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Trade court says Trump's 10% global tariffs are unlawful

US President Donald Trump during a military Mother's Day event in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday, May 6, 2026. (Yuri Gripas/Abaca/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

(WASHINGTON) -- A federal court on Thursday concluded that President Donald Trump's global 10% tariffs are unlawful, a decision that the Department of Justice quickly appealed.

In a 2-1 decision, a panel of judges on the Court of International Trade concluded that the Trump administration misread the law used to justify the sweeping tariffs. 

The ruling marks the second time the president's tariff regime has been found to be illegal, with the Supreme Court earlier this year affirming a decision from the Court of International Trade blocking Trump's first round of tariffs. 

Lawyers for the Department of Justice filed a notice of appeal at the Court of International Trade on Friday, signaling plans to challenge yesterday’s ruling. 

The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, D.C., handles appeals from the Court of International Trade. The tariffs in question are set to expire in late July and it is unclear if the court will hear the case in time to meaningfully rule on the issue.

The immediate impact of Thursday's ruling is also unclear. The court granted an injunction for two small businesses and the state of Washington; however, the judges dismissed the claims brought by the larger group of states because they lacked standing. 

The dispute boiled down to the definition of the phrase "balance-of-payments deficits." The Court of International Trade rejected the Trump administration's argument that the term "balance-of-payments deficits" in Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 is the same as a "trade deficit." 

"It is clear that Congress was aware of the differences in the words it chose," the majority wrote. 

The judges acknowledged that the term "causes some confusion," but concluded that the Trump administration's interpretation was incorrect. 

"The Government argues that in today's world, the current account is the proper component for identifying a balance-of-payments deficit," the majority wrote. "Problematically for the Government, and as discussed herein, Congress in 1974 identified the settlement, liquidity, and basic balance deficits as 'balance-of-payments deficits.'"

The global 10% tariff took effect in February and by statute is set to expire in late July. 

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


Tentative trial date set in James Comey's 'seashell' case

James Comey speaks onstage at 92NY on May 30, 2023 in New York City. (Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)

(WASHINGTON) -- Former FBI Director James Comey is tentatively set to stand trial on July 15 on charges that he allegedly threatened to kill President Donald Trump by posting a photo of seashells spelling out "86 47" on a beach.  

In a written order issued Friday, U.S. District Judge Louise Flanagan scheduled the trial to begin on July 15. 

After his court appearance in North Carolina that was originally set for Monday was canceled, Comey will be arraigned on June 30. 

Comey’s lawyers have previewed that they plan to move to dismiss the case. His pretrial conference is scheduled to take place on or before May 29.

Renewing efforts to prosecute one of Trump's longtime adversaries, Department of Justice prosecutors brought the case after a judge last year threw out an indictment against Comey on unrelated charges.

The new indictment centers on a controversy that erupted nearly a year ago when Comey, in a since-deleted Instagram post, shared a picture showing the numbers "86 47" written in seashells with the caption "Cool shell formation on my beach walk."

Citing the slang meaning of "86" as to "nix" or "get rid" of something, allies of the president allege that the post was a veiled threat against Trump, who is the 47th president.

Following backlash over the post, Comey removed the photo from Instagram and said he was unaware that the post could be associated with violence. 

"I posted earlier a picture of some shells I saw today on a beach walk, which I assumed were a political message. I didn't realize some folks associate those numbers with violence. It never occurred to me but I oppose violence of any kind so I took the post down," Comey posted. 

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


Trump administration eyeing $400M settlement from TikTok for DC 'beautification': Sources

TikTok logo is displayed on a mobile phone screen for illustration photo. Krakow, Poland. On April, 20th, 2026. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) -- The Trump administration is nearing an agreement with TikTok to resolve an ongoing lawsuit over alleged child privacy violations in exchange for the social media company paying $400 million that the administration plans to use to fund President Donald Trump's Washington, D.C., "beautification" projects, sources familiar with the discussions told ABC News.

The proposed settlement would end a 2024 lawsuit brought during the Biden administration that alleged that the then-Chinese-owned social media company engaged in "massive-scale invasions of children's privacy" by collecting extensive data from children without notifying or obtaining consent from parents.

While sources say the administration and TikTok are finalizing the terms of the settlement, it must still be approved by a vote of the TikTok board, which is expected to take place as soon as Friday.

As part of the proposed settlement terms, which are not expected to include an admission of wrongdoing, TikTok would agree to pay the U.S. government $400 million, sources familiar with the matter told ABC News -- money the administration intends to use for some of the ongoing "beautification" projects in the nation's capital, the sources said.

While the proposed settlement is not expected to detail specific projects the money would support, the funds are expected to be directed to either the Department of Interior, the Department of Commerce, or both, sources familiar with the discussions said. Officials in the White House have had weekslong discussions about whether they could legally use the money to pay for Trump's proposed massive 250-foot triumphal arch near Arlington National Cemetery, the sources said.

On Thursday evening, President Trump personally traveled down to the National Mall to tout his administration's "beautification" projects around the nation's capital, telling reporters his administration is "working on some other jobs" and saying he was most excited about the triumphal arch, which he said would break ground "very soon."

While the Department of Justice regularly reaches settlements with private companies accused of wrongdoing, the proposed TikTok settlement marks a departure from the practice of using the settlement funds to resolve the alleged wrongdoing or compensate victims.

The Department of Justice alleged that millions of children under the age of 13 were subjected to extensive data collection and excessive content meant for adults, but the proposed settlement funds are set to directly support Trump's efforts to improve the appearance of the nation's capital.

The White House referred questions on the matter to the Justice Department, which declined to comment. TikTok did not respond to a request for comment from ABC News.

The $400 million agreement would come as the Trump administration attempts to cut funding from the National Park Service while surging more than $10 billion in their proposed 2027 budget to form a "Presidential Capital Stewardship Program." According to the Trump administration's proposed budget, the president hopes to "coordinate, plan, and execute targeted, priority construction and beautification projects" throughout the capital to make "Washington, D.C. -- a once-great city --safe, clean, and beautiful again."

Further complicating the matter is President Trump's direct role in helping to create the business venture that will pay out hundreds of millions for his D.C. projects, raising possible ethical concerns about his personal interest in the use of the settlement funds.

'I am so happy to have helped in saving TikTok!'

Since taking office last year, Trump has fashioned an unprecedented relationship with TikTok after the company was banned from operating unless it was sold to a U.S. owner. When the social media app briefly went dark in January 2025, Trump, on his first day in office, signed an executive order that allowed the company to continue operating in the United States, essentially vowing not to enforce the ban while negotiations over a potential sale continued.

Following months of negotiations, TikTok earlier this year finalized a $14 billion deal creating an American venture -- partially owned by Trump ally Larry Ellison's database software company Oracle, private equity firm Silver Lake, Emirati investment firm MGX, and others -- to address national security concerns stemming from TikTok's ties to Beijing. TikTok's Chinese parent company, ByteDance, still retains a minority stake in the American version of TikTok, which licenses its algorithm from ByteDance.

"I am so happy to have helped in saving TikTok! It will now be owned by a group of Great American Patriots and Investors, the Biggest in the World, and will be an important Voice," Trump said in a social media post in January before thanking Chinese President Xi Jinping "for working with us and, ultimately, approving the Deal."

'Massive-scale invasions of children's privacy'

The 2024 lawsuit that the Biden administration's Department of Justice brought against TikTok and ByteDance, which followed a referral from the Federal Trade Commission, alleged that the social media company violated the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act by allowing children under the age of 13 to create and use TikTok accounts without their parents' consent, and collected "extensive data from those children."

"By adhering to these deficient policies, Defendants actively avoid deleting the accounts of users they know to be children," the complaint alleged. "Instead, Defendants continue collecting these children's personal information, showing them videos not intended for children, serving them ads and generating revenue from such ads, and allowing adults to directly communicate with them through TikTok."

