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Kennedy Is Keeping His Stake in Vaccine Litigation

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Kennedy Is Keeping His Stake in Vaccine Litigation

Lawmakers quizzed Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Wednesday during a Senate Finance hearing about his decision to keep a financial stake in litigation against a major vaccine maker.

Ethics records released in advance of the hearing said that Mr. Kennedy planned to receive fees on cases with the personal injury law firm Wisner Baum.

Mr. Kennedy has referred clients to the firm in cases claiming injuries from the Gardasil vaccine, a Merck product that is meant to prevent cervical cancer that can be caused by the human papillomavirus, or HPV.

Mr. Kennedy took the unusual step of keeping his stake in the pending litigation, according to ethics documents he filed in advance of his confirmation hearings. Mr. Kennedy said in his ethics filings that he would end his referral agreement with the law firm but would collect fees related to cases in the continuing cases.

The financial arrangement drew sharp criticism from Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat from Massachusetts. She noted Mr. Kennedy’s history of suggesting that drug companies and federal officials are motivated by financial gain.

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She accused Mr. Kennedy of profiteering from vaccine skepticism. She pointed to the financial stake in litigation against the vaccine maker Merck — and his intention to hold on to it even if he gains regulatory power over the company as health secretary.

“Kids might die,” Ms. Warren said. “But Robert Kennedy can keep cashing in.”

Public records show that Mr. Kennedy has earned about $2.5 million from his work with Wisner Baum since 2022. Mr. Kennedy earned fees related to his work with the firm on cases claiming harm from the weed killer Roundup, according to the firm. He also earned fees in cases related to California wildfires.

“All of these cases alleged corporate wrongdoing that caused life-changing harm to victims,” Wisner Baum’s managing partner, R. Brent Wisner, said in a statement Wednesday.

The Wisner Baum firm is currently representing a plaintiff in a bellwether trial against Merck that started this month in California, and other lawsuits are pending in North Carolina.

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The California trial involved a plaintiff who claimed that she developed postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, or POTS, after getting the shot. A Merck spokesman has said the allegations have no merit.

Mr. Kennedy would receive a potentially significant sum if Merck settles the cases or if there is a verdict against the drug company in one of many jury trials that are expected.

Ethics experts said the business arrangement would be problematic if Mr. Kennedy is confirmed to be the nation’s health secretary. He would oversee the Food and Drug Administration and other agencies that issue key decisions for drug companies, including Merck. Some involve drug approvals, safety actions and funding for Medicare and Medicaid.

The arrangement, first reported by The Times, has drawn widespread attention. Caroline Kennedy, who released a scathing letter Tuesday detailing her concerns about her cousin, said the deal demonstrated that “he is willing to enrich himself by denying access to a vaccine that can prevent almost all forms of cervical cancer and which has been safely administered to millions of boys and girls.”

He also pledged to end a referral agreement with Morgan & Morgan, the large personal injury firm that is now suing major food companies, claiming that they harmed people with their addictive ultra-processed foods.

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NASA Releases Photos of Far Side of the Moon From Artemis II Astronauts

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NASA Releases Photos of Far Side of the Moon From Artemis II Astronauts

New shades of brown and green in the rings of impact craters. Rugged terrain and long shadows along their rims. Earth rising over the moon’s horizon and the glow of lofted dust.

These are observations the Artemis II astronauts made during their lunar flyby on April 6. While passing by the far side of the moon, they saw parts never observed with human eyes before.

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The astronauts were able to catch a full view of the Mare Orientale, a dark, ringed 600-mile wide crater that straddles the near and the far sides of the moon. Human eyes had never seen the whole basin before. (The Apollo missions were timed so that the landings occurred as the crater was hidden in darkness.)

Everything to the left of the crater is the far side, the hemisphere we don’t get to see from Earth because the moon rotates on its axis at the same rate that it orbits around us.

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Astronauts looked at the dark smooth plains on its concentric impact rings, noting that there was more brown near the center of the multi-ring crater. To the naked eye, the basin looked like a plain or a plateau, but through the camera lens the Artemis II crew members were able to distinguish colors from shadows.

This is a close-up view of the Vavilov crater on the rim of the larger and older Hertzsprung crater. Astronauts looked at terrain changes: smooth inside the inner rings of the crater and rugged around the rim.

