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2025-06-02 18:34:09
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If you drove by your North Carolina gas station last week and shrugged off an idea to buy a ticket -- just for the fun of it -- you might be kicking yourself right now.You could have been one of the 2,014 winning tickets. Yes, you read that right.Saturday's lucky numbers -- 0-0-0-0 -- won the .8 million jackpot, the largest ever in a single drawing in the game, the North Carolina Education Lottery said in a 425

  濮阳东方医院看男科好么   

In an interview with Charles Benson, a reporter for Scripps affiliate TMJ-TV in Wisconsin, President Donald Trump stressed the importance of ratification of a new free trade agreement between the US, Mexico and Canada. This comes after Trump scrapped a previous agreement known as NAFTA. "This is going to open up the playing field," Trump said about the USMCA agreement. "I came to Wisconsin two years ago about specialty milk. And that was the straw the broke the camel's back because Canada treated you unfairly."But Democrats have not been so keen on approving the USMCA. House Speaker Pelosi said she would like to see the agreement include provisions over labor and the environment. To see the full interview, watch below. 740

  濮阳东方医院看男科好么   

Juan Rodriguez's 1-year-old twins died after being left in a hot car for eight hours. Thursday morning, he is expected to appear in court to face charges in connection with their deaths.Rodriguez's twins, Luna and Phoenix, were found Friday unresponsive in the back seat of a Honda sedan in the Bronx, according to a news release from the New York Police Department. Rodriguez was at work at a nearby VA hospital, where he is a social worker, his friend Temple Barros told CNN.Temperatures that Friday reached highs in the mid-80s, according to the National Weather Service. The twins were pronounced dead on the scene.New York City's medical examiner's office will determine the twins' cause of death, police said.Rodriguez was arraigned on Saturday in New York on charges of manslaughter, negligent homicide and endangering the welfare of a child, according to the New York City Police Department. He pleaded not guilty, said Patrice O'Shaughnessy, a spokeswoman for the Bronx District Attorney.Rodriguez out on bondThe 39-year-old father paid ,000 on a 0,000 bond, according to a source with the Bronx Criminal Court Central Booking Clerk's Office.Criminal negligent homicide carries a maximum of four years in prison and manslaughter carries a maximum of 15 years, Joey Jackson, Rodriguez's attorney 1322

  

It's 1:48 a.m. and a pregnant Shanann Watts is arriving home from a business trip to Phoenix.Front-door video at her Frederick, Colorado, home captures the moment a friend drops Watts from the airport on August 13, 2018. She can be seen carrying her suitcase up the driveway and to the door.The short video clip is believed to be the last time Shanann Watts, who was 15 weeks pregnant, is seen to be alive. Within hours -- possibly even minutes -- Shanann was slain, authorities have said.Her husband, Chris Watts, pleaded guilty in November to first-degree murder and other charges in the death of his wife and young daughters. He was sentenced to five life sentences with no possibility of parole. 711

  

It could take up to two years for the government to identify potentially thousands of additional immigrant families US authorities separated at the southern border, officials said in a court filing.The government's proposed plan, detailed for the first time in documents filed late Friday night, outlines a strategy for piecing together exactly who might have been separated by combing through thousands of records using a mix of data analysis and manual review.The court filing comes a year after a memo from then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions officially created the administration's "zero tolerance" policy, which eventually led to the separation of thousands of immigrant families. While a federal court order forced the reunification of many of those families, an explosive government watchdog report in January revealed there could be thousands more who hadn't previously been acknowledged by officials.And a federal judge last month ruled that this group should be included in the class-action lawsuit over family separations.The judge's order was a major blow for the Trump administration, which had argued finding these families would be too burdensome a task. And it now presents a major logistical challenge for the government.Several factors complicate the process, officials said in Friday's court filing:? All the children from this group of separated families have already been released from government custody? US Customs and Border Protection didn't start tracking separated families as a searchable data set in its records before April 19, 2018? A manual review alone would "overwhelm ORR's existing resources" because teams would have to comb through nearly 50,000 case files Instead of taking that approach, officials propose using data analysis to hone in on which records are likely to be separated children, and then to embark on more painstaking manual reviews. The process, officials said, would take "at least 12 months, and possibly up to 24 months."A team of officials representing the Department of Health and Human Services, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Customs and Border Protection would lead the effort, the filing said. They would then convene a data analysis team led by a senior biostatistician.Last month, US District Judge Dana Sabraw issued a 14-page ruling modifying the class definition, following revelations that the government had been separating families as far back as July 1, 2017, months before the controversial "zero tolerance" immigration policy was announced. Officials estimated that the children were separated, received by HHS for care and released prior to Sabraw's June 26, 2018, court order ordering a halt to most family separations at the US border.Plaintiffs "request that the government identify the families whom it separated on or after July 1, 2017 whose children were released from ORR before June 26, 2018," according to a court document late last month. They note that the government should "start the process immediately." The government had proposed submitting a proposal on next steps "on or before April 5, 2019."The Ms. L, et al. vs. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, et al., case was initially prompted by the separation of a Congolese woman and her 7-year-old daughter. The American Civil Liberties Union originally filed the case last year and it was later expanded to become a class action lawsuit.Last June, Sabraw issued a preliminary injunction blocking most family separations at the US-Mexico border and ordered the government to reunite the families it had divided.Since then, the administration has provided regular reports to the court on the reunification status of children and parents whom the government separated, including some parents who were deported but ultimately elected not to be reunified with their children.As of March 25, 2019, the government has discharged 2,749 of 2,814 possible children of potential class members, up eight since the last status report on March 6. 4028

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