TikTok pushed back against the claims, arguing they were "going above and beyond" federal law requirements, while pointing the finger at children for figuring out how to "sign up for TikTok in contravention of the company's policies." The complaint appears to have been stalled in pre-trial litigation -- with TikTok yet to file a motion to dismiss the case -- and the judge overseeing the matter recently set a trial for May 2027.

In the past, the Trump administration has been critical of settlements that do not directly compensate victims of wrongdoing. During Trump's first term, former Attorney General Jeff Sessions banned settlements that resulted in payments to non-governmental, third parties that were not directly harmed by the conduct. Former Attorney General Pam Bondi reinstated a similar policy in 2025 banning improper third party settlements.

"Settlements, including civil settlement agreements, deferred prosecution agreements, non-prosecution agreements, and plea agreements, are a useful tool for Department attorneys, and should be used, first and foremost, to compensate victims, redress harm, or punish and deter unlawful conduct," Bondi wrote in a Justice Department memo.

Making Washington 'safe, clean, and beautiful again'

Over the last year, the Trump administration has prioritized carrying out "beautification" projects such as the extensive renovation of the White House East Wing, the planned arch near Arlington, the resurfacing of the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool, and other projects to upgrade local infrastructure and parks.  

Beyond the $400 million from the TikTok settlement, the Trump administration's proposed 2027 budget includes $10 billion for a "Presidential Capital Stewardship Program" to create a fund within the National Park Service to improve buildings and parks in and around D.C.

"As the capital of the greatest Nation in the history of the world, Washington, D.C. should showcase beautiful, clean, and safe public spaces. However, many historic park features and public-facing infrastructure throughout the city show signs of decay, years of heavy public use, and inadequate maintenance," the administration said in its proposed 2027 budget.

While details about the massive $10 billion fund are sparse, the Department of the Interior's 2027 budget says the money would be used to "rehabilitate historic buildings and landscapes, and enhance architectural grandeur so that Americans can once again be proud of their capital."

The size of Trump's D.C. fund would dwarf the operating budget of the National Park Service, which the Trump administration seeks to cut by more than a billion dollars to a total to $2.2 billion. The Trump administration's 2027 budget also would reduce staffing in the National Park Service -- which manages more than 400 sites including 63 national parks -- by approximately 3,000 employees.

When pressed about the $10 billion beautification fund, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum told lawmakers in April that the money would be used for "deferred maintenance" on existing facilities.

"D.C. is like a state. I mean it's not like [the fund is only for] the National Mall -- it's for the greater capital region," Burgum said. "I believe that if we got together, we could come back and go. 'That number is not high enough.'"

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


New search warrant in Kristin Smart case, decades after 19-year-old disappeared

Deputies served a search warrant at a property in the 500 block of East Branch Street in San Luis Obispo, Calif., May 5, 2026, in connection with the 1996 disappearance of Kristin Smart. (San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office)

(SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.) -- Nearly 30 years after 19-year-old Kristin Smart disappeared, California investigators conducted new search warrants as part of their ongoing probe into the location of her body.

The San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office announced Wednesday that deputies executed a search warrant at the 500 block of East Branch Street.

Sheriff Ian Parkinson told reporters Friday that the search of the premises, which belongs to Susan Flores, the mother of the man convicted in Smart's death, was still ongoing but investigators did not find any remains.

Parkinson said that the house was previously searched in 1996, and the investigators are using new forensic technology, including soil analysis.

"We will dig anywhere the evidence shows us," he said.

Smart attended an off-campus party at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, where she was a freshman, on May 24, 1996, but never returned to her dormitory.

Investigators declared Smart legally dead in 2002 and the case remained cold until 17 years later, when the true crime podcast "Your Own Backyard" launched and helped investigators get new witnesses and evidence.

In 2021, investigators arrested and charged Paul Flores, who was a student at the college at the time of Smart's disappearance.

Detectives said that some classmates found Smart passed out during the early morning hours of May 25, 1996, and Flores appeared out of nowhere. He claimed to the other classmates that he knew where she lived and offered to help her to her dorm, detectives said.

Flores was interviewed by officers following Smart's disappearance, but he was not charged.

In 2021, police searched the home belonging to Flores' father, Ruben Flores, and allegedly found human blood and fibers in the dirt that matched the colors of the clothing Smart had been wearing when she went missing.

A jury convicted Paul Flores in October 2022 of first-degree murder and he was sentenced in 2023 to 25 years to life.

Ruben Flores was charged with being an accessory to murder; however, a jury acquitted him on those charges.

Paul Flores appealed his conviction, but in January, the California Supreme Court denied his petition for review of his conviction.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


Missing hiker found dead from suspected bear attack in Glacier National Park

Glacier National Park, Montana. (Marli Miller/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

(GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, Mont.) --  A man who went missing while hiking in Glacier National Park in Montana has been found dead from a suspected bear attack, according to the National Park Service.

Search and rescue crews located the body of the missing hiker around noon Wednesday, approximately 50 feet off the Mt. Brown Trail in a densely wooded area, according to park officials.

"His injuries are consistent with those sustained by a bear encounter," the National Park Service said in a press release Thursday.

The victim's name and age have not been released. Park officials said they are withholding his identity until 72 hours after next-of-kin notification.  

A 33-year-old hiker from Florida had been reported missing in Glacier National Park earlier this week, with rangers focusing the search effort in the Mt. Brown and Snyder areas, according to park officials. The man was last heard from Sunday night and was reported missing the following day, park officials said.

The investigation into the suspected bear attack remains ongoing. Sections of the trail where the incident occurred have been temporarily closed.

"Wildlife and law enforcement personnel are currently assessing the area for bear activity and any ongoing public safety concerns," the National Park Service said.

The last bear attack in Glacier National Park was in August 2025, when a 34-year-old woman was injured by a brown-colored bear at Lake Janet.

The last fatal incident was nearly 30 years ago, when a man was killed by a grizzly bear in the Two Medicine Valley in 1998.

Earlier this week, two hikers were injured in a bear attack at Yellowstone National Park, near the Old Faithful area in Wyoming.

Park officials believe a female grizzly bear with two or three young cubs were involved in Monday's encounter, the National Park Service said in an update Thursday. The injured male hikers, ages 15 and 28, were airlifted out of the park.

Temporary trail, backcountry campsite, and fishing closures remain in effect following the incident. 

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


DOJ seeks to denaturalize former diplomat convicted of spying for Cuba

he Department of Justice (DOJ) seal on the J. Edgar Hoover Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) building in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, April 7, 2026. (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

(WASHINGTON) -- The Justice Department is seeking to denaturalize a former diplomat who was caught spying for the Cuban government.

For nearly 40 years, Manuel Rocha acted as a spy for the Cuban government under the guise of being a U.S. diplomat, according to the Justice Department. 

Rocha is a native of Colombia, but became a "great friend" of the Cuban government. The lawsuit filed by the Justice Department in the Southern District of Florida alleges that he lied on his naturalization paperwork when he filed it in the late 1970's.

"Under no circumstances should an agent of a foreign adversary be permitted to hold the title of American citizen," Assistant Attorney General Brett Shumate said in a statement. "Our mission is clear: to root out these fraudsters and preserve the sanctity of the naturalization process for those who adhere to our laws. Any individual who lied during the naturalization process to gain a foothold in this country will be met with the full weight of the Department of Justice."

He had worked at the State Department and held various leadership posts since the early 1980's, according to the Justice Department. All of that unraveled when he was caught on video outlining all of his crimes to an undercover agent in 2022.

"Rocha celebrated his activities on behalf of the DGI and against the United States' interests, and explained why and how he continued to preserve the secrecy of those activities," according to court records unsealed in 2023.

He was sentenced to 15 years behind bars.

