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Inside the Newark Liberty International Airport Monday night, an Alaska Airlines employee spotted two men who she thought looked suspicious.When the employee approached them, the men started running and she screamed "evacuate," a source with knowledge of the incident told CNN, based on preliminary information. The yells stirred panic at the gate, the source said.The concerned employee hit an alarm after talking to the two men and nearly 200 passengers evacuated the gate, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey spokesman Steve Coleman said.One passenger told CNN affiliate 592
Is she smiling or is she upset as she stands with one hand touching her necklace, the other clutching her phone? The last known images of Mackenzie Lueck, 23, released by the Salt Lake City Police Department on Tuesday, offer few clues.In the still shots snatched from Salt Lake City International Airport videotape, Lueck is seen wearing a black backpack and carrying a stylish handbag as she exits the airport's departure area sometime after 2 a.m. on Monday, June 17. Lueck had arrived at the airport after attending a family funeral in California. She texted her mother at 1 a.m. Monday when she landed in Salt Lake City, according to 651

In the Tennessee community hardest hit by devastating tornadoes, the few houses still standing have become beacons of hope. One of those belongs to Amy and Darrell Jennings. The Jennings have welcomed friends and neighbors into their house in Putnam County and are trying to help survivors recover some of their belongings from the rubble. A tornado tore a 2-mile-long path through the county early Tuesday, killing 18 people, including five children under 13. The tornado was one of at least two that swept through the state Tuesday, killing at least 24 people all together. 588
Javier Amir Rodriguez's family was among the crowd of mourners who gathered in a high school football field Monday evening to release white doves to remember him and the 21 other people killed in Saturday's massacre at Walmart.The 15-year-old was the youngest victim in a deadly mission authorities say was carried out by a white supremacist who drove hundreds of miles from a Dallas suburb to El Paso, Texas."Please understand, this violence, this hatred, will not define this community," Democratic presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke said during the vigil at Horizon High School. "We will speak forever about Javier with pride and gratitude and love."Among those killed were parents, grandparents and spouses from both sides of the US-Mexico border. Authorities said a white supremacist from Dallas drove hundreds of miles for his deadly mission.The doves are positive symbols, Horizon High School Principal Elena Erives Acosta said."Symbols of new beginnings, of love and healing," she said at the vigil.The dead include 13 Americans, eight Mexicans and one German. The last moments of their lives before the shooting began could not have been more routine.One couple was shopping for school supplies for their daughter. Another couple had just dropped off their dog at the groomer. A man from Mexico was visiting his granddaughter as she raised money with her soccer team.On Monday, the death toll rose from 20 to 22 after two of the wounded died from their injuries.Here's what we know about the victims so far:These people died protecting their familiesJordan and Andre Anchondo had gone to the store after dropping off their 5-year-old daughter at cheer practice, Jordan's aunt Elizabeth Terry told CNN.The couple brought along their 2-month-old son as they shopped for school supplies for their daughter.Only the little boy would survive.As the gunfire erupted, Jordan, 24, shielded her baby, Terry said. Andre, 23 jumped in front of his wife, said another relative, Jesse Jamrowski."The baby still had her blood on him. You watch these things and see these things and you never think this is going to happen to your family," Terry said."How do parents go school shopping and then die shielding their baby from bullets?"In addition to their 5-year-old-daughter, the couple leaves behind another child, aged 2.The first call of an active shooter went out at 10:39 a.m. local time, authorities said. Around 2 p.m., Anchondo's relatives started calling each other, saying the couple was not answering their phones, Terry said.The baby was "pulled from under her body," said Terry, the sister of Anchondo's father, Paul, for whom the injured infant is named. The infant suffered broken fingers but is home with family, Terry said.Jordan Anchondo died alone at the hospital because no friends or loved ones were able to immediately find her, her aunt said. "It took us a while to confirm and identify her throughout all the chaos," she said.The couple had recently celebrated their first wedding anniversary.Andre Anchondo owned a mechanic shop in El Paso, Terry said. Originally from Odessa, Texas, Jordan Anchondo loved being a mother to her children, Terry said."She had the most contagious smile and laugh," Terry told CNN. "We lost the light of our family and the light of our heart."Dave Johnson, 63, died shielding his wife Kathy and their 9-year-old granddaughter, Kaitlyn, from the hail of bullets, Johnson's daughter Stephanie Melendez told CNN.The couple was grocery shopping and picking out a present for Kaitlyn, the family told CNN's Anderson Cooper.It didn't surprise his family that Johnson risked his life for them. He doted on his granddaughter, spending time with her after work on science experiments, Melendez and her sisters said.Kathy Johnson told her daughters that the gunman got as close as two feet from them. Johnson was shot after he pushed down his wife and granddaughter and covered them, Melendez said."I was so close to losing her but because of him she is still here," Melendez said. "I wish he was here so I can tell him how thankful I am."A relative tracked a victim's car to the Walmart parking lotArturo Benavides, 60, was an Army veteran and a bus driver who loved telling stories of his days in the service as an Army staff sergeant.His niece Jacklin Luna described her uncle as popular and beloved."He was an absolutely caring and strong-willed man," she said. "He was the person that would give any dime and shirt off his back, a meal and a home to anyone.Leo Campos and Maribel Hernandez dropped their dog off at the groomer before going to Walmart, Hernandez's brother Al Hernandez told 4648
ISLAMABAD — A senior U.S. State Department official says the seven-day “reduction of violence" deal promised by the Taliban will begin “tonight," without specifying the exact time. That will start the countdown to the signing of a peace agreement between the Taliban and the United States at the end of the month. That peace agreement, to be signed in Qatar on Feb. 29, will pave the way for a withdrawal of U.S. troops and intra- Afghan negotiations. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says the peace agreement will also lead to an eventual permanent cease-fire. 576
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