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Updating . . .
California Policy and Politics Friday
Explosive that killed 3 L.A. County sheriff’s deputies was recovered in Santa Monica, source says -- Three deputies were killed Friday in an explosion at the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Biscailuz Center Training Academy in East L.A., the deadliest incident for the agency in more than 160 years. Richard Winton, Nathan Solis, Hannah Fry, Christopher Buchanan and Connor Sheets in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
California sues Trump administration over loss of high-speed rail funding -- The lawsuit calls the administration’s actions “arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, and contrary to law, and threatens to wreak significant economic damage on the Central Valley, the State, and the Nation.” Colleen Shalby in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Fox News’ Jesse Watters admits mistake in program claiming Newsom lied about Trump call -- Faced with a $787-million defamation suit filed by the governor, Watters said he misunderstood Newsom’s X post about his communications with the president. Stephen Battaglio in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
Trump and Bondi want to turn Alcatraz back into a prison. Here’s the poop problem -- Alcatraz does not have its own wastewater treatment plant or water pipes connecting to the mainland. Right now, boats ferry wastewater from the national park’s restrooms to San Francisco, where it enters the municipal sewage system. If the city chose not to accept such a delivery, the federal government could have a serious problem on its hands. Tara Duggan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/18/25
Garofoli: Escape from Epstein: Trump officials stage a diversion with Alcatraz visit -- Attorney General Pam Bondi and Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum broke two unofficial records during their junket to San Francisco Thursday purportedly to, as Burgum put it, “start the work to renovate and reopen” Alcatraz as a federal prison: Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/18/25
CEQA
From green icon to housing villain: The fall of California’s landmark environmental law -- Democrats pared back one of the state's preeminent policies to restore trust with voters frustrated by the high cost of living. Jeremy B. White Politico -- 07/18/25
Street
California lawmakers are quietly working to roll back criminal justice reforms -- California lawmakers are attempting to claw back reforms their colleagues approved in pursuit of making racial profiling less common, police agencies more transparent and juries more representative. Raheem Hosseini in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/18/25
Uvalde school shooter was fueled by Instagram and ‘Call of Duty,’ L.A. lawsuit alleges -- Families from Uvalde, Texas, are traveling to Los Angeles to confront tech giant Meta and “Call of Duty” publisher Activision in court, alleging they market gun violence to young people through video games and social media. Sandra McDonald in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
‘We are all eating’: Inside California’s secret industry that props up mass shoplifting -- The investigation brought authorities from high end cosmetic stores in the suburbs to dusty flea markets in the valley, to an Oakland lot where suspected shoplifters would pull up in daytime with jumbo garbage bags full of items. Nate Gartrell in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/17/25
Murder and burglary charges filed in shooting of ‘American Idol’ executive and husband -- A 22-year-old man was charged Thursday with killing an “American Idol” music supervisor and her musician husband who walked into their Encino home during a burglary. Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Can a county fire a sheriff behind closed doors? Advocacy group threatens to sue for access -- The First Amendment Coalition is urging San Mateo County to open to the public its deliberations on removing embattled Sheriff Christina Corpus. Nigel Duara Calmatters -- 07/18/25
ICE
ICE is gaining access to trove of Medicaid records, adding new peril for immigrants -- The Trump administration is forging ahead with a plan that is sure to fuel alarm across California’s immigrant communities: handing over the personal data of millions of Medicaid recipients to federal immigration officials who seek to track down people living in the U.S. illegally. Jenny Jarvie and Hannah Fry in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
Border Patrol raids in Sacramento intended to send message: ‘No such thing as a sanctuary state’ -- Border Patrol agents raided a Home Depot and other locations in Sacramento on Thursday in what appeared to be a heavily orchestrated operation intended to send a message that the Trump administration would not back down on immigration enforcement, despite legal blockades. Rachel Uranga and Brittny Mejia in the Los Angeles Times$ Wendy Fry and Sergio Olmos Calmatters -- 07/17/25
Trump wants to hire 10,000 new ICE agents. Is that goal doable? -- Past hiring sprees by the Border Patrol have proved challenging. One recruitment push resulted in a wave of high-profile corruption cases. Andrea Castillo in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
Sacramento’s ‘Good Trouble’ rally draws hundreds, hours after immigration arrests -- In front of the Capitol building about 800 people gathered as part of the nationwide protest against the Trump administration. Called “Good Trouble Lives On,” the demonstration focused focusing on racial justice and voting rights. Amelia Wu in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 07/18/25
