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GM’s driverless car unit Cruise probed over dragging incident

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GM’s driverless car unit Cruise probed over dragging incident

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General Motors’ Cruise faces probes by numerous federal and state authorities, including the Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission, after an accident that led to the shutdown of driverless car operations across the country and the resignation of its chief executive.

Cruise disclosed the inquiries on Thursday alongside findings from a report into the incident last year in San Francisco, in which a pedestrian hit by another car was thrown into the pathway of an autonomous Cruise vehicle. The pedestrian was trapped and dragged about 20 feet by the car.

The report, which Cruise commissioned from law firm Quinn Emanuel, provides new details of the company’s response to the crisis, which has dealt a major blow to its expansion ambitions and renewed concerns about the risks posed by autonomous vehicles.

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After interviews with 88 Cruise employees and contractors and an analysis of more than 200,000 documents, the report said it had not found evidence that Cruise leadership had “sought to intentionally mislead or hide from regulators” what had happened.

The report released on Thursday also found Cruise employees had not been aware that the pedestrian was dragged when the company first issued a press statement about the accident.

But they did not update its statement to the press once new information emerged or show the full video of the incident, which the report attributed to “a myopic focus on correcting the initial inaccurate media narrative that the Cruise [autonomous vehicle], rather than the human driver, had caused the incident”, according to the company.

Cruise representatives “attempted” to play regulators a video of what had happened, but internet issues stopped them from doing so “clearly and fully”. Nevertheless they failed to verbally explain to authorities what had happened, the report found.

Altogether the company’s response was attributed to “poor leadership, mistakes in judgment, lack of co-ordination, an ‘us versus them’ mentality with regulators, and a fundamental misapprehension of Cruise’s obligations of accountability and transparency to the government and the public”, the report concluded.

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After the accident California regulators barred the company’s autonomous vehicles from the state’s roads, only months after it was given permission to operate driverless taxis in San Francisco without restrictions. Cruise later halted its driverless car operations across the country, and GM said it would cut spending on the unit by “hundreds of millions of dollars”. Cruise’s co-founder and chief executive, Kyle Vogt, also resigned.

When suspending Cruise’s driverless permit, the California Department of Motor Vehicles said the company had misrepresented the details of the accident by failing to disclose in meetings the day after it occurred that the pedestrian had been dragged underneath the vehicle.

Cruise said it accepted Quinn Emanuel’s conclusions and acknowledged that “we have failed to live up to the justifiable expectations of regulators and the communities we serve”.

“We know our license to operate must be earned and is ultimately granted by regulators and the communities we serve. We are focused on advancing our technology and earning back public trust,” the company added.

Cruise on Thursday said it was co-operating with law enforcement agencies. In addition to the DoJ and SEC investigations, the incident prompted probes by the California DMV, the California Public Utilities Commission and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

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Video: President Trump Rescinds Canada’s Invitation to His ‘Board of Peace’

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Video: President Trump Rescinds Canada’s Invitation to His ‘Board of Peace’

new video loaded: President Trump Rescinds Canada’s Invitation to His ‘Board of Peace’

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President Trump Rescinds Canada’s Invitation to His ‘Board of Peace’

President Trump on Thursday rescinded his invitation to Canada to join his “Board of Peace,” an organization he founded to oversee the Gaza peace deal, after Prime Minister Mark Carney made comments critical of the United States.

Canada and the United States have built a remarkable partnership in the economy and security and in rich cultural exchange. But Canada doesn’t live because of the United States. Canada thrives because we are Canadian. Canada gets a lot of freebies from us, by the way. They should be grateful also, but they’re not. I watched your prime minister yesterday. He wasn’t so grateful. They should be grateful to us. Canada, Canada lives because of the United States. Remember that, Mark. The next time you make your statements. Middle powers must act together, because if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu. We stand firmly with Greenland and Denmark and fully support their unique right to determine Greenland’s future.

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President Trump on Thursday rescinded his invitation to Canada to join his “Board of Peace,” an organization he founded to oversee the Gaza peace deal, after Prime Minister Mark Carney made comments critical of the United States.

By Nader Ibrahim

January 23, 2026

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Ryan Wedding arrested: FBI confirms former Olympian turned drug kingpin in custody

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Ryan Wedding arrested: FBI confirms former Olympian turned drug kingpin in custody

Second man extradited to US along with Weddingpublished at 17:35 GMT

Image source, FBI

During his remarks, Patel confirmed the arrest and extradition of another man who had been on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list.

He only gives his last name – Castillo – and appears to be referencing fugitive Alejandro Castillo, who is now labeled as “captured” on the FBI’s list.

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Castillo is wanted for the murder of his former girlfriend in 2016, Truc Quan “Sandy” Ly Le, who he met when they were both working in a North Carolina restaurant.

The FBI says he owed the victim around $1,000 at the time of the murder.

Castillo, who was 17-years-old at the time of the killing, crossed into Mexico two months later. Officials said he was to be considered “armed and extremely dangerous” and had offered a $250,000 award for information leading to his capture.

In a news release from last week, the FBI announced that Castillo had been captured in Hidalgo, Mexico, and would be extradited to North Carolina.

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Video: Jack Smith Defends His Trump Indictments During House Hearing

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Video: Jack Smith Defends His Trump Indictments During House Hearing

“Do you swear or affirm, under penalty of perjury, that the testimony you’re about to give is true and correct to the best of your knowledge, information and belief, so help you God?” “I do. No one should be above the law in this country, and the law required that he be held to account. So that is what I did. To have done otherwise on the facts of these cases would have been to shirk my duties as a prosecutor.” “You, like the President’s Men for Richard Nixon, went after your political enemies. Maybe they’re not your political enemies, but they sure as hell were Joe Biden’s political enemies, weren’t they? They were Harris’s political enemies. They were the enemies of the president, and you were their arm, weren’t you?” “No.” “So, Mr. Smith, what evidence did you develop to suggest Trump knew he had lost the 2020 election?” “We had evidence from a variety of sources, evidence from people who were close to Donald Trump and who he relied on, people who wanted him to win the election. Our investigation revealed that Donald Trump is the person who caused Jan. 6, that it was foreseeable to him and that he sought to exploit the violence.” “Under your theory, people besides the president were involved in the unprecedented assault on American democracy, but you didn’t find it necessary to charge them criminally.” “I had not yet charged anyone besides the president.” “You didn’t — you decided not to charge anybody but Donald Trump in that indictment.” “I made the decision to make the charges in this case.” “And, Mr. Smith, do you believe that President Trump’s Department of Justice will find some way to indict you?” “I believe that they will do everything in their power to do that because they’ve been ordered to by the president.”

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