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The US Army Corps of Engineers deployed teams to help manage debris, set up temporary emergency power and consult officials on the recovery from Hawaii's devastating wildfires, a spokesperson told CNN. “Our personnel are assisting with planning and assessments,” said Raini Brunson, the Corps of Engineers spokesperson. The deployment includes experts on relevant topics in public works and engineering, Brunson said. The soldiers' mission has been coordinated through FEMA, according to the official. It’s unclear where the teams have specifically been sent.
Persons: , Raini Brunson, Brunson Organizations: US Army Corps of Engineers, CNN, , Corps, Engineers, FEMA
Brian Kemp speaks to voters during a campaign stop at Williamson Brothers Bar-B-Q on November 3, 2022 in Marietta, Georgia. When Kemp refused to overturn Biden’s 2020 win in Georgia, Trump demonized him and recruited former Sen. David Perdue to challenge Kemp in the 2022 GOP gubernatorial primary. Kemp also testified last year before the Atlanta-area special grand jury probing efforts by Trump to overturn the 2020 election in Georgia. Trump said Wednesday night that he wouldn't sign the pledge to support whoever the Republican nominee is because "I can name three or four people that I wouldn’t support for president." Despite that, Kemp recently told CNN he will “certainly” endorse the 2024 Republican nominee, even if it is Trump.
Persons: Brian Kemp, Alex Wong, Donald Trump, Kemp, Joe Biden, Trump, Sen, David Perdue, Stacey Abrams, Fani Willis, Vivek Ramaswamy Ron DeSantis Nikki Haley CNN's Dana Bash Organizations: Williamson, Georgia Gov, Republican, Biden’s, Democratic, Atlanta -, CNN, GOP Locations: Marietta , Georgia, Georgia, Atlanta, Fulton County, Peach State, Trump
Former President Donald Trump is seen in court on Thursday in this courtroom sketch. America now faces the prospect of an ex-president repeatedly going on trial in an election year in which he’s the Republican front-runner and is promising a new White House term of retribution. He is responding with the same kind of extreme rhetoric that injected fury into his political base and erupted into violence after the last election. If he wins back the White House, the already twice-impeached new president could trigger a new constitutional crisis by sweeping away the federal cases against him or even by pardoning himself. Any alternative Republican president could find themselves besieged by demands from Trump supporters for a pardon that, if granted, could overshadow their entire presidency.
Persons: Donald Trump, Bill Hennessey, Trump, pardoning, , , Geoff Duncan Organizations: Washington, Republican, Trump Locations: America, Georgia
July 16, 2023 Russia-Ukraine news
  + stars: | 2023-07-16 | by ( Sophie Tanno | Thom Poole | Elise Hammond | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
"The missile was equipped with prohibited cluster munitions. Reports from outside organizations: Cluster munitions have been used on civilian targets in the northeastern Kharkiv region as well, a CNN investigation from last year found. In a report published on August 25, 2022, the UN-partnered Cluster Munition Monitor civil society group said Russian forces had “repeatedly” used cluster munitions since the start of the war. Ukraine's own use of the weapons: The same report by the Cluster Munition Monitor group found that Ukrainian forces had also used cluster munitions "several times" and "mostly" in populated areas. Cluster munitions have killed at least 215 civilians and injured 474 people overall since the start of the war, according to the monitoring group's report.
Persons: Igor Ovcharruck, Clodagh Kilcoyne, , Vladimir Putin's, General's, Michelle Bachelet, , CNN's Uliana Pavlova Organizations: US, United Nations, General's, CNN, UN Locations: Ukraine's Kharkiv, Ukraine, Russia, Dnipropetrovsk, Rih, Russian, Kharkiv, Syria
The US Supreme Court in Washington, DC, on Friday, June 30, 2023. Anna Rose Layden/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesCNN senior Supreme Court analyst Joan Biskupic says that over the past day, "all of the tensions on so many issues" were on display among the justices. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, sitting right next to him, then drew a contrast in her dissent. And she said, 'At this kind of time, what does the Supreme Court do? On the student loans decision: In a "brisk voice and tone," Chief Justice John Roberts "cut to the chase," according to Biskupic.
