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ABC News' $15M settlement with Trump. And, renewed hope for an Israel-Hamas ceasefire

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ABC News' M settlement with Trump. And, renewed hope for an Israel-Hamas ceasefire

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There is renewed hope for a ceasefire deal with Israel and Hamas, which have been engulfed in war for 14 months. Senior Biden administration officials have been in the region pushing for the negotiations. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is back from his latest trip to the Middle East and says this is a moment to bring the conflict to an end.

Children stare at the destruction following an Israeli strike in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on Thursday.

Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images


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Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images

  • 🎧 There is optimism around a potential deal because Hamas has been degraded to the point it can’t carry out another attack like Oct. 7, NPR’s Michele Kelemen tells Up First. Hamas is now being more flexible. A source informed NPR that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants to focus more on Iran, so he is more interested in a deal in Gaza. It would be a lengthy ceasefire deal: up to two months. Hamas would release some hostages in exchange for Palestinian detainees released from Israeli jails. This deal would just be a start, Kelemen says.

ABC News has agreed to pay $15 million toward President-elect Donald Trump’s future presidential library to settle a lawsuit over remarks by anchor George Stephanopoulos during an interview with Rep. Nancy Mace on This Week. The TV network is also posting a statement of regret. Trump sued for defamation after Stephanopoulos said that Trump was “found liable for rape,” which misstated verdicts in two of E. Jean Carroll’s lawsuits against him.

  • 🎧 Trump was found liable for sexually assaulting Carroll, NPR’s David Folkenflik clarifies. After talking to six First Amendment media lawyers, Folkenflik says they agreed with his gut instinct that Stephanopoulos had a screw-up. The lawyers said they expected the network and Stephanopoulos to clarify the distinction promptly. They also said this should have been a pretty easy call to defend in court because what Stephanopoulos said was close to what the judge said, but the TV network is happy to be past this lawsuit. The settlement comes at a time when the incoming administration has suggested a strong intent to use the powers of government against the press.

Trump has signaled he wants to try to pull back a consumer tax credit for electric vehicles, which his incoming administration has declared wasteful spending. Drivers can currently get a tax credit worth up to $7,500 for buying or leasing an EV. This year alone, buyers claimed more than $2 billion in EV credits. Some shoppers are looking into whether they should act fast. NPR’s Camila Domonoske speaks with experts to look into what shoppers need to know about the EV tax credit’s uncertain future.

Behind the story

Sarah Abdel Hamid al-Aami is searching for her four brothers who were snatched on their way to work by government forces years ago on what she says were bogus accusations of terrorism.

Clare Harbage/NPR

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This essay was written by Morning Edition senior editor and reporter Arezou Rezvani. Rezvani and a team from
Morning Edition are on the ground in Syria, covering the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

For decades, Syrians have lived in a constant state of fear and paranoia. For 54 years, under the rule of dictator Bashar al-Assad and his father before him, there was no tolerance for criticizing the government. Those who did speak out often disappeared into Syria’s notorious prison system, known for soul-crushing torture and killings. The oppression took an even darker turn in 2011 after Assad’s regime crushed pro-democracy protests and clamped down on any association with emerging opposition groups. During the ensuing 13-year civil war, friends, neighbors and colleagues would avoid political discussions. Even in the privacy of their own homes, Syrians remained tight-lipped. Parents withheld their true feelings from their own children for fear they’d say something at school, where they were closely monitored by teachers and staff who would report on families if they sensed any hints of disloyalty at home. It was commonly said that in Syria, “the walls have ears.”

With Bashar al-Assad now gone, Syrians are slowly starting to come out and share their secrets. Long-time friends are revealing details about their lives they had long kept under wraps, like their imprisonments, the rebel-held cities their families are originally from, their religions, political leanings, dreams, aspirations, unfiltered thoughts and ideas. After so many decades of repression, many Syrians say this newfound freedom to speak doesn’t come naturally, that it’s almost like they need to be deprogrammed.

Lurking underneath the thrill of the moment is a great deal of anxiety. There are still a lot of questions about the rebel groups that toppled Assad. Will they accept criticism? Will they hold free and fair elections? Will all religious and minority groups be protected? Have they really abandoned all links with al-Qaeda and the Islamic State? Syrians are celebrating the end of Assad rule, but they’re holding their breath for what’s to come.