The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida Jason A. Reding Quiñones said that Rocha was not a "low level operative" but rather "a senior government official who admitted he secretly served the Cuban regime for decades."

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


CDC researcher accused of stealing over $1 million in grant funding extradited to US

Poul Thorsen was extradited Thursday from Germany with U.S. Air Marshals, according to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General. (Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General)

(NEW YORK) -- A former influential scientist who did work at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is back in the grasp of U.S. law enforcement, facing financial fraud charges -- after more than a decade out of federal authorities’ reach, according to officials.

Poul Thorsen was extradited Thursday from Germany with U.S. Air Marshals, according to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General. It comes 15 years after he was indicted by a federal grand jury in the Northern District of Georgia.  

His work, and the fraud allegations against him, have long lingered in the lexicon of conspiracy theorists seeking to question the safety of vaccines.  

Thorsen helped lead research for the CDC studying infant disabilities, according to prosecutors. Thorsen’s work included co-authoring papers that found no link between autism and childhood vaccination -- science which, according to medical experts, still stands today.  

Separate from Thorsen’s pursuit of peer-reviewed medicine, prosecutors say he schemed to divert research grant money to his own coffers.

Thorsen was indicted in 2011 after he allegedly "absconded" with over $1 million in CDC grant money for autism research and was charged with 13 counts of wire fraud and 9 counts of money laundering. He was arrested in Germany in June 2025.

Thursday, Thorsen was flown in handcuffs from Germany to Atlanta, also the home of CDC headquarters.

In a statement to ABC News, an HHS-OIG spokesperson lauded the work that brought Thorsen’s extradition to bear.  

“Mr. Thorsen is alleged to have stolen more than a million dollars in federal research funds – money intended to advance critical scientific work and improve public health outcomes. His betrayal harms taxpayers, researchers, and the communities who depend on this research,” said HHS-OIG spokesperson Yvonne Gamble.

“HHS-OIG remains committed to protecting the integrity of federal health care programs and ensuring that individuals who misuse public funds are held accountable. We are grateful for our federal and international law enforcement counterparts, whose coordinated efforts made this extradition possible,” Gamble said.

In the 1990s and early aughts, Thorsen worked as a visiting scientist from Denmark at the CDC’s Division of Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities -- just as new public health initiatives in the area were flourishing and flush with fresh funding. Thorsen, at the time, vigorously advocated for grants for Danish research on infant disabilities. His push was successful: from 2000 through 2009, the CDC awarded over $11 million to two Danish government agencies for the research, according to prosecutors.

Thorsen quickly assumed responsibility for the research money he had pushed for. In 2002, he moved back to Denmark and “became principal investigator responsible for administering the research money awarded by the CDC,” the indictment said.

Thorsen began funneling the funds elsewhere, prosecutors said. He forged signatures and documents with official CDC letterhead and submitted fake invoices he claimed were for research, according to the indictment. Meanwhile, Thorsen was actually moving the funds into personal accounts within CDC's credit union, the indictment said. He would then withdraw the money for his own personal use, including the purchase of a Harley Davidson motorcycle, cars and a home in Atlanta.

From February 2004 through June 2008, Thorsen submitted for reimbursement more than a dozen fraudulent invoices purportedly signed by a CDC lab boss. He claimed it was for expenses incurred in connection with the CDC grant. They were not, prosecutors said.

“In truth, the CDC Federal Credit Union accounts were personal accounts held by defendant Thorsen. He used the accounts to steal money under the CDC grant,” the indictment said.

Thorsen’s alleged crimes have, since his indictment, also become attractive fodder for conspiracy theorists, attempting to conflate his financial fraud with his medical research. Among his published works are findings of “strong evidence against the hypothesis” that the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine causes autism. Some anti-vaccine groups have used Thorsen to paint a picture of corruption at the highest echelons of medical exploration.

Among those groups: the Children’s Health Defense (CHD), a group that pursues anti-vaccine causes. CHD was also once led by now-Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has long shared vaccine-skeptic views.

There is a page dedicated to Thorsen’s “criminal conduct” on CHD’s site, linking to a lengthy 2017 paper in which a group chaired by RFK Jr. levied accusations of “questionable ethics and scientific fraud” that “have resulted in untrustworthy vaccine safety science.” The paper called Thorsen a “key figure” in “shaky research” on vaccines and autism.

Decades of research has found no link between autism and vaccines or any vaccine preservative. Thorsen was indicted on wire fraud and money laundering, not for falsifying medical research.

Thorsen is expected to be arraigned Friday in federal court in Atlanta, according to an HHS-OIG official.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


Visual investigation: Scores of online resellers are using AI to fool customers by pretending to be mom-and-pop stores

A smartphone screen displays a folder containing AI applications Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Grok, Copilot, and DeepSeek. . (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) -- Visual investigation: Scores of online resellers are using AI to fool customers by pretending to be mom-and-pop stores

Scores of online companies are increasingly turning to generative AI technology to deceive consumers, falsely portraying themselves as struggling small businesses to charge a premium for lower quality products, an ABC News visual investigation found.

ABC News has identified dozens of similar online retailers -- selling everything from clothing to jewelry to lamps -- that used AI images and videos to portray themselves as down-on-their-luck craftsmen or small business owners in need of support.

These kinds of sites have proliferated online and take advantage of consumer trends. Experts warn that by the time others leave reviews or complain about the misleading claims, the sites often go offline or move on to selling another product.

"You can use AI to create very realistic media, right? So you can take and create photos of people who look like someone who might be making handmade goods," said Marshini Chetty, an associate professor of computer science at the University of Chicago. "You can create reviews at scale. You can create testimonials. And then even when you generate these sites, they already use these kind of manipulative tactics."

According to Denny Svehla, a musician from Rockford, Illinois, the ad he saw for a retiring craftsman selling flat caps appeared completely normal at first.

"I've been making flat caps and newsboy caps by hand since 1973. Closing the workshop next Wednesday and I'll be honest, I've still got way more inventory than I know what to do with -- just needs to go," one slickly produced ad said. "Every cap on that shelf has hours of my work in it -- real materials, hand finished, built to outlast the man wearing them. 53 years and not one shortcut."

For Svehla -- a Neil Diamond tribute artist who runs a small business with his wife -- the story felt personal, and he wanted to help.

"I get the pressure, so I thought, 'Man, I am going to buy a cap,'" Svehla told ABC News. "I even gave him a tip."

According to Svehla, he first became suspicious about the purchase when he got an update showing that the "handmade" hats he bought were being shipped from mainland China. When the hats eventually arrived, he said he was disappointed at their quality and even more annoyed at the deception.

"I'm sitting there thinking I'm trying to help someone," Svehla said. "He's going to end up going out of business after 52 years. I've been in business for 50 years myself, and I'm looking at, you know, what am I going to do if I can't go anymore?"

Unbeknownst to Svehla, the website that sold him the hats is one example of a growing trend of sites that use generative AI technology to portray themselves as struggling small businesses. At least three similar sites -- George's Caps, Henry's Caps, and Walter's Caps -- offered similar pitches to consumers, claiming they are retiring after decades in business and need to offload their inventory.

A representative of George's Caps, when reached by ABC News, did not address questions regarding whether George is a real person or if claims regarding his retirement are fabricated. They touted the quality of the products they sell, saying, "We are actually well aware that there are some genuinely poor operators in this space. We hear about them directly from our own happy customers who have tried competitors and been disappointed before finding us." The representative said, "I would also challenge the assumption that foreign made goods are automatically inferior. What matters is the quality standard being maintained and the commitment to the customer."

Other sites use AI to make emotional appeals. One purportedly New York-based clothing retailer shared an AI-generated image of their damaged storefront -- with shattered glass and police tape -- to announce their "big sale."

"Our store has been completely destroyed and after years of love and dedication to our business, we see no other way out. As if we hadn't fought enough against the big giants with their huge budgets, this has dealt us the final blow," the ad claimed.