‘Good Trouble’ draws hundreds of protesters to downtown San Diego -- It was the largest of several Good Trouble Lives On protests throughout the region, and one of several nationwide. Teri Figueroa, Tammy Murga in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/18/25
Justice Department requests lists of all noncitizen inmates being held in California jails -- The Justice Department said it hopes for voluntary cooperation from California counties, but will pursue legal recourse to force compliance if necessary. Kevin Rector and Connor Sheets in the Los Angeles Times$ Jakob Rodgers in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/17/25
L.A. County sheriff says there’s ‘no choice’ but to honor ICE warrants for jail inmates -- Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said Thursday that his department has “no choice” but to turn inmates over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement when it receives federal judicial warrants seeking the transfer of inmates in its county jails. Connor Sheets in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Bird Flu
Immigration crackdown could stymie efforts to fight bird flu outbreak, experts fear -- As authorities brace for a potential resurgence in bird flu cases this fall, infectious disease specialists warn that the Trump administration’s crackdown on undocumented immigrants could hamper efforts to stop the spread of disease. Susanne Rust in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
Workplace
Port of Oakland shipments drop dramatically as tariffs spur ‘market recalibration’ in trade -- The Port recorded a 10.1% drop in June over the previous month as Trump’s tariffs cast uncertainty into trade relationships abroad. Chase Hunter in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/18/25
San Francisco AI company lays off 200 after Meta’s multibillion-dollar deal -- Just weeks after Meta invested $14.3 billion into Scale AI and tapped its founder, Alexandr Wang, to lead its new artificial intelligence initiative, the data-labeling startup is cutting roughly 200 full-time employees — about 14% of its staff — and parting ways with 500 contractors worldwide. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/18/25
Stephen Colbert’s ‘Late Show’ canceled by CBS, ends May 2026 -- CBS is axing “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” in May 2026, the host told an audience at a taping Thursday. The announcement came three days after Colbert spoke out against Paramount Global, parent company of CBS, settling with President Donald Trump over a “60 Minutes” story. Alicia Rancilio and Andrew Dalton Associated Press -- 07/18/25
California Forever
Billionaire-backed Bay Area city pitches plans for factory hub -- California Forever, the proposed futuristic community backed by billionaire venture capitalists, is now billing itself as a manufacturing center a year after local opposition forced it to withdraw plans to incorporate a new city. John Gittelsohn, Bloomberg in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/18/25
Wildfire
Winds behind fierce California wildfires will change, study finds -- Santa Ana winds have driven some of California’s most devastating wildfires, including the destructive Palisades and Eaton fires that scorched Los Angeles in January. Jack Lee in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/18/25
January fire victims face little used mediation in faceoff with insurers -- After receiving more than 1,000 complaints from Jan. 7 fire victims about how insurers are handling their claims, state regulators are considering referring hundreds of the cases to mediation — a little used practice that some consumer advocates fear could hurt policyholders. Laurence Darmiento in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
Altadena’s rough real estate market: Slower sales, lower prices, lottery winner plucking up properties -- Eaton fire victims in Altadena are confronting decisions about whether to rebuild or sell. Prices are falling as available lots fill up the market, agents say. Terry Castleman in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
HIV/AIDS
Rep. Garcia of Long Beach asks RFK Jr. to explain targeting of HIV/AIDS funding for cuts -- Garcia asserted that Kennedy has a history of spreading HIV/AIDS misinformation, and questioned whether that had played a role in billions of dollars in cuts to prevention, treatment and research funding. Kevin Rector in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Education
UC tuition hike proposal gets a tepid response and many questions from regents -- University of California regents — confronted with an uncertain financial outlook amid Trump administration cuts, state budget tightening and inflation — had a tepid response and many questions Thursday as they began debate on a proposal to increase tuition and set aside less of that revenue for financial aid. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
What skills do employers want in college graduates? New UC tool has answers -- So that the UC could better develop its academic programs to prepare students for the changing workforce, the UC created a new data tool to show where tens of thousands of alumni work in California and the skills those employers seek. Mikhail Zinshteyn Calmatters -- 07/17/25
‘Like having a hand cut off’: California schools reeling after AmeriCorps cuts -- Trump cut AmeriCorps, laying off over 5,600 of California’s public service workers. Because of a lawsuit, the state’s program can restart, at least temporarily, but schools and disaster relief sites are still reeling from staffing shortages. Adam Echelman and Carolyn Jones Calmatters -- 07/18/25