Life advice

A father teaches his child to swim in a pond in Sylhet, Bangladesh.

A father teaches his child to swim in a pond in Sylhet, Bangladesh. Drowning is a leading causes of death globally for children, according to the first ever report on drowning as a public health issue issued by the World Health Organization.

Md Rafayat Haque Khan/Eyepix Group/Future Publishing via Getty Images

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More than 300,000 people die from drowning each year. A new World Health Organization report found that nearly all cases are preventable. WHO gathered data from 139 countries for its first-ever report on how to prevent drowning. Children are the highest-risk group, with nearly a quarter of all drowning deaths happening among kids under age 4. The threat is evolving as climate change makes floods more frequent and severe. Caroline Lukaszyk, a technical officer for injury prevention at the WHO, share some findings with NPR.

  • 🌊 A lot of the drowning burden is in Southeast Asia and Africa. There are bodies of water everywhere throughout the communities, and people need them for drinking, cooking, washing and bathing. But they pose a risk for unsupervised youth.
  • 🌊 It’s good to have life jackets on board boats. There’s work being done to use local materials, such as empty two-liter plastic bottles, as flotation devices.
  • 🌊 Swimming lessons that teach water safety and survival skills can be low-cost solutions.
  • 🌊 Bystander training and safe rescue and resuscitation are also recommended. It can be key to teach CPR to older children and adults who could be around children playing in bodies of water.

3 things to know before you go

Caroline Davis said a stranger's generosity reminder her of her dad.

Caroline Davis said a stranger’s generosity reminder her of her dad.

Caroline David


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Caroline David

  1. This past summer, Caroline Davis was working on a DIY project that required 1,500 pounds of gravel. As she loaded her car with 50-pound bags, a stranger stepped in and warned her of the damage it could cause to the vehicle. The unsung hero then helped her with the load. The interaction reminded her of her dad, who died in 2017.
  2. Indian tabla player Zakir Hussain, whose career spanned over five decades, died yesterday at age 73. Hussain is revered as a national treasure.
  3. Two men were arrested Saturday for allegedly flying a drone “dangerously close” to Logan International Airport, the Boston Police Department said. The arrests come as drones have been sighted across the East Coast.

This newsletter was edited by Suzanne Nuyen.

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Court names alleged Chinese spy linked to Prince Andrew

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Court names alleged Chinese spy linked to Prince Andrew

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The alleged Chinese spy linked to Prince Andrew has been publicly named as Yang Tengbo after a judge lifted an anonymity order protecting his identity on Monday.

The 50-year-old Chinese national, who is also known by the Anglicised alias Chris Yang, has been banned from entering Britain on national security grounds since March 2023.

Yang had challenged that decision by the Home Office, an appeal that was rejected last week by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission.

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He had developed business links to Prince Andrew and access to a network of other senior British political and business figures, primarily through his company Hampton Group International, which said it focused on “investing in, consulting on and enabling opportunities between China, the UK and the rest of the world”.

The commission’s ruling found that Yang “had been in a position to generate relationships with prominent UK figures and senior Chinese officials that could be leveraged for political interference purposes by the CCP [Chinese Communist party] . . . or the Chinese State”.

Tengbo previously worked with UK drugmaker GSK to manage the fallout of a bribery scandal in China, according to people familiar with the matter. 

GSK did not comment.  

GSK was introduced to Tengbo by Ron Dennis, the former chief executive of McLaren, one of the people said. Neither Ron Dennis nor McLaren responded to a request for comment.

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The anonymity order was reviewed during a hearing at the Royal Courts of Justice on Monday, ahead of MPs threatening to use parliamentary privilege to name the individual in the House of Commons.

Yang, previously known only as H6 in the court documents, has already been named on social media and some overseas news sites.

This is a developing story

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Weak China retail sales add to pressure on Beijing to lift economy

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Weak China retail sales add to pressure on Beijing to lift economy

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Retail sales in China missed expectations in November, adding to pressure on policymakers after President Xi Jinping signalled last week that he wants to spur household consumption to boost the world’s second-largest economy.

The consumption measure added 3 per cent year-on-year, below a forecast of 4.6 per cent in a Reuters poll, and last month’s rise of 4.8 per cent. Industrial production added 5.4 per cent, slightly above predictions.