But that store didn't list an address in New York, and online detection tools suggested the image was made entirely with artificial intelligence.

Another site claimed to be a New York-based lamp company that was closing after two decades in business and now offering customers a massive discount on their remaining inventory.

"It's not easy to close the doors of something that's been part of your soul. But the time has come. Aluné, our beloved lamp boutique in New York, is packing up for the very last time," their post said, showing an image of a middle-aged man and woman laying out their lamps on a sidewalk.

But after weeks online, the site has since been removed, and multiple experts said that the site's advertising was generated with AI. When ABC News visited their address on one of New York's priciest streets -- between retailers for Chanel and Versace -- there was no trace of the company or evidence that it ever existed.

None of these businesses responded to a request for comment from ABC News.

According to Chetty, massive advances in AI technology has made it easier to quickly create convincing sites that can fool even the savviest online shoppers.

"People can do this at scale, create these images, create these websites, put them up quickly, take them down quickly," she said.

And Chetty noted that those kinds of sites can thrive on social media, where consumers are often distracted and more likely to make a quick purchase. ABC News has identified dozens of videos on platforms like YouTube and TikTok where retailers used AI to generate videos showing fake craftspeople making their products. Expert analysis -- paired with online detection tools -- confirmed they were created with AI technology, and their websites were linked to generic holding companies or companies oversees.

None of the other retailers who were contacted by ABC News responded to a request for comment.

Many of the videos prey on customers' emotions by showing interactions that try to create sympathy by showing creators being picked on in public.

"This comment says, 'You're a 32-year-old man making Mario lamps for kids in your bedroom, let that sink in,'" one video said, mimicking a video format where creators respond to negative comments.

ABC News identified four nearly identical videos, where different middle-aged men -- seemingly in the same garage -- spoke the same script.

While Chetty said that AI videos like these might have been easier to spot a few years ago, even experts sometimes struggle to identify what's real from what's fake.

"Maybe you're walking down the street in New York, you're not thinking too deeply and you're just clicking away. That's kind of how they get you, right?" she said. "Because they know that they want you to make a quick decision. They know you're not paying careful attention. And it's very easy to kind of take advantage of you at that point."

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


Former sheriff's deputy Jason Meade convicted of reckless homicide in shooting of Casey Goodson

In this July 31, 2021, file photo, a Black Lives Matter activist holds a picture of Casey Goodson Jr. during a march and rally, in Columbus, Ohio. (Sopa Images via LightRocket via Getty Images, FILE)

(COLUMBUS, Ohio) -- A jury in Columbus, Ohio, reached a partial verdict on Thursday in the retrial of a former Ohio deputy Jason Meade, who was charged in the 2020 shooting death of 23-year-old Casey Goodson, Jr.

The jury found Meade guilty of reckless homicide, but failed to reach a verdict on the murder charge.

“We the jury, upon our oaths and law and evidence in its case find the defendant guilty of reckless homicide,” the judge read after a partial verdict was reached.

The judge said that the jury was hung on the murder charge and he declared a mistrial on that count. He also revoked Meade's bond after the partial verdict was reached. The decision came after the 12-member jury communicated to the judge earlier on Thursday that they were deadlocked and believed it was "impossible" for the group to reach a "unanimous decision" on a verdict. The judge asked them to resume deliberations.

Meade's first trial in Feb. 2024 ended in a mistrial after the jury failed to reach an agreement.

Goodson's mother, Tamala Payne, welcomed the jury's decision and said that Meade now "has to stand accountable for what he did to Casey." "It gives us closure. It gives us peace. And now I'm sure I speak for my family when I say this, I know now, Casey can rest," she added.

ABC News reached out to Meade's defense attorneys, but requests for comment were not immediately returned.

Brian Steel, the president of the police union that represented Meade, spoke out during a post-verdict press conference, saying that he is "disappointed" in the jury's decision.

Special prosecutor Tim Merkle said that the state is "pleased with the partial verdict."

"We appreciate the hard work the jury did. They have spoken, and we're pleased with that," he added.

Merkle said that while the murder charge remains "unresolved," prosecutors have not made a decision on whether they will pursue a third trial on that charge.

The jury, which is made up of nine women and three men, began deliberations on Wednesday afternoon and resumed on Thursday morning. Meade, who did not take the witness stand during the trial, pleaded not guilty.

On the day of the fatal shooting, Goodson had gone to a dentist appointment, prosecutors said, and was returning to his home while listening to music on his AirPods and carrying a bag of sandwiches when he was fatally shot.

Meade was working with the U.S. Marshals on that day in search of a potential violent fugitive when he fatally shot Goodson. Goodson was not the target of the search.

Meade’s defense team argued during the trial that the former sheriff’s deputy followed Goodson and pursued him after Goodson allegedly pointed a gun at other cars while driving.

At the center of the case was the defense team’s claim that Meade was acting in self-defense when he fatally shot Goodson, claiming that Goodson had pointed a gun at Meade before he was killed. Goodson was entering his home at the time.

Prosecutors disputed this claim and argued that Goodson’s fatal shooting was unjustified and said that the 23-year-old did not pose an “imminent threat” and was killed with his keys in the door as he tried to get inside.

A gun was found in Goodson's possession with the safety on, according to police. Goodson was a legal gun owner and had a concealed carry permit, which was found in his wallet, police said. No body camera video of the incident exists because at the time, Franklin County Sheriff's deputies were not issued body-worn camera equipment.

During the trial, which began with opening statements last week, the state called detectives, law enforcement officers, Goodson's family, a medical examiner, forensic firearms and use of force experts to the stand. Meanwhile, the defense called one witness -- a use-of-force expert -- before resting their case. The jury was shown body camera footage of the aftermath of the shooting, a reenactment video that was produced by the FBI and before the trial began, the jurors visited the scene of the incident.

During the trial, special prosecutor Tim Merkle argued on behalf of the state that this case is about the “six shots in the back” that killed Goodson.

"Six shots in the back," Merkle said. "The evidence will show that on Dec. 4, 2020, the defendant shot Casey Goodson Jr. six times in the back, killing him. At the time Casey had entered his house, he was carrying a bag of Subways and was listening to YouTube music on his AirPods."

Kaitlyn Stephens, a defense attorney for Meade, argued that Meade's fatal shooting of Goodson was a "justified tragedy" that occurred because Meade perceived a "threat" after Goodson "pointed a gun" at the sheriff's deputy -- a claim that prosecutors dispute.

"The evidence will show that Jason Meade was justified -- a justified tragedy as such," Stephens said.

"He's going into the house with a gun. That is not an imminent threat, that is not an immediate threat, that is not a threat," Merkle said. Stephens told jurors that the law requires them to consider the incident from Meade's perspective "as a reasonable" law enforcement officer.

"Our defense will require you to answer two questions. Question one, did Jason believe he was about to be shot when he saw Mr. Goodson point the gun at him?" Stephens said. "And question two was Jason's decision to use deadly force reasonable through the eyes of a reasonable police officer standing in Jason's shoes without 2020 hindsight.”

Goodson's family attended the trial, and his grandmother, Sharon Payne, his sister, Janae Jones and his uncle, Ernest Payne, Jr., testified on behalf of the state.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


Suspects arrested in $1M Apple delivery truck hijacking

Three individuals were arrested in New York on May 7, 2026, for their roles in a January 2026 armed hijacking of a truck making a delivery at the Apple store in the Americana shopping center in Manhasset. (Department of Justice, Eastern District of New York)

(NEW YORK) -- Three people were arrested Thursday in the January armed hijacking of a truck making a delivery at the Apple store in the Americana shopping center in Manhasset, New York City.

The delivery truck was filled with Apple merchandise valued at more than $1 million. The stolen goods included hundreds of devices and other accessories, including MacBooks, iPhones, iPads and Apple Watches, federal prosecutors said.