Walters: California is finally adopting phonics, fulfilling a grandmother’s dream -- Marion Joseph died in 2022 and therefore cannot celebrate what at long last is happening in California to improve children’s abysmal levels of reading comprehension. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 07/18/25
Gilead
Foster City drugs giant Gilead to pay $202 million over alleged kickback scheme -- Foster City pharmaceuticals giant Gilead Sciences has agreed to pay a $202 million settlement over allegations in a lawsuit by state and federal authorities that it paid doctors kickbacks, sent them on trips and fed them dinners at fancy restaurants to promote the company’s HIV drugs, used to treat the virus that causes AIDS. Ethan Baron in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/18/25
Also
CalMatters: Holding the state accountable for 10 years, and we’re just getting started -- In our first decade, CalMatters journalism has brought communities together, inspired lawmakers to create a better California and made the state more accountable to Californians. Sisi Wei Calmatters -- 07/18/25
Giant pandas, tiger attacks and the ugly fight to control the San Francisco Zoo -- The San Francisco Zoo, a beloved but crumbling seaside Art Deco treasure, is in trouble and facing controversies that could imperil the planned arrival of two giant pandas from China. Sonja Sharp in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/18/25
The nation’s first Vietnamese American bishop formally takes over San Diego’s diocese -- Michael Pham has already made his mark by defending local immigrants facing deportation. Blake Nelson in the San Diego Union Tribune$ -- 07/18/25
POTUS 47
Jeffrey Epstein’s Friends Sent Him Bawdy Letters for a 50th Birthday Album. One Was From Donald Trump -- The leather-bound book was compiled by Ghislaine Maxwell. The president says the letter ‘is a fake thing.’ Khadeeja Safdar and Joe Palazzolo in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/18/25
Trump will sue the WSJ, directs Bondi to unseal Epstein material -- Trump said he had personally warned the Journal’s owner, Rupert Murdoch, and its editor in chief, Emma Tucker, that the letter was “fake,” calling the story “false, malicious, and defamatory.” Irie Sentner Politico Glenn Thrush in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
House Republicans Dangle Possible Vote on Epstein Files, After Voter Backlash -- The House Rules Committee laid the groundwork for an eventual vote to call for release of the Epstein files, reflecting Republican uneasiness with the president’s refusal to divulge information from the investigation. Michael Gold in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
A Timeline of What We Know About Trump and Epstein -- Donald Trump was friendly for at least 15 years with Jeffrey Epstein, the multimillionaire financier and convicted sex offender who died in prison in 2019. Luke Broadwater in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
The Global Risks That Come With the Loss of an Independent Fed -- President Trump’s threat to attempt to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has raised a pressing but potentially unanswerable question: What would the global economy and financial markets look like without an independent U.S. central bank? David Uberti and Justin Lahart in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/17/25
Trump is winning in the Supreme Court because its conservatives believe in strong executive power -- The court’s conservative majority has intervened for President Trump in brief orders with no explanation, prompting criticism from Democrats and progressives. David G. Savage in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
In the Trump Administration, Watchdogs Are Watching Their Backs -- The president has fired or demoted over 20 inspectors general since he took office. Employees say they are demoralized and reluctant to pursue investigations that could prompt political blowback. Luke Broadwater in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
'Final nail:' Trump administration memo could strike fatal blow to wind and solar power -- The Trump administration has been aggressively working to suffocate the wind and solar industry in the United States. Its latest action could do the trick. Zack Colman and Josh Siegel Politico -- 07/18/25
White House shares diagnosis in rare acknowledgment of Trump’s age -- The White House on Thursday said that President Donald Trump has been diagnosed with a mild but chronic illness related to his age — a rare admission from one of the nation’s oldest presidents who has long sought to project vigor. Emily Davies in the Washington Post$ -- 07/18/25
Iran bomb damage intel suggests two nuclear sites not ‘obliterated’ -- U.S. officials briefed on the evolving intelligence assessment from Operation “Midnight Hammer” caution that the claim of total destruction may be overstated. Alex Horton and Warren P. Strobel in the Washington Post$ -- 07/18/25
California Policy and Politics Thursday
