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Coyote trapped in Florida hotel parking garage

admin - Latest News - November 26, 2025
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Nov. 25, 2025, 11:10 PM ESTBy Gary Grumbach and Raquel Coronell UribeThe Justice Department said Tuesday that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was the Trump administration official behind the decision not to comply with a federal judge’s order to halt the deportation of alleged Venezuelan gang members to El Salvador under the Alien Enemies Act.In a court filing, the Justice Department said administration officials conveyed U.S. District Judge James Boasberg’s March 15 oral order to return alleged Venezuelan members of the Tren de Aragua gang to the United States, as well as the subsequent written order the same day that blocked the federal government from removing members subject to the Alien Enemies Act under President Donald Trump’s invocation of the 18th century law.The filing said Justice Department officials relayed the order and provided legal advice to the acting general counsel for the Department of Homeland Security, who conveyed that advice, as well as his own, to Noem. Noem then decided that detainees under the Alien Enemies Act who were removed from the United States before the court’s order could be transferred to El Salvador.A DHS spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Justice Department filing Tuesday night.Judge finds probable cause to hold Trump administration in contempt over deportation flights03:29The filing, which came 255 days after 261 people were loaded onto three planes in the United States bound for El Salvador, reveals for the first time who in the Trump administration was responsible for making the final decision. It comes as Boasberg said he wanted to revive criminal contempt proceedings against administration officials who authorized the deportation flights.The Justice Department’s disclosure is an attempt to provide Boasberg with information he has requested for months in an effort to avoid high-ranking officials’ being ordered to publicly testify about their actions that day.Chief U.S. District Judge James Boasberg in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 3.Saul Loeb / AFP – Getty Images fileBoasberg barred the administration from deporting alleged Tren de Aragua members using the wartime Alien Enemies Act in March, saying the deportees most likely did not receive due process. The administration executed flights carrying deportees under the act anyway.The Justice Department has argued that Boasberg’s written injunction halting the deportations had no bearing on those already removed from the country. In the filing Tuesday, the administration maintained that its decision was “lawful” and “consistent with a reasonable interpretation of the court’s order.”The decision to authorize the flights came amid the administration’s early showdown with judges who ruled against some of Trump’s policies and tactics.In April, the Supreme Court threw out Boasberg’s decision while still saying detainees must receive due process. That approach to due process has continued in other courts.A whistleblower alleged in June that former Principal Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove — who the court said Tuesday was one of the Justice Department officials who provided DHS with legal advice — had told subordinates they would need to consider ignoring court orders. Bove denied the accusations during Senate confirmation hearings for his nomination to the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “I have never advised a Department of Justice attorney to violate a court order,” he said.The whistleblower is one of the people Boasberg indicated he intends to hear testimony from in any contempt proceedings.The Trump administration is seeking a final ruling from Boasberg on the issue, and it could appeal after that. But Boasberg is pushing to get to the bottom of what happened on March 15 and why his orders weren’t followed. An appeals court allowed him to continue with contempt proceedings this month.Plaintiffs want to put at least nine past or present Trump administration officials on the witness stand for a contempt hearing.The list of potential witnesses includes Bove, a 3rd Circuit appeals judge; whistleblower Erez Reuveni, formerly acting deputy director of the Justice Department’s Office of Immigration Litigation; and Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign, whom the Justice Department filing pointed to Tuesday as having conveyed Boasberg’s oral and written orders to DHS.Gary GrumbachGary Grumbach is an NBC News legal affairs reporter, based in Washington, D.C.Raquel Coronell UribeRaquel Coronell Uribe is a breaking news reporter. 
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Nov. 26, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Maya Huter and Chloe MelasHawkins, Indiana, the fictional town in Netflix’s “Stranger Things,” is as central to the show’s plot as any of its main characters. Fans are so fascinated by the place that they travel from all over the world to experience it for themselves. Only, it’s not in Indiana — it’s in central Georgia, in the town of Jackson, about an hour south of Atlanta.The quaint town of 5,000 is in a wooded area just outside of Indian Springs, one of Georgia’s oldest state parks. Locals say the town was once marked by significant drug activity and was desperate for business. “It was a bootstrap situation,” said Hannah Thompson, who owns a local shop dedicated to 1980s memorabilia and runs daily “Stranger Tours” with her husband, Cameron. “If you’re looking around, you’re seeing empty shops, many of those were empty for almost a decade.”
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Oct. 11, 2025, 7:00 AM EDTBy Aria BendixIt started with an unsubstantiated warning that taking Tylenol during pregnancy could raise a child’s risk of autism. But the message from President Donald Trump and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. seems to have quickly expanded to suggest that babies and young children should avoid the common painkiller.“Don’t give it to the baby when the baby’s born,” Trump said of Tylenol at a Cabinet meeting on Thursday.Kennedy jumped in to suggest that children who are circumcised have higher autism rates, “likely because they’re given Tylenol.”As the administration’s stance on the medication has broadened over the last few weeks, researchers say the notion that young children may develop autism as a result of taking Tylenol is particularly far-fetched.“There’s even less evidence that there’s a link between Tylenol in early childhood and autism than there is that Tylenol taken during pregnancy causes autism,” said David Mandell, a psychiatry professor at the University of Pennsylvania.The bulk of scientific evidence suggests moderate Tylenol use is safe in pregnancy, and many autism researchers say data does not support a causal link to autism. When it comes to young children, the American Academy of Pediatrics says Tylenol is safe when taken correctly under the guidance of a pediatrician. The medication shouldn’t be given to children younger than 12 weeks, the group says, unless a doctor recommends it, since Tylenol can mask fevers or early signs of sepsis, which require immediate medical attention.Packages of Tylenol and generic pain and fever relief medicine for sale on a shelf in a pharmacy in Houston on Sept. 23.Ronaldo Schemidt / AFP – Getty Images fileTrump and Kennedy’s first announcement about Tylenol and autism came on Sept. 22, when they unveiled regulatory actions to limit the medication’s use in pregnancy. Though Trump warned pregnant women to “fight like hell not to take it,” the actual policy changes were more subdued. The Food and Drug Administration issued a letter asking physicians to “consider minimizing the use of acetaminophen during pregnancy for routine low-grade fevers.” (Acetaminophen is the active ingredient in Tylenol.)The FDA acknowledged, however, that Tylenol is the safest over-the-counter pain reliever in pregnancy and that “a causal relationship has not been established” with autism.The agency made no mention of risks to children. Nevertheless, both Kennedy and Trump have repeated such warnings on several occasions — a significant leap from the FDA messaging.In a post on Truth Social two weeks ago, Trump wrote that young children should not take Tylenol “for virtually any reason.”Kennedy, meanwhile, doubled down on his statement about circumcision in a post on X on Friday, saying that “the observed autism correlation in circumcised boys is best explained by acetaminophen exposure.”Dr. Joshua Gordon, chair of the psychiatry department at Columbia University, said the snowballing warnings about Tylenol represent a common tactic among those looking to attribute autism to vaccines or medications.“Robert F. Kennedy and his colleagues will start with asking one question, and when the scientific community answers that question, they’ll tweak the question slightly to prolong, if you will, the debate on the topic,” Gordon said.He pointed to the way the anti-vaccine community first raised concerns about the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine in connection to autism, then pivoted to focus on a mercury-based preservative in vaccines and on the cumulative amount of