Alan Christhofer Cedeno-Ferrer, Michael Mejia-Nunez and Ennait Alexis Sirett-Padilla are accused of hijacking the truck and forcing the delivery workers to drive to a secluded location where they made off with more than $1.2 million worth of Apple products.

Victims were preparing to unload the merchandise when a black Honda Accord pulled up to the delivery truck. Three masked men, armed with handguns, got out of the car and approached the victims, according to court records.

They forced victim-1 into the back of the truck and zip-tied his hands. Victim-2 was ordered at gunpoint, into the driver’s seat to drive the truck. He was directed to a secluded parking area behind an office building less than a half mile away and then ordered into the back of the delivery truck with Victim-1, where his hands were also zip-tied, according to prosecutors.

The Accord and the delivery truck were followed to the location by a Home Depot box truck, authorities said. As captured by surveillance cameras, the Home Depot truck backed up to the rear of the delivery truck, so the cargo sections were aligned, according to prosecutors.

The Apple merchandise was then moved from the delivery truck to the Home Depot truck. Once they finished, they closed the cargo door to the delivery truck with the victims inside and left the location. One of the victims was able to free himself and call 911, according to prosecutors.

The defendants are expected to appear in federal court later Thursday, when federal prosecutors will seek their detention.

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Mississippi tornadoes leave more than a dozen injured and trail of destruction

Tornado ( Jeremy Woodhouse/Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) -- At least three tornadoes hit Mississippi overnight with at least 17 injuries reported and hundreds of homes damaged, officials said.

Approximately 500 homes were damaged statewide, primarily in Lamar and Lincoln counties, according to Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves.

The initial assessment shows a trail of devastation stretching about 16-miles long in Lamar County, nearly from one end of the county to the other, Lamar County Emergency Management Director James Smith told ABC News.

Some of the hardest-hit areas include Purvis and Brookhaven, as well as a mobile home park in Bogue Chitto, authorities said.

Baseball-sized hail and flooding was also reported in parts of the state as well as in Alabama, especially in and around Montgomery, where the state capitol building was evacuated during a special session debate on redistricting.

Mississippi has seen 62 tornadoes so far this year before Wednesday, all of them EF0 or EF1 strength.

As a cold front slowly sinks into the region, there is a chance that some storms could produce more damaging wind and tornadoes.

Over the next few days, widespread rounds of rain are expected to bring 1 to 4 inches throughout the South, which is dealing with a serious drought.

The National Weather Service Office in Jackson, Mississippi, will be conducting surveys on Thursday to confirm tornadoes along a major tornado path in Franklin, Lincoln and Lawrence counties as well as from Purvis to south of Hattiesburg, where there are several damage reports.

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DOJ probing $2.6 billion in oil trades related to Iran war, sources say

Signage during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Photographer: Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

(WASHINGTON) -- The Department of Justice is investigating a series of suspiciously timed trades in the oil market just ahead of major announcements by President Donald Trump and a top Iranian official about the war in Iran, sources told ABC News.

The DOJ, along with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, is probing at least four of these trades where traders made a total of more than $2.6 billion betting that oil prices would drop right before they did.

The DOJ and CFTC have not commented on the trades.

ABC News obtained the data of the four trades from the London Stock Exchange Group.

On March 23, 15 minutes before Trump announced that he would delay threatened attacks on Iran's power grid, traders bet more than $500 million that oil prices would fall.

On April 7, hours ahead of a temporary ceasefire announced by Trump, traders bet $960 million that oil prices would fall.

On April 17, 20 minutes before Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi posted on social media saying that the Strait of Hormuz was open, traders bet $760 million that oil prices would fall.

On April 21, 15 minutes before Trump announced he would extend the ceasefire, traders placed a series of bets worth $430 million that oil prices would fall.

The series of oil trades was first reported by Reuters and the data from LSEG does not indicate any identities behind these trades and does not prove individuals were trading based on insider information.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.


Lawsuits allege negligence by UPS, others before fiery, fatal November crash

Fire and smoke mark where a UPS cargo plane crashed near Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport on November 04, 2025 in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by Stephen Cohen/Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) -- A slew of new civil lawsuits allege UPS and its partners failed their responsibility to make sure a plane they put in the air was safe to fly -- and that negligence led to the fiery, fatal plane crash in Louisville, Kentucky, last year that claimed the lives of 15 people.

The complaints allege the plane was faulty, the risks were known and yet it left the ground on a nonstop trip to Honolulu on Nov. 4, 2025 anyway.

The lawsuits -- 15 in total -- were filed in Jefferson Circuit Court on behalf of more than 100 survivors and victims of the crash as well as impacted businesses.

The lawsuits, which include several wrongful death claims, name a lengthy list of defendants, including UPS, Boeing, GE, Allianz insurance and the company that performed maintenance and repair on the plane.

Also named as a defendant: the estate of one of the plane's pilots -- Capt. Richard Wartenburg, who perished in the crash -- who the lawsuits claim was "directly responsible for determining whether" the plane "was in a condition for safe flight."

The lawsuits claim the defendants let a "catastrophic failure" occur.

In a statement, UPS said in a statement, "We remain deeply saddened by Flight 2976. Our focus continues to be on supporting those affected and working closely with the National Transportation Safety Board as the investigation continues."

In a statement, Boeing said: "We extend our deepest condolences to the families and friends of those who lost their lives in this accident."​

'Huge ball of fire coming straight for us'
The new allegations come just on the heels of the crash's six-month anniversary.

The UPS jet -- a McDonnell Douglas MD-11 -- lost its left engine and pylon shortly after taking off from Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport last November, crashing just seconds into the flight, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.

Exploding in a fireball, it slammed into an area scrapyard, Grade A Recycling.

"I wake up every day and have to kind of relive it and bring myself back to reality," said Ashley Muse, who was there that day, and is a plaintiff in one of the suits.

"All you could see was a huge ball of fire coming straight for us, and everyone started screaming and running, and within seconds, it hit us, the whole building shook like we were in an earthquake," Muse told ABC News in an exclusive interview. 

Muse said she was saved by a colleague who later died. Her colleague Adam Bowman, who is a plaintiff in one of the suits, also jumped into action -- saying he pulled one victim out of the inferno, who later passed away from his injuries.

"I turned my head, all I saw was a massive fireball," Bowman said. "It started getting really hot, and thinking, I love my job, but I don't want to die here."

The lawsuit alleges the defendants, including UPS, the pilot, Boeing and others "negligently allowed" the aircraft "to be dispatched in an unsafe and an unairworthy condition resulting in the departure of the left pylon and engine from the wing causing the crash."

They "accepted the risk of an MD-11 crash by continuing to utilize the aircraft type without more frequent and rigorous inspections of the pylon assemblies," the filings said.

"People made decisions, corporations made decisions, to continue to operate these planes," said attorney Masten Childers III, who is representing the plaintiffs.

Childers said in this case, UPS and the other defendants "took those risks, and those risks came to a head on Nov. 4 ... when this plane fell out of the air on top of our clients."

"More could have and should have been done to ensure that those problems were remedied so things like what happened on the 4th didnt happen," Childers said.  

'It happened out of the blue'
One of those deaths was 3-year-old Kimberly Asa, who was with her grandfather Louisnes Fedon at Grade A Recycling on the day of the crash.

Left behind -- Kimberly's mother, and Louisnes' daughter.

"My dad was a really good person. My daughter, she was also a very bubbly person. I expected to watch her grow. I expected to always be able to run to my dad. So, the biggest thing is how it happened out of the blue," Sherline Fedon said. "It's not something that you hear about -- when I finally saw a plane had hit, I don't think anybody would have ever thought that it was their family. That's something that you see on the news, and never think that you would be a part of it, or someone that you love to be a part of that. So I think what sticks with me the most is how random, and unheard of, it feels to me." 