Murder and burglary charges filed in fatal shooting of ‘American Idol’ executive and husband -- A 22-year-old man was charged Thursday with killing an “American Idol” music supervisor and her musician husband who walked into their Encino home during a burglary. Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Bondi, other officials tour S.F.’s Alcatraz as part of Trump’s pledge to reopen prison -- Beating the usual rush of tourists, the U.S. attorney general and interior secretary traveled early Thursday to Alcatraz, where they were expected to announce a highly improbable plan to reopen the prison on the San Francisco Bay island, in what appeared to be a publicity stunt designed to portray President Donald Trump as tough on crime while antagonizing a famously liberal city. Anna Bauman, Jessica Flores, Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Salvador Hernandez in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Newsom slams Trump’s $4B cut to California bullet train as ‘illegal’ -- Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday condemned the Trump administration’s decision to rescind $4 billion in federal funding for California’s high-speed rail project, calling the move “illegal” and vowing to fight back. “Trump wants to hand China the future and abandon the Central Valley. We won’t let him,” Newsom said in a statement. Aidin Vaziri in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
Trump administration pulls billions in funding for high-speed rail project -- The Trump administration has canceled billions of dollars in funding for California’s high-speed rail project after the state agency rejected the federal government’s assessment of the project’s failings. Colleen Shalby in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Pelosi slams imminent Trump plan to announce Alcatraz reopening: ‘Stupidest initiative yet’ -- The Trump administration appears to be gearing up to announce it will reopen Alcatraz as a federal prison, an idea it has teased for months. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
Citing security threats, California lawmakers want to shield their addresses from public -- California lawmakers are advancing a measure that would curb journalists’ access to their home addresses and contact information through their voter registration records, an attempt watchdog groups say hinders the public’s ability to hold politicians accountable. Yue Stella Yu Calmatters -- 07/17/25
Behind the masks: Who are the people rounding up immigrants in California? -- Many of them belong to the Border Patrol, the agency that traditionally has policed the nation’s border with Mexico. But the Trump administration sent officers from other agencies to Los Angeles, too, including the FBI and special tactical teams from the Department of Homeland Security not widely seen until now. Michael Lozano Calmatters -- 07/17/25
National Guard came to L.A. to fight unrest. Troops ended up fighting boredom -- They were deployed by the Trump administration to combat “violent, insurrectionist mobs” in and around Los Angeles, but in recent days the only thing many U.S. Marines and California National Guard troops seemed to be fighting was tedium. Jenny Jarvie, Grace Toohey and Christopher Buchanan in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Gov. Newsom criticizes Trump’s use of National Guard after removal of some troops -- A day after the Pentagon ordered the withdrawal of half of the National Guard troops deployed in Los Angeles, Gov. Gavin Newsom criticized President Trump for wasting hundreds of millions of dollars to appear “tough” by punishing immigrants. Noah Goldberg and Taryn Luna in the Los Angeles Times$ Teresa Liu in the Orange County Register$ -- 07/17/25
Trump’s National Guard Troops Are Questioning Their Mission in L.A. -- Thousands of National Guard members have served in the L.A. region since last month. Six soldiers spoke in interviews about low morale over the deployment. Shawn Hubler in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
Army vet calls for investigation after being detained for three days in ICE raid -- A U.S. Army veteran who was detained during the massive immigration raid in Ventura County last week said Wednesday that he wants “a full investigation” into how he could have been held behind bars for three days despite being an American citizen. Jessica Garrison in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Lawsuit targets ICE arrests at immigration courthouses -- Immigration courthouses, once considered safe places for migrants seeking the right to remain in the United States, have become sites of massive arrests and deportation orders under a Trump administration policy that was challenged in a nationwide lawsuit Wednesday. Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
California’s marijuana industry was already in crisis. Then the ICE raids started -- Recent immigration raids on Southern California cannabis facilities have shaken California’s already beleaguered marijuana industry as leaders worry about a renewed federal assault on farms and dispensaries that could scare workers into staying home and further cripple the state’s multibillion-dollar industry. Joe Garofoli in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
Donald Trump’s immigration agenda is largely avoiding a vital California region -- Those interviewed said the influence of powerful agriculture businesses, Trump’s focus on creating a political spectacle in Southern California and a court ruling that has restricted some enforcement in the Central Valley could be protecting the industry. Stephen Hobbs and Mathew Miranda in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 07/17/25
Weather Service cuts are harming agriculture, worsening wildfire danger, California senators say -- California lawmakers are growing increasingly concerned about federal staffing cuts at the National Weather Service, which they say are harming the state’s agriculture industry and putting critical fire operations in jeopardy. Hayley Smith in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