Persons: Anna Rose Layden, Joan Biskupic, Biskupic, Neil Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor, Sotomayor, Lorie Smith, John Roberts, , Elena Kagan, Roberts, Kagan Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty, CNN, Civil Locations: Washington ,, Colorado, America
June 17, 2023 Russia-Ukraine news
  + stars: | 2023-06-17 | by ( Sophie Tanno | Thom Poole | Adrienne Vogt | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with African leaders on June 17 in Russia. The Black Sea grain deal: Putin also claimed "the crisis on the global food market is not a consequence of conflict in Ukraine." “Ukrainian grain supply to the world’s markets doesn’t solve the problem of world hunger,” he said. “Countries in need should not suffer, so Moscow went to great lengths to ensure the supply of Ukrainian grain to African countries,” Putin said. Ramaphosa also pushed for "opening up of the movement of the grains across the Black Sea so whatever blockages there are should be released."
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky, , ” Putin, Cyril Ramaphosa, Ramaphosa, Maria Lvova Organizations: United Nations, , Initiative, African Locations: Russia, Moscow, Ukraine, St . Petersburg, , Turkey, Africa, Russian
Walt Nauta, an aide to former President Donald Trump, prepares to join Trump on an airplane in Palm Beach, Florida, in March. Nauta’s indictment is the second in the special counsel’s investigation after Trump was indicted on seven counts on Thursday. Nauta’s involvement in the movement of boxes of classified material at Trump’s Florida resort had been a subject of scrutiny of investigators. Investigators obtained surveillance footage showing Nauta and the worker moving boxes of the classified documents around the resort, CNN previously reported. Nauta had spoken to investigators repeatedly in the probe, at first telling them he hadn’t handled boxes or sensitive documents at Mar-a-Lago.
Persons: Walt Nauta, Donald Trump, Jabin, Jack Smith’s, Trump, Nauta, , ‘ Trump Organizations: Trump, Washington Post, Getty, Trump White House, Street Journal, Nauta, Mar, FBI, CNN, Patriot, DOJ Locations: Palm Beach , Florida, Bedminster , New Jersey, Trump’s Florida, Beach
The North Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, on November 18, 2022. Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images/FileThe White House is declining to comment on reports that former President Donald Trump has been indicted. Biden upheld that very notion earlier on Thursday when he was asked what he would tell Americans to convince them that they should trust the independence and fairness of the Justice Department. “Because you’ll notice, I have never once, not one single time, suggested to the Justice Department what they should do or not do on whether to bring any charges or not bring any charges. I’m honest,” Biden said.
Persons: Mandel Ngan, Donald Trump, Ian Sams, Justice Department —, , Joe Biden, Biden, ” Biden Organizations: White, Getty, Justice Department, Department of Justice Locations: Washington ,, AFP
Medvedev gave several interviews explaining that the murder by Wagner of its own deserters led him to leave and seek asylum in Norway. He told CNN he witnessed brutality and incompetence on the front lines in Ukraine, where the mercenary group's fighters have played a pivotal role in Russia's invasion. Legal troubles in Norway: Medvedev crossed the Russia-Norway border on foot in January and sought political asylum. Horrors in Ukraine: Medvedev was the commander of ex-convict Yevgeny Nuzhin, who Wagner executed for surrendering to Ukrainian troops. “They would round up those who did not want to fight and shoot them in front of newcomers," Medvedev told CNN in January.
A veteran and former police officer described the haunting scenes he found when he arrived at the outlet mall in Allen, Texas, Saturday. The aftermath of the mass shooting there was “horrific,” Steven Spainhouer told CNN’s Fredricka Whitfield on Sunday. Spainhouer said he was planning to meet his son, who works at the H&M store at the outlet mall, for lunch. Spainhouer drove to the outlet mall and said when he showed up, he saw many people fleeing the scene and counted seven bodies on the ground. Spainhouer added that both he and his son will receive counseling for what they witnessed Saturday.