Kimberly "survived the initial impact" and "attempted to flee to safety from the explosion of nearly 220,000 pounds of jet fuel, seeking shelter from the smothering smoke and intense flames under a partially collapsed structure," the documents alleging their wrongful deaths stated.

Their autopsies indicated that their deaths were not quick, according to the lawsuits.

Kimberly "suffered from excessive smoke inhalation resulting in soot in her airway, charring of all of her body surfaces and heat related fractures to her skull, left ribs and both arms," according to the filings. Her cause of death was determined to be "smoke inhalation and thermal injuries resulting from the crash, explosion and subsequent fire" of the plane.

Her grandfather Louisnes also "survived the initial impact" and tried to flee with Kimberly, according to the filing. His "autopsy indicates that he suffered baking of his brain and right lung from the exposure to extreme temperature." His cause of death was determined as "carbon monoxide intoxication, smoke inhalation and thermal injuries" from the crash and fire.

'Known structural defects'
After the crash, federal investigators focused on metal fatigue cracks around the engine of the UPS plane that crashed on Nov. 4.

The lawsuits now home in on those cracks -- alleging that overstress fracture and failure of the pylon assembly "significantly contributed to the crash."

The lawsuits allege there were "known structural defects" with the MD-11F fleet of aircraft, citing a 2011 "service letter" issued by Boeing.

That letter informed operators of the MD-11 aircraft, including UPS, of the risk of bearing race failures, according to the lawsuits, which allege that despite that Boeing "did not alter the inspection interval for MD-11 spherical bearings and bearing races."

The lawsuits also allege Boeing "failed to provide adequate warning of the defective condition of the MD-11 and failed to provide a reasonably safer alternative."

Given what it called the "known risk" of the some of the plane's alleged defects, UPS and the other defendants "knew or shoud have known that the assembly required more frequent inspection(s)," the lawsuit stated, alleging that the cost of such inspections would have made that plane model "inefficient for operation from a cost perspective."

Regarding the actions of the pilot, the lawsuits argue Captain Wartenburg also had a duty to make sure his plane was safe to fly. Upon takeoff roll and rotation on the flight, a "repeated bell was sounding in the cockpit" but he "failed to act appropriately when presented with this alarm bell and failed to prevent the crash," the lawsuits allege.

UPS pilots, including Wartenberg, knew this plane and type "as a problem aircraft with multiple defects but Defendant Wartenberg and the UPS Defendants, jointly and severally, elected to operate N259UP anyway," the lawsuits claim.

In addition to those killed in the crash, others suffered "physical and psychological injuries," and businesses suffered financial loss and damage from the crash, according to the lawsuits.

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Nancy Mace says she has records from congressional sexual misconduct 'slush fund’

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., presents documents related to Rep. Cory Mills,R-Fla., as she participates in a House Armed Services Committee hearing with U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth in the Rayburn House Office Building on April 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

South Carolina Republican Rep. Nancy Mace says she has obtained records through a congressional subpoena that reveal the value of several confidential sexual misconduct and harassment settlements struck on behalf of members of Congress and paid at the expense of the U.S. taxpayer totaling more than $338,000 over a 10-year run -- while a letter to the House Oversight Committee shows that many additional records on the subject have been destroyed.

Mace shared the names of eight former members and the office of one former member shortly after obtaining the documents on Monday. 

None of the former members shared by Mace still hold public office anywhere, but the underlying disclosure offers a glimpse into the legislative branch's recent history addressing sexual harassment.

In a post on X, Mace -- a member of the House Oversight Committee -- first posted a picture of a binder she says contained more than 1,000 pages of records from the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights beginning in 2007 and stretching into 2017.

The settlements are paid by the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights Section 415 fund, which is authorized by the Congressional Accountability Act of 1995.

Among those named by Mace are former Rep. Patrick Meehan, R-Pa., and former Rep. Rodney Alexander, R-La., and former Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., and former Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., who both passed away shortly after leaving Congress.

Mace listed a settlement of $8,000 in 2009 for the office of McCarthy, who is alleged to have been aware of and conducted mistreatment related to a consensual sexual relationship between an aide and a senior staffer. She also faced allegations of discrimination based on sex and disability, and reprisal.

For Conyers, a $50,000 payment was made in 2010. He's alleged to have made advances on a staffer. Four years later, Conyers faced a hostile workplace, sexual harassment, age discrimination, and reprisal allegations, resulting in improper termination, resulting in a $27,111.75 payout.

Meehan is listed to have two cases involving alleged sexual harassment by a senior staffer that the member was aware of and alleged sexual harassment by the member. The severance pay period for the complainant is listed at $39,250.

Meehan confirmed to ABC News on Wednesday that he paid back the settlement after resigning.

"There is no comment. There is nothing [Mace] puts out that wasn't already public 8 years ago," Meehan wrote. "Yes, I personally repaid the full settlement amount within 30 days of leaving as I said I would."

Alexander, who left Congress in 2013 and went on to become the secretary of the Louisiana Department of Veterans Affairs, faced an allegation of a consensual sexual relationship with a staffer prior to her employment, resulting in her alleged mistreatment and firing, according to a source familiar with the document production. The payout was listed at $15,000.

Alexander told ABC News in a statement that the $15,000 settlement tied to his name was the result of "the behavior of two staffers" in his office.

"Nineteen years ago, during my tenure in Congress, there were two separate and unrelated incidents involving the behavior of two staffers in my office. The allegations were referred to the proper authorities and settlement payments were made by the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights," Alexander wrote. "After an immediate investigation, both offending staffers' employment with my office were terminated immediately. At no time during my tenure in Congress was any allegation made against me."

An attorney for Rep. Eric Massa, D-N.Y., who faced allegations of hostile workplace, sexual harassment and inappropriate touching, told ABC News in 2017 that the former congressman had no knowledge of the payments. There were three Massa cases listed and three settlements totaling to $115,000.

Former Rep. Blake Farenthold, R-Texas, told ABC News in 2018 that he had no intention of repaying the $84,000 sexual harassment settlement stemming from a 2014 complaint by a former congressional aide alleging sexual harassment, gender discrimination and retaliation. He resigned in 2018 and died last year.

The records surrounding nine cases were provided Monday to Mace and the House Oversight Committee by the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights as part of an initial document production pursuant to a committee subpoena, according to a letter signed by John N. Ohlweiler, general counsel at the OCWR, that was sent to the committee on April 24.

The letter presents "relevant statistical information" regarding OCWR cases from Jan. 1, 1996, through Dec. 12, 2018. The OCWR says it "approved a total of 349 awards or settlements to resolve complaints against legislative branch offices." 

"Some of these awards or settlements may have resolved more than one complaint filed by the same individual against the same office. Of these 349 awards or settlements, there were 80 that were settled by the Office of a Member of the House of Representatives or the Office of a Senator," the letter states.

ABC News has reviewed an April 24 letter to the committee, which does not name any of the lawmakers whose cases are detailed in the 1,000-page document production to the Oversight Committee, meeting an April 30 deadline imposed by a committee subpoena. A source familiar with the document production confirmed to ABC News that the names listed by Mace do appear in the 1,000-page response from OCWR, though ABC News has not yet independently reviewed the complete document production.

Mace says she will release the documents after carefully reviewing them to ensure that any sensitive information about victims is fully redacted.

In his letter to the committee, Ohlweiler explained how the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights determined which documents met the committee's objective to investigate sexual misconduct or harassment involving a member of Congress.

Ohlweiler's letter notes that the CAA Reform Act of 2018 requires OCR to establish a program for the permanent retention of records and OCR's current Record Retention Policy requires the digital preservation of records from all filed cases.

"We prioritized our efforts on identifying those cases involving allegations of actual Member misconduct -- particularly sexual misconduct or sexual harassment -- that resulted in awards or settlements, and locating the documents associated with those cases," Ohlweiler wrote Oversight Chairman James Comer and ranking Democrat Robert Garcia.