California to provide LGBTQ suicide prevention hotline after Trump administration axes it -- The move comes weeks after the Trump administration announced it would no longer provide specialized support for LGBTQ+ youth on the national suicide prevention hotline. Molly Gibbs in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/17/25
How Republicans Supersized Silicon Valley’s Favorite Tax Break -- Tucked into the huge set of tax cuts that Republicans passed into law this month was the expansion of an unusually valuable tax break for start-up investors. Andrew Duehren in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
The mother of an L.A. teen who took his own life is fighting for a new mental health tool for LGBTQ+ youth -- Bridget McCarthy believes that if her son Riley Chart had quick and easy access to a suicide prevention hotline designed for queer young people, he might be alive today. Tyrone Beason in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Workplace
Intel eyes hundreds more Bay Area job cuts as tech layoffs worsen -- Intel has decided to slash well over 700 Bay Area jobs in July as the longtime chipmaker embarks on a restructuring it hopes will create a more nimble company. George Avalos in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/17/25
Hollywood’s being reshaped by generative AI. What does that mean for screenwriters? -- Since its launch in November 2022, hundreds of millions of people have used ChatGPT to write wedding toasts, college essays, apology texts, bad jokes and even worse poetry. Billy Ray — Oscar-nominated screenwriter and unapologetic human being — is not one of them. Josh Rottenberg in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
San Francisco SPCA announces layoffs of animal hospital and shelter staff -- San Francisco’s largest animal shelter and veterinary hospital, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, announced layoffs of 32 people or 11% of its staff on Wednesday. Tara Duggan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
Wildfire Recovery
Conspiracy theories thwart rebuilding plan after L.A. County wildfires -- After a social media firestorm based on misinformation, a proposal to create a new housing authority to help rebuild after January’s wildfires fails to pass in the state Legislature. Liam Dillon in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Six months after the fire, has Mayor Karen Bass done enough for the Palisades? -- Mayor Karen Bass’ political image was badly bruised in the wake of the fires, but she has compensated amid a string of historically good headlines. Julia Wick and Matt Hamilton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Water
Cost to build largest new reservoir in California in 50 years increases by $2 billion to at least $6.2 billion -- Construction costs to build the largest new reservoir in California in 50 years, a vast 13-mile-long off-stream lake that would provide water to 500,000 acres of Central Valley farmlands and 24 million people, including residents of Santa Clara County, parts of the East Bay and Los Angeles, have risen sharply. Paul Rogers in the San Jose Mercury$ -- 07/17/25
Education
UC to consider increasing tuition and cutting how much of it goes to financial aid -- University of California regents — confronted with an uncertain financial outlook amid Trump administration cuts, state budget tightening and inflation — are considering whether to increase tuition and set aside less of that revenue for financial aid. Jaweed Kaleem in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Orange Unified is weighing school consolidations amid enrollment declines -- Faced with falling enrollment, the Orange Unified School District is exploring a proposal to consolidate schools, with four campus pairings currently under consideration. Hanna Kang in the Orange County Register$ -- 07/17/25
Students with discrimination complaints left in limbo, months after California civil rights office closed -- The U.S. Supreme Court's decision to allow mass layoffs in the Department of Education stalls pending cases. Emma Gallegos EdSource -- 07/17/25
Anonymous benefactor helps SFUSD open new Mandarin immersion school -- An anonymous benefactor will help spur San Francisco public schools to expand Chinese language programs in the district, including the opening of a new Mandarin immersion school for students in the fall of 2027, district officials announced Wednesday. Jill Tucker, Ko Lyn Cheang in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
Street
Menendez brothers’ freedom: What would the governor consider? -- A judge’s decision to make the Menendez brothers’ eligible for parole by reducing their sentences to 50 years to life set up a high-stakes parole board hearing scheduled for August. Should the parole board back their release, Newsom would have 90 days to decide whether to reject parole. Sean Emery in the Orange County Register$ -- 07/17/25
Sacramento County man in Jan. 6 riot pardoned by Trump convicted for child porn -- After a one‑day trial, a jury in federal court found Kyle Travis Colton, 37, of Citrus Heights, guilty of one count of receiving child pornography, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Sacramento announced in a news release. Rosalio Ahumada in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 07/17/25
Tom Girardi, 86-year-old disbarred lawyer, begins prison sentence as dementia worsens -- The 86-year-old disbarred lawyer, once the most prominent trial attorney in California, will likely spend the rest of his life behind bars after being convicted of wire fraud last year. Harriet Ryan and Matt Hamilton in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Also
