceful protests to espouse violence against federal law enforcement.
Who are the real bad guys? The Minnesota politicians resurrecting the George Floyd debacle. Why can’t the Sun Sentinel and Minnesota leaders join hands with law enforcement to bring justice and sanity back to their city and state?
I guess as long as President Trump is in office, the liberal left and Sun Sentinel will be against everything the Trump administration says or does.
Chuck Lehmann, Delray Beach
Don’t shoot at a moving vehicleAs a Vietnam vet and later as an officer with NYPD, I would never fire on a vehicle unless I was being fired upon.
There seemed ample room and time (for the agent) to move away. To Renee Good, I ask: Why drive away? There were important issues to consider (such as the future of her three children).
Consider, too, the behavior of the driver’s spouse, who loudly told Ms. Good, “Drive, baby. drive!” I believe that this prompted her to move forward with her SUV, causing Good’s death.
It’s shameful that an innocent person lost her life due to the behavior of two people who did not make reasonable or correct decisions. This is my belief, and I am saddened.
Louis Cohen, Tamarac
The answer is “nej”How do you say “NO” in Danish?
Scot McCluskey, Davie
Please submit a letter to the editor by email to letterstotheeditor@sunsentinel.com or fill out the online form below. Letters may be up to 200 words and must be signed with your email address, city of residence and daytime phone number for verification. Letters will be edited for clarity and length.
[contact-form]Morning Update: South Florida’s top stories for Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026
Here are the top stories for Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. Get the weather forecast for today here.
SUBSCRIBE NOW: Get our free Morning Update email. Sign up here.
FAU faculty member won’t get job back after Charlie Kirk posts
Gymnasium graduation plan prompts heated Broward School Board debate
Weekend things to do: Jerry Seinfeld, Festival of Chocolate and (fingers crossed) Morrissey
Judge moves congresswoman’s FEMA theft trial to late April after co-defendants request delay
Florida is reshaping higher education. Other states are watching
Florida couple sues fertility clinic after discovering baby girl isn’t biologically theirs
Jury acquits ex-officer of charges he failed his duty to confront gunman in Texas school shooting
Miss Manners: I want to shut down rude whispers about my husband’s criminal past
Today in History: January 22, ‘Unabomber’ Ted Kaczynski pleads guilty
Today is Thursday, Jan. 22, the 22nd day of 2026. There are 343 days left in the year.
Today in history:On Jan. 22,1998, Theodore Kaczynski pleaded guilty in Sacramento, California, to being the “Unabomber” responsible for three deaths and 23 injuries in a mail-bombing campaign. In return for the pleas in federal court, he received a sentence of life in prison without parole.
Also on this date:In 1901, Britain’s Queen Victoria died at age 81 after a reign of more than 63 years; she was succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII.
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In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces began landing at Anzio, Italy.
In 1947, America’s first commercially licensed television station west of the Mississippi, KTLA-TV in Los Angeles, made its official debut.
In 1953, the Arthur Miller drama “The Crucible” opened at the Martin Beck Theatre in New York.
In 1973, former President Lyndon B. Johnson died at his Texas ranch at the age of 64.
Also in 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court, in its Roe v. Wade decision, declared a nationwide constitutional right to abortion. (The court would overturn Roe v. Wade in 2022, in the decision Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.)
In 2006, Kobe Bryant scored 81 points, the second-highest single-game point total in NBA history, in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 122-104 victory over the Toronto Raptors. (Wilt Chamberlain set the record with 100 points in 1962 for the Philadelphia Warriors in a 169-147 win against the New York Knicks.
In 2017, an outbreak of tornadoes in the U.S. Southeast killed at least 16 people in Georgia after claiming four lives in Mississippi.
Today’s birthdays:- Celebrity chef Graham Kerr (TV: “The Galloping Gourmet”) is 92.
- Singer Steve Perry is 77.
- Film director Jim Jarmusch is 73.
- Actor Linda Blair is 67.
- Actor Diane Lane is 61.
- DJ Jazzy Jeff is 61.
- Celebrity chef Guy Fieri is 58.
- Actor Olivia d’Abo is 57.
- Actor Gabriel Macht is 54.
- Actor Balthazar Getty is 51.
- Rapper Logic is 36.
- Actor Daryl McCormack is 33.
- Actor Sami Gayle is 30.
- R&B singer Ravyn Lenae Washington is 27.
- WNBA point guard Caitlin Clark is 24.
Take these steps to protect yourself from winter weather dangers
By JUAN A. LOZANO and PATRICK WHITTLE
HOUSTON (AP) — Winter weather brings various hazards that people have to contend with to keep warm and safe.
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These dangers can include carbon monoxide poisoning, hypothermia and frozen pipes that can burst and make homes unlivable.
Public safety officials and experts say there are multiple ways people can prepare themselves to avoid these winter weather hazards and keep themselves safe.
The hazards are on the radar this week because millions of people in the United States are set to be hit with heavy snow, sleet and freezing rain from a “significant winter storm” this weekend that will impact the Midwest, the East Coast as well as much of the southern U.S., including Texas, Georgia and the Carolinas, according to the National Weather Service.
Staying safe inside your home Multiple vehicles slid off the road in whiteout conditions along Lake Michigan Drive during a winter storm warning in Ottawa County, Mich. on Monday, Jan. 19, 2026. (Joel Bissell/Kalamazoo Gazette via AP)Officials say that during a winter storm, people should stay indoors. But home heating systems running for hours can increase the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning as the deadly fumes can be produced by furnaces, stoves and heaters, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Carbon monoxide can also be created when people use portable generators or run cars in their garages to stay warm or charge their phones.