The letter from Ohlweiler explains that from the 80 total settlements, at least 20 case files "were destroyed pursuant to an 'OCWR Record Retention Policy' that required case records to be destroyed ten years after the case was fully closed" in accordance with a retention policy "put in place in 2013 to align OCWR with regular government-wide record retention practices."

The OCWR says it maintained a retention policy that required case records to be destroyed ten years after the case was fully closed -- a policy it put in place in 2013 to align OCWR with "regular government-wide record retention practices."

Ohlweiler's letter notes that the CAA Reform Act of 2018 requires OCR to establish a program for the permanent retention of records and OCR's current Record Retention Policy requires the digital preservation of records from all filed cases.

"These 20 destroyed physical case files dated to the time period between 1996 and 2003. There are 3 additional physical case files from 2003 and 2004 for which the 'OCWR Record Retention Policy -- Destruction Schedule' indicates the physical case files were destroyed, but we have not yet physically confirmed that destruction took place because the relevant boxes from long-term storage have not been examined."

Ohlweiler says that OCWR does still possess and has reviewed the original Settlement Agreements for these 23 cases -- including the terms of the settlements. But Ohlweiler says the documents "do not specify any details about the underlying allegations, including who was accused of committing the alleged misconduct."

There were six additional cases scheduled for destruction between 1997 and 2001 for which OCWR does not have the Settlement Agreement or the case file, according to Ohlweiler's letter. Ohlweiler says that information within the office's retired content management system confirms that these six cases were filed against member offices and were ultimately settled.

"For these 6 cases, the CMS does not provide any information regarding the terms of the settlement (except that only one of the six required a payment from the 416 Fund) or the details of the underlying allegations," Ohlweiler wrote.

"The results of my subpoena of Congress's sexual harassment slush fund are in. Nine members. One thousand pages," Mace posted on X on Monday. "All records prior to 2004 were destroyed -- which tells you everything you need to know about how long this has been buried. We are reviewing every page. We will name all nine. We will release the full 1,000 pages -- once we confirm that personally identifiable information of victims and witnesses has been properly redacted. Accountability is not a threat. It is a promise."

"Read that again: they destroyed all the evidence prior to 2004," Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Florida, reacted on X

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Court reinstates deportation proceedings against pro-Palestinian student Mohsen Mahdawi

Pro-Palestinian activists rally for Mohsen Mahdawi and protest against deportations outside of ICE Headquarters on April 15, 2025, in New York City. Mohsen Mahdawi, an organizer of pro-Palestinian demonstrations last year at Columbia University, was detained by the Department of Homeland Security during his naturalization interview in Vermont on Monday. (Photo by Adam Gray/Getty Images)

The Board of Immigration Appeals has reinstated deportation proceedings against pro-Palestinian student Mohsen Mahdawi, according to a court filing from his attorneys.

In February, Judge Nina Froes dropped the deportation case against the Columbia University student, ruling in part that the Department of Homeland Security failed to authenticate a memo allegedly signed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio claiming Mahdawi posed a threat to United States foreign policy. 

The Trump administration appealed that decision and the BIA, which skews conservative, overturned Froes' decision. 

he move reinstates deportation proceedings against Mahdawi, but it will be overseen by a different judge after Froes was terminated from her position. Her firing comes as critics of the Trump administration say it has sought to reshape immigration courts by replacing immigration judges in an attempt to ramp up deportations.

The Executive Office for Immigration Review did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for comment.

Mahdawi’s arrest is still being challenged in federal court, so the government can’t deport him for the moment, the ACLU said. He was detained in April 2025 when he arrived at his citizenship interview. 

"The government continues to weaponize the immigration system to silence dissent," Mahdawi said in a statement. "But it cannot erase the Constitution or the First Amendment, which protects free speech for all. The government is trying to punish and deport me, a stateless Palestinian refugee from the occupied West Bank, because it opposes my peaceful advocacy for human dignity and equal rights for Palestinians. But I remain unafraid and faithful that justice will prevail in America and in Palestine."

Arguing for his detainment last spring, lawyers for the Trump administration pointed to a 2015 FBI investigation, in which a gun shop owner alleged that Mahdawi had claimed to have built machine guns in the West Bank to kill Jews.

However, the FBI closed that investigation and Mahdawi was never charged with any crime, a point a federal judge highlighted when he ordered Mahdawi's release in May 2025.

 

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Army veteran accused of shooting wife found dead during manhunt: Authorities

Craig Berry is seen in an undated photo released by the Stewart County Sheriff's Office. (Stewart County Sheriff's Office)

(STEWART COUNTY, Tenn.) -- An Army Special Forces veteran accused of trying to kill his wife then fleeing into the woods was found dead, likely from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities said Wednesday.

Craig Berry, 53, went into the woods near his home in Dover on May 1 after allegedly shooting his wife, according to the Stewart County Sheriff's Office.

The incident sparked a dayslong manhunt involving assistance from the U.S. Marshals Service, Tennessee Highway Patrol and Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, the sheriff's office said.

"During search today, Stewart County Sheriff's Office SWAT, along with TBI agents, located the body of wanted subject Craig Berry," the Stewart County Sheriff's Office said in a statement. "Initial indications show he died due to a self-inflicted gunshot wound."

The U.S. Marshals also confirmed Wednesday that Berry is dead "and no longer a threat to the public."

Deputies responded to a domestic altercation at his residence around 1:30 a.m. on May 1, and Berry was gone before deputies arrived, authorities said. His wife was transported to a medical facility, according to the sheriff's office, which did not provide details on her condition.

He was wanted for attempted second-degree murder, aggravated assault with a weapon, domestic assault, and leaving the scene of an accident, according to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, which had added him to the state's Most Wanted list earlier Wednesday.

Berry was an Army Special Forces veteran with "extensive military training," according to the U.S. Marshals Service, which on Tuesday had also issued a wanted bulletin for the suspect.

He had "extensive training in survival tactics," the Stewart County Sheriff's Office said, and had warned that it could be a "lengthy process" to capture him.

Berry was last seen alive in the wooded area near Old Paris Landing in Dover on May 2, according to the U.S. Marshals.

He was armed with "at least one handgun" and may have taken extra ammunition, Stewart County Sheriff's Office spokesperson Paulette Redman said in a statement on Monday. He was captured by a trail camera wearing camouflage clothing, the sheriff's office said.

The U.S. Marshals Service was offering a reward of up to $5,000 for information on Berry, while the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation was offering $2,500.

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Texas man federally charged in Secret Service-involved shooting near National Mall

A still from video that federal prosecutors say shows Michael Marx running from U.S. Secret Service officers. (Department of Justice)

(WASHINGTON) -- A 45-year-old Texas man has been charged in connection with a shooting near the Washington Monument on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., in which a teenage bystander was hit by gunfire, federal prosecutors announced Wednesday.

Michael Marx faces three charges in connection with Monday's shooting -- felony assault of federal officers with a dangerous weapon, discharging a firearm during a crime of violence and unlawful possession of a firearm, the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office said.

The complaint includes new images from CCTV showing the frantic scene during the shooting, which occurred at a busy intersection where multiple civilians were crossing the street Monday afternoon.

After a plainclothes Secret Service agent observed Marx in possession of a firearm, several uniformed Secret Service officers responded and located the suspect at 15th Street and Independence Avenue SW, at the time Vice President JD Vance's motorcade was departing the White House, according to the complaint.

Officers gave "verbal commands" to the suspect, who began to run, according to the complaint. As officers chased him, the suspect pulled a firearm from his waistband while running and began firing toward one of them once he reached the sidewalk, according to the complaint. A bystander behind the officer was struck in the leg, it said.

Officers returned fire, striking Marx in his hand, left arm and upper abdomen and collapsed at the intersection, according to the complaint.