Walters: New California budget papers over $20 billion deficit, ignores day of reckoning -- When Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislative leaders were drafting a more-or-less final 2025-26 state budget last month, they were closing what they described as a $12 billion deficit, a number that the state’s media repeatedly cited. Dan Walters Calmatters -- 07/17/25
Barack and Michelle Obama address divorce rumors in podcast episode -- “There hasn’t been one moment in our marriage where I’ve thought about quitting on my man,” Michelle Obama said on the podcast she hosts with her brother. Brianna Tucker and Niha Masih in the Washington Post$ -- 07/17/25
Connie Francis, legendary singer of ‘Who’s Sorry Now?’ and ‘Where the Boys Are,’ dies at 87 -- Connie Francis, the angelic-voiced singer who was one of the biggest recording stars of the late 1950s and early 1960s, has died. She was 87. Stephen Thomas Erlewine in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
Mother lost with son in dense California forest uses trail of notes to point rescuers their way -- A missing mother and her child were found in deep California forestland recently by rescuers who located them after following a trail of notes the woman had left behind, authorities said. In another unmodern twist in this rescue tale, searchers also got help from ham radio. Christopher Buchanan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
Berkeley professor’s ex-wife arrested in his slaying in Greece -- Greek authorities arrested the ex-wife of a UC Berkeley professor in connection with his slaying in Athens earlier this month. Nathan Solis in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 07/17/25
‘Kaz’ Kajimura, Bay Area Jazz-Club Impresario, Dies at 81 -- His club became the go-to spot for generations of musicians touring the West Coast, and a place for local students to play alongside legends. Charley Locke in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/17/25
POTUS
Jeffrey Epstein’s Friends Sent Him Bawdy Letters for a 50th Birthday Album. One Was From Donald Trump -- It was Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday, and Ghislaine Maxwell was preparing a special gift to mark the occasion. She turned to Epstein’s family and friends. One of them was Donald Trump. Khadeeja Safdar and Joe Palazzolo in the Wall Street Journal$ -- 07/17/25
Trump Wants Lower Rates. Firing Powell Could Push Them Higher -- Investors, not the Fed, control the interest rates that matter most to businesses and consumers. They might demand higher returns if the central bank’s independence comes into question. Ben Casselman in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
The Trump officials and nominees who could benefit from the administration’s approach to crypto -- Nearly 70 Trump administration officials and nominees held cryptocurrency or investments in blockchain or digital-asset companies at the time of their selection, with stakes ranging from small to more than $120 million, a Washington Post examination found. Arfa Momin, Clara Ence Morse and Cat Zakrzewski in the Washington Post$ -- 07/17/25
Manhattan Prosecutor Who Handled Epstein Cases Is Fired -- Maurene Comey, a Manhattan federal prosecutor who worked on the criminal cases against Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, was abruptly fired on Wednesday by the Trump administration, according to six people with knowledge of the matter. Jonah E. Bromwich, William K. Rashbaum, Michael S. Schmidt, Santul Nerkar and Maggie Haberman in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
Trump lashes out at Republicans questioning his handling of Jeffrey Epstein case -- The president has spent recent days trying to quiet some of his supporters’ criticisms about how his administration has dealt with the case of the deceased sex offender. Patrick Svitek in the Washington Post$ -- 07/17/25
After CBS and ABC’s Trump settlements, Democrats want to curb presidential library gifts -- President Trump’s future presidential library has a growing list of corporate sponsors, and Democratic lawmakers are sounding alarms. Meg James in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25
20 States Sue Trump Administration Over Ending FEMA Funding for Disaster Mitigation -- FEMA announced in April that it was ending the funding to eliminate “waste, fraud and abuse.” The program saved taxpayers more than $150 billion over 20 years, the plaintiffs said. Maxine Joselow in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
Inside ‘Alligator Alcatraz,’ detainees report relentless mosquitoes, limited water -- Former guards at the facility cited limited fresh water and clogged toilets among the problems at the remote detention center. Lori Rozsa, David Ovalle and Rachel Hatzipanagos in the Washington Post$ -- 07/17/25
African Nation Says It Will Repatriate Migrants Deported by U.S. -- The Trump administration sent five deportees to Eswatini, an African kingdom, saying that their own countries would not take them. But Eswatini says it will send them home. John Eligon and Hamed Aleaziz in the New York Times$ -- 07/17/25
Democrats, playing defense on immigration, see a flicker of hope in new polls -- In Washington, efforts to corral Democratic lawmakers behind a unified message on immigration have been futile for months. Top Democratic operatives are testing new talking points, hoping to press their potential advantage. Michael Wilner in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 07/17/25