The unexpectedly weaker growth comes days after the Communist party leadership called for “vigorous” efforts to boost consumption and domestic demand at the annual Central Economic Work Conference last week.

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The November retail number “was the big disappointment of the month, as retail sales . . . came in well softer than both consensus and our forecasts”, said Lynn Song, chief economist for greater China at ING in a research note.

Beijing has struggled to boost confidence against the backdrop of a property slowdown, now entering its fourth year, and bouts of deflation. The government unveiled a series of measures to boost stock markets in late September and to refinance local government debt last month.

Chinese equities fell on Monday. The CSI 300 index of blue-chip mainland-listed companies was down 0.6 per cent by mid-morning, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 0.4 per cent.

China’s 10-year sovereign bond yield fell 0.05 percentage points to 1.73 per cent and its 30-year yield fell below 2 per cent for the first time.

The conference’s work report last week listed consumption as the first of nine economic priorities for 2025, ahead of the “new productive forces” that have emerged as a core pillar of Xi’s approach.

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The emphasis is one of several signs of growing urgency from the government, including a shift in its monetary policy stance to “moderately loose” from “prudent” for the first time in over a decade last week.

Consumer prices in November rose just 0.2 per cent, a five-month low. Prices have increased every month since January, but growth has remained close to deflationary territory, adding to concerns over the strength of domestic demand.

Consumer spending was an economic concern in China during the Covid-19 pandemic, when the government imposed strict lockdowns to prevent the spread of the virus, and has failed to bounce back fully since a reopening almost two years ago.

ING’s Song said that aside from the National Bureau of Statistics’ property price index for 70 cities, which showed marginal falls during the month and indicated a stabilisation, the overall data was softer than expected in November.

Property investment was still declining, falling 10.4 per cent in the 11 months to the end of November, the NBS said, compared with a fall of 10.3 per cent in the first 10 months.

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Goldman Sachs economists attributed the soft retail sales to an earlier than usual start to the annual November “Singles Day” online shopping festival, which pulled forward some sales to October.

But Goldman and other economists said that overall, indicators suggested that annual growth this year would end close to the government’s official target of 5 per cent.

Xi last week pledged to meet the target, saying that China would continue “to play its role as the world’s largest economic growth engine”.

Citi analysts said the government would probably release few details of any proposed fiscal stimulus measures until early next year during the annual meeting of China’s rubber stamp parliament, the National People’s Congress. This normally sets out the economic agenda for the following 12 months.

“The politburo and CEWC concluded with a supportive tone but no major breakthroughs or concrete measures,” Citi said. “The next two months could be a policy vacuum until the NPC.”

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What’s next for the suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO | CNN

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What’s next for the suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO | CNN



CNN
 — 

The man accused of killing UnitedHealthcare’s CEO in Manhattan remains in a Pennsylvania state prison, while a possible indictment looms in New York as a grand jury considers evidence on charges he faces there, including one count of murder.

Luigi Mangione, who faces a possible sentence of 15 years to life in prison if convicted on the charge of second-degree murder, is set to appear in a Pennsylvania court for a preliminary hearing next week on state charges following his December 9 arrest at a McDonald’s in Altoona.

Mangione, 26, has been fighting extradition to New York after being accused of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on December 4, but Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said Friday it is possible the suspect could soon waive his right to fight being handed over to New York authorities.

“Indications are that the defendant may waive, but that waiver is not complete until a court proceeding, which my understanding from court officials in Pennsylvania cannot happen until Tuesday,” Bragg said. “So until that time, we’re going to continue to press forward on parallel paths and we’ll be ready whether he is going to waive extradition or whether he’s going to contest extradition.”

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Here are the latest developments in the case:

  • After a San Francisco Police Department officer recognized Mangione from a surveillance photo as the possible suspect on December 5, the day after the shooting, they shared the tip with the FBI.
  • Mangione has retained attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo, a former Manhattan prosecutor, to represent him in New York.
  • A Center for Internet Security report released Saturday found “widespread support” of Thompson’s killing could lead to potential copycats of the shooting likely to feel “emboldened and encouraged.”
  • A defense fund set up on Mangione’s behalf raised more than $115,000 by Sunday, according to a campaign page on GiveSendGo. It is unclear whether his defense team will accept the funds.