A patient prepares to take Mifepristone, the first medication in a medical abortion, at Alamo Women's Clinic in Carbondale, Illinois. Along with misoprostol, mifepristone is one of the drugs used for an abortion via medication, as opposed to surgery. Someone having a medication abortion takes mifepristone and then, after 24 to 48 hours, takes misoprostol. Side effects of mifepristone: Mifepristone usually doesn’t have many side effects, doctors say, but as with any drug, there can be short-lived ones. Preliminary data published February 2022 from the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organization focused on sexual and reproductive health that supports abortion rights, showed that medication abortion accounted for 53% of all abortions in the US.
“I could never have foreseen him doing that,” said John Powell, a former high school classmate. Teixeira grew up in the suburbs of Providence, Rhode Island, according to public records and graduated from Dighton-Rehoboth High School in neighboring Massachusetts in 2020. He toted around a “dictionary-sized” book on firearms and another about “tanks, planes and submarines,” former classmates told CNN. “A lot of people were wary of him,” said Brooke Cleathero, a former classmate in both high school and middle school. FBI agents interviewed at least one person who said a young man later identified as Teixeira began posting “what appeared to be classified information” on a server in December.
December 11, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news
  + stars: | 2022-12-11 | by ( Matt Meyer | Maureen Chowdhury | Mike Hayes | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +1 min
Young mothers Yana and Yaroslava don’t want to leave Russia with their 6-year-old son. But they fear a harsh new anti-gay law passed by Russian lawmakers will leave them little choice. Honestly, it is scary to stay,” Yaroslava told CNN. As the Kremlin prepared to finalize the expansion of the 2013 discriminatory anti-gay law, members of the LGBTQ community in Russia told CNN they feared the uncertain future ahead. “Our mere existence is illegal for our state and even for our child,” Yaroslava said.
December 10, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news
  + stars: | 2022-12-10 | by ( Adrienne Vogt | Tori B. Powell | Matt Meyer | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: 1 min
A Russian lawmaker announced Saturday that he invited freed arms dealer Viktor Bout to be in "broad cooperation" with a government committee that he leads. The legislator, Leonid Slutsky, is head of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs. Slutsky said Bout could help the committee on "issues of assistance to Russian citizens who find themselves in a difficult life situation abroad." "And the experience of interaction during the release of Victor will certainly be useful,” Slutsky said in a post on his Telegram account. The Russian official said Bout is holding up well for "all the trials he had gone through."
Kirby said the US was imposing new sanctions on three Russian entities involved in acquiring and using Russian drones. The US also authorized an additional $275 million in military aid for Ukraine on Friday. He said the several hundred drones Iran is providing to Russia are being used to kill innocent Ukrainians and destroy civilian infrastructure. He said Iran was providing Russia with an "unprecedented level" of military and technical support, including the potential sale of ballistic missiles and a new joint production line. He called the Tehran-Moscow pipeline a "full-fledged defense partnership" that the US expects to grow in the coming months.
December 4, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news
  + stars: | 2022-12-04 | by ( Matt Meyer | Maureen Chowdhury | Mike Hayes | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
The Biden administration called them “shortsighted” and said they would hurt low- and middle-income countries by pushing energy prices higher. Europe’s ban on importing oil from Russia shipped by sea kicks in on Monday, injecting extra uncertainty into the outlook for energy supply. G7 nations, the European Union and Australia agreed Friday to impose a price cap of $60 a barrel on Russian oil shipped to other countries that have not adopted an embargo. The move, which also takes effect Monday, is aimed at depriving the Kremlin of revenue while avoiding a price shock by keeping Russian oil flowing to some markets. Moscow has previously threatened to retaliate by cutting off oil supply to countries that adhere to the price cap.
November 10, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news
  + stars: | 2022-11-10 | by ( Kathleen Magramo | Jack Guy | Adrienne Vogt | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
Hackers linked to Russia's military were very likely behind ransomware attacks last month on Ukrainian and Polish transportation and logistics organizations, Microsoft said Thursday. The revelation will raise concerns in Washington and European capitals that allies supporting Ukraine against Russia's invasion could face greater cyber threats from Moscow. Poland is a NATO member and a key conduit for supplying military aid to Ukraine. The hacks "did cause damage" at the transportation and logistics companies in Poland and Ukraine, a Microsoft spokesperson told CNN. It's a rare public example of an alleged Russian hack related to the war causing damage in a NATO member country.
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