Investigators recovered a handgun loaded with 9mm ammunition from the area where Marx fell, according to federal prosecutors. He does not hold a license to carry a handgun in Washington, they said.

As U.S. Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro first told ABC News on Tuesday, Marx allegedly made statements to officers, including "F--- the White House" and "Kill me, kill me, kill me," while being transported in an ambulance to a hospital.

"We will prove this defendant carried an illegal firearm into the heart of Washington, D.C., opened fire at Secret Service officers near a crowded intersection, and shot an innocent bystander who was simply crossing the street with his family," Pirro said in a statement Wednesday. "My office will pursue the most serious charges available against anyone who brings gun violence to our streets, particularly when that violence unfolds steps from the seat of our government and the path of the Vice President of the United States."

Court records do not list any attorney information for Marx at this time.

The teen injured in the shooting has since been released from the hospital, Pirro told ABC News.

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Trump asks judges to pause E. Jean Carroll ruling so he can appeal case to Supreme Court

E. Jean Carroll arrives for her civil defamation trial against President Donald Trump at Manhattan Federal Court on January 22, 2024 in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) -- President Donald Trump on Wednesday asked a federal appeals court in New York to pause its ruling rejecting his challenge to the writer E. Jean Carroll's defamation lawsuit so he can pursue an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

A jury awarded Carroll $83 million in damages in 2024 after she successfully argued that Trump defamed her with comments he made disputing her claim that he sexually abused her in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room in the 1990s.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined last week to re-hear Trump's claim of immunity and his attempt to substitute the United States as a defendant in Carroll's case.

Trump on Wednesday asked the 2nd Circuit to stay its ruling in order to allow him "to present important questions relating to, without limitation, Presidential immunity and the Westfall Act to the Supreme Court."

If the stay is not granted, Trump's attorneys said he would suffer irreparable harm.

The jury in 2024 found that, as a result of Trump's comments, Carroll was harassed and humiliated, subjected to death threats, and feared for her physical safety for years. Trump has denied all wrongdoing.

A separate jury in an earlier trial awarded Carroll $5 million in damages after holding Trump liable for defamation and sexual abuse. 

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Ted Turner, cable television pioneer and CNN founder, dies at 87

Turner Enterprises CEO Ted Turner address the Newsmaker Luncheon on renewable and alternative energy at the National Press Club April 19, 2011 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) -- Ted Turner, the television and media mogul who launched CNN -- the first 24-hour cable news network -- and a roster of successful TV and entertainment brands, died on Wednesday, according to the network. He was 87.

"Ted was an intensely involved and committed leader, intrepid, fearless and always willing to back a hunch and trust his own judgement," according to a statement from Mark Thompson, the chairman and CEO of CNN Worldwide. "He was and always will be the presiding spirit of CNN. Ted is the giant on whose shoulders we stand, and we will all take a moment today to recognize him and his impact on our lives and our world."

"On behalf of the Turner family, it is with great sadness that we announce the passing of philanthropist, environmentalist and cable pioneer Ted Turner who died peacefully today at age 87, surrounded by his family," a statement from Turner Enterprises said.

The company added, "He charmed people he met with his warmth and general lack of conceit, despite his many successes and celebrity – an attribute made apparent in his response to anyone who addressed him as "Mr. Turner" – he'd always reply, "Call me Ted!"

A private family service is planned and a public memorial will be held at a later date, Turner Enterprises said.

Turner announced in 2018 he was battling the progressive brain disorder Lewy body dementia, acknowledging issues with his memory.

Born in Cincinnati, Robert Edward Turner III was raised in Savannah, Georgia. He attended Brown University briefly before leaving the university and joining the U.S. Coastal Guard Reserve during the Vietnam War.

Turner began his career as an executive at his father's advertising business, Turner Advertising Company. Following the death of his father, he became president and chief executive of the company and turned the firm into a global enterprise.

He entered the television business in the early 1970's when he acquired an Atlanta UHF station, WJRJ, and renamed it WTCG. The station originated the "superstation" concept, transmitting via satellite to cable systems across the country. Later renamed TBS, the station became a precedent for the modern basic cable station.

On June 1, 1980, Turner Broadcasting System launched CNN, the first 24-hour cable news network. In his launch speech at the network's Atlanta headquarters in June 1980, he expressed hope that CNN's national and international coverage would "bring together in brotherhood and kindness and friendship and in peace the people of this nation and this world."

CNN quickly made its mark covering major news events such as the 1982 Lebanon War and the 1986 Challenger explosion as they happened.

A chain of successful cable television brands followed for Turner, including CNN International, Cartoon Network, TNT and Turner Classic Movies. Turner Broadcasting later acquired the film studios Castle Rock Entertainment and New Line Cinema.

Turner's company also expanded into sports starting in the late 1970s, acquiring the MLB's Atlanta Braves and the NBA's Atlanta Hawks. The Hawks won three division titles under the company's ownership. The Braves won the 1995 World Series.

In 1988, Turner ventured into the professional wrestling business, purchasing Jim Crockett Promotions and renaming it as World Championship Wrestling (WCW). The company served as the main competitor to Vince McMahon's World Wrestling Federation (WWF) over the next decade. WCW was purchased by McMahon's company in 2001.

In October 1996, Turner Broadcasting merged with Time Warner Inc., and in 2001, Time Warner merged with AOL to create AOL Time Warner.

Turner also made his mark as a philanthropist. In 1990, he founded Turner Foundation which supports efforts for improving air and water quality, developing initiatives to protect the climate and maintaining wildlife habitat protection, among other initiatives. The Turner Foundation says it has given more than $380 million to hundreds of organizations since its founding.

In 1997, Turner announced a historic pledge of up to $1 billion to the United Nations and the following year, he created the United Nations Foundation (UNF). The organization supports the goals and objectives of the United Nations to promote "a more peaceful, prosperous and just world."

Speaking to ABC's "This Week" in 2012, he described his interest in supporting U.N. efforts.

"Everybody needs help sometime, no matter how rich and powerful you are," he said. "I did not know for sure when I started that it was going to work...there were a lot of things that weren't getting done, that are getting done now, done a lot more quickly."

He added, "Saving the world is a hard job."

Turner also launched the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI), a think tank he co-chaired with former Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia that seeks to reduce "nuclear and biological threats imperiling humanity."

He was the recipient of numerous awards, including Time Magazine's 1991 "Man of the Year," the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences' Lifetime Achievement Award, the Audubon Medal from the Audubon Society, and the Edward R. Murrow Award for Lifetime Achievement in Communication. He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2004.

Turner was married three times, including to actress Jane Fonda from 1991 to 2001. He is survived by five children, fourteen grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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Correspondents' dinner shooting suspect indicted by a grand jury on 4 counts

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(WASHINGTON) -- Cole Tomas Allen, the suspect in the shooting at the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner, was indicted Tuesday by a grand jury on four counts -- three of which he had already been charged by criminal complaint.

Those initial charges he was indicted on are attempting to assassinate the president, transportation of a firearm with intent to commit a felony and discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence. The fourth new charge is assaulting a federal officer with a deadly weapon, according to the indictment.

The California native was tackled by law enforcement after the gunfire April 25 inside the Washington, D.C., Hilton hotel, where thousands of journalists, as well as President Donald Trump and members of his Cabinet, were gathered for the annual dinner.

Allen did not reach the ballroom, where the dinner was underway. A Secret Service member was shot during the incident, but the bullet hit the agent's protective vest, officials said.

Allen -- who officials say traveled by train from California to D.C. -- allegedly left a note which said that administration officials were his targets and were "prioritized from highest-ranking to lowest," according to the criminal complaint against him.

The suspect allegedly wrote that Secret Service agents were targets "only if necessary, and to be incapacitated non-lethally if possible," the complaint said.

Allen has not yet entered a plea.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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