Dr. Alex Harding, assistant professor of emergency medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, said that because carbon monoxide is odorless and colorless, people won’t necessarily be aware of it.
“The symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning can be really insidious. They can sneak up on patients and can range from just developing a headache or maybe a little bit of nausea to all the way to losing consciousness and seizures,” he said.
Dealing with hypothermia Traffic passes piled-up snow in Lowville, N.Y., Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Cara Anna)The cold weather hitting the U.S. this weekend has the ability to be dangerous or deadly because of unsafe exposure to elements.
The cold temperatures could sneak up on people in parts of the country, including Texas, that have largely experienced a mild winter so far.
“Really cold temperatures and winds can make temperatures feel a lot colder, and the result of that could be cold air that could eventually lead to frostbite at a much faster rate or hypothermia at a much faster rate than normal,” said Jon Palmer, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Gray, Maine.
Prolonged exposure to frigid temperatures can put people at risk to hypothermia, a condition that happens when one’s body loses heat faster than it can produce it.
“Hypothermia is definitely one of the bigger concerns, especially if we do have any kind of certainty in like power grids or electricity failing,” Harding said.
The danger of hypothermia is greater for someone who is outside, exposed to wind gusts and isn’t wearing appropriate clothing or has clothing that gets wet.
“If they have a safe place that’s warm, where they can hunker down, where they have water and food and all those kind of necessities … then that’s going to limit their exposure to those risks,” Harding said.
But vulnerable populations like people with disabilities or homeless individuals can have problems finding a warm and safe place to stay.
Protecting your home’s pipes People walk their dogs on an ice covered beach at the Lake Michigan shore, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato)Frozen pipes in a home during severe winter weather is a particular problem in parts of the South because such equipment is often located outside structures. But other parts of the country also have to deal with this problem.
Jose Parra, a master plumber with Abacus Plumbing, Air Conditioning & Electrical in Houston, advises people to insulate any pipes that are exposed to the outside, turn off and drain sprinkler systems and let faucets inside a home drip during freezing temperatures so water can run through the pipes and protect them.
“A lot of what we’re fixing, I would say 80% to 90%, could have been prevented with just a little bit of work ahead of time,” Parra said.
Electric vehicle troubles A Tesla Cyber truck is driven along North Scenic Drive through Muskegon State Park during a winter storm warning in Muskegon County, Mich. on Saturday, January 17, 2026. (Joel Bissell/Kalamazoo Gazette via AP)Experts acknowledge that cold weather can be hard for electric vehicles. But they say with some planning and a little adjustment, owners should be able to travel pretty much as normal.
Inside EV batteries, lithium ions flow through a liquid electrolyte, producing electricity. But they travel more slowly through the electrolyte when it gets cold and don’t release as much energy. That cuts into the range and can deplete a battery faster.
In the short run, automakers are likely to come up with better ways to protect battery life and warm them for charging, Neil Dasgupta, associate professor of mechanical and materials science engineering at the University of Michigan, told The Associated Press. And there are new battery chemistries in development that are more resilient in cold weather.
Associated Press writer Tom Krisher contributed to this report.
Conservative group says Los Angeles school policy hurts white students in federal lawsuit
By JAIMIE DING
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A conservative group filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday challenging a Los Angeles schools policy meant to address the harms of segregation, alleging that it discriminates against white students.
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The 1776 Project Foundation, created by the 1776 Project PAC, targeted in its lawsuit a Los Angeles Unified School District policy that provides smaller class sizes and other benefits to schools with predominantly Hispanic, Black, Asian or other non-white students. It dates back to 1970 and 1976 court orders that required the district to desegregate its schools.
The group said the policy amounts to racial discrimination and violates the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.
The lawsuit calls for a permanent injunction to prevent the school district from using race preferences in “operating, funding, advertising, or admitting students into school programs.”
A district spokesperson said they were unable to comment on the specifics of pending litigation.
“Los Angeles Unified remains firmly committed to ensuring all students have meaningful access to services and enriching educational opportunities,” the district said in a statement.
More than 600 schools in the district are classified as predominantly Hispanic, Black, Asian or other non-white, while less than 100 are not, the lawsuit said.
Students that attend a school under this designation receive extra points when applying to magnet schools, and they are required to have at least two parent-teacher conferences per year, according to the district’s Student Integration Services website. These schools are also required to have student-teacher ratios of 25 to 1 or less, compared to other schools that are allowed to have classroom ratios of as high as 34 to 1, according to the lawsuit.
The 1776 Project Foundation’s mission is to “create and disseminate policies that will promote academic achievement and revitalize our educational system for families and students across the nation,” according to its website. It does so primarily by supporting local school board candidates, pushing back against “progressive pedagogy” and diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, its website said. The related 1776 Project PAC has financially backed those candidates.
The group’s members include a parent whose children are enrolled in a Los Angeles school that is not classified as predominantly Hispanic, Black, Asian or other non-white, according to the lawsuit. Because of the district’s policy, those children were denied certain benefits such as admission to a magnet program, the lawsuit alleges.
The filing comes as Trump administration officials have pushed for the lifting of Civil Rights Movement-era school desegregation court orders, calling them obsolete and unnecessary.
Civil rights groups say the orders are important to keep as tools to address the legacy of forced segregation — including disparities in student discipline, academic programs and teacher hiring — as well as segregation that is still actively happening.