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Some 24 minutes into the flyby, the Artemis II crew began observing the South Pole-Aitken basin, seen in the photo below with the terminator line separating the sunlit side from the dark side.

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With an immense width of about 1,600 miles, it is the largest known impact crater in the solar system. These observations will help scientists find clues to the moon’s geological history.

The eastern edge of the South Pole-Aitken Basin.

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After Artemis II swung around the far side, the astronauts experienced a 53-minute solar eclipse.

They were able to observe the solar corona and get glimpses of a bright Venus, a reddish Mars far in the distance and a Saturn with hints of orange.

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The crew described the corona as similar to “baby hair” as the sun’s light intensified.

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Then, Earth came into view over the moon’s edge, an event described as Earthrise when humans first saw it in 1968.

Earthrise seen from the Orion spacecraft.

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Photos taken by Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen from the Orion capsule on April 6 and provided by NASA. Time annotations are based on audio comments during NASA’s live transmission of the mission.

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Chicago Bears Pro Bowler Steve McMichael diagnosed with CTE a year after ALS death

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Chicago Bears Pro Bowler Steve McMichael diagnosed with CTE a year after ALS death

Hall of Fame defensive tackle Steve McMichael, a key member of the Super Bowl XX champion Chicago Bears, has been diagnosed posthumously with Stage 3 chronic traumatic encephalopathy, the Concussion & CTE Foundation said Tuesday.

McMichael died April 23, 2025, after a five-year battle with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. He was 67.

“By sharing Steve’s diagnosis, we want to raise awareness of the clear connection between CTE and ALS,” McMichael’s wife Misty said in a statement released by the Concussion & CTE Foundation.

“Too many NFL players are developing ALS during life and diagnosed with CTE after death. I donated Steve’s brain to inspire new research into the link between them.”

ALS — amyotrophic lateral sclerosis — is a neurological disorder that destroys motor neurons. CTE is a degenerative brain disease that has been found in people exposed to repetitive head trauma; it can be diagnosed only after death.

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McMichael’s CTE diagnosis was made by researchers at the Boston University CTE Center, which has found that several other former NFL players suffered from both ALS and CTE. According to the center’s director, neurologist Dr. Ann McKee, about 6% of people with CTE also have ALS.

“There is strong evidence linking repetitive brain trauma and ALS,” McKee said.

Michael kept up with the research, according to the Concussion & CTE Foundation, and pledged to donate his brain to be studied after his death.

“Steve McMichael was known for his strength, toughness, and larger-than-life presence,” said Dr. Chris Nowinski, co-founder and chief executive of the Concussion & CTE Foundation, “but his final act was to give a piece of himself back to the sports community so we might have a chance to save ourselves.”

McMichael spent 13 of his 15 NFL seasons in Chicago, earning Pro Bowl honors in 1986 and 1987. He set a Bears record playing in 191 consecutive games from 1981 to 1993 and is second on the team’s all-time sacks list with 92.5 (he had 95 total in his career).

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After football, McMichael spent several years as a professional wrestler with World Championship Wrestling.

Bedridden in the advanced stages of ALS, McMichael was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in a ceremony from his Homer Glen, Ill., home in 2024.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Video: Artemis II Completes Historic Journey Around the Moon

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Video: Artemis II Completes Historic Journey Around the Moon

new video loaded: Artemis II Completes Historic Journey Around the Moon

transcript

transcript

Artemis II Completes Historic Journey Around the Moon

NASA’s Artemis II crew received a call from President Trump, who congratulated them for the successful lunar flyby.

“Today you’ve made history and made all America really proud, incredibly proud. Well, I look forward to seeing you in the Oval Office. And I’ll ask for your autograph, because I don’t really ask for autographs much, but you deserve that. You really are something. Everybody is talking about this.” “Orion has come back around the other side of the moon. And that little crescent that you see is Earth, over 252,000 miles away.” “And it is so great to hear from Earth again. To Asia, Africa and Oceania, we are looking back at you. “We are Earth bound and ready to bring you home.” “We’ve got to explore. We got to go further, to expand our knowledge, expand our horizons.” “I’m not ready to go home. I can’t believe that something this cramped of quarters, can fly by and still be fun every single minute.

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NASA’s Artemis II crew received a call from President Trump, who congratulated them for the successful lunar flyby.

By Nailah Morgan

April 7, 2026

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