Authorities tracked down Mangione in Altoona last week after being alerted he looked similar to the person who gunned down Thompson in front of a Midtown Manhattan hotel as the health care executive prepared to attend his company’s investors’ conference.

Mangione faces charges in both Pennsylvania and New York. He remains in custody in Pennsylvania Monday on charges related to a gun and fake ID police say they found at the time of his arrest.

In New York, prosecutors have charged him with one count of second-degree murder, two counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, one count of second-degree possession of a forged document and one count of third-degree criminal possession of a weapon, according to online court documents.

Investigators in New York believe Mangione, a former high school valedictorian and Ivy League graduate born into a well-to-do family, appeared to be driven by anger against the health insurance industry and “corporate greed,” according to an NYPD intelligence report obtained by CNN.

Mangione is scheduled to appear at a hearing in Pennsylvania on December 30 in response to his petitions for writ of habeas corpus and imposition of bail, court documents from Thursday show. The habeas corpus petition is a key factor in whether Mangione can be extradited to New York.

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Thomas Dickey, Mangione’s attorney in Pennsylvania, denied his client’s involvement in Thompson’s killing and said he anticipates a not guilty plea from Mangione to the charges he faces in New York.

Dickey also said Mangione, who was denied bail last Tuesday at an extradition hearing, plans to plead not guilty to the charges in Pennsylvania.

Following Bragg’s comments on Mangione possibly backing down from the extradition fight, CNN has sought comment from Dickey regarding whether he and his client have changed their position on extradition.

New York authorities have executed as many as three search warrants as part of their investigation, including at least two warrants for a backpack found in Central Park and a burner phone discovered along Mangione’s believed getaway route away from the crime scene, sources told CNN.

The mounting evidence against the suspect accused of killing Thompson, authorities say, includes a 3D-printed gun they allege Mangione had when he was arrested, which matches three shell casings found at the crime scene.

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Mangione’s fingerprints match those found on items near the scene, New York City’s police commissioner has said, and investigators discovered a three-page handwritten “claim of responsibility” and writings in a spiral notebook pointing to the suspect’s involvement, a law enforcement source briefed on the matter told CNN.

Thomas Dickey, attorney for suspected shooter Luigi Mangione, speaks to reporters in front of the Blair County Courthouse in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, after an extradition hearing Tuesday.

Three 9 mm shell casings from the crime scene had the words “delay,” “deny” and “depose” written on them, according to NYPD’s Chief Detective Joseph Kenny. The words are similar to a title of a 2010 book critiquing the insurance industry.

Dickey has said he wants to see the ballistics and fingerprint evidence for himself.

“Those two sciences, in and of themselves, have come under some criticism in the past, relative to their credibility, their truthfulness, their accuracy, however you want to do it,” Dickey said on CNN’s “Erin Burnett OutFront” on Wednesday.

The office of New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is convening business leaders and law enforcement to discuss safety this week.

Kathryn Garcia, Hochul’s director of operations and infrastructure, will hold a call with several business leaders and law enforcement on Tuesday, a spokesperson for the governor’s office told CNN.

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Kathryn Wylde, president and CEO of the Partnership for New York City, a nonprofit organization which represents New York City’s global business leaders and major employers, told CNN the call will include top State Police officials and counterterrorism law enforcement.

A source familiar with the planning told CNN the state is also considering setting up a hotline for CEOs so they can call to report security concerns or threats.

The hope is the call will “provide a forum for questions and sharing of best practices regarding threats to business leaders around the city,” Wylde said.

Approximately 200 people, mostly security people as well as some CEOs are expected to join, according to Wylde.

The call comes as C-suite leaders across the country are left shaken in the wake of Thompson’s killing and reassessing preparedness for potential threats.

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The NYPD, in an intelligence report obtained by CNN last week, said it believed Thompson’s killing was a “symbolic takedown” and could inspire others to act violently toward business leaders.

CNN’s Jason Hanna, Karina Tsui, Steve Almasy, Andy Rose, Brynn Gingras, Michelle Watson, Bonney Kapp, Dakin Andone, Emma Tucker, Meg Tirrell and Jason Carroll contributed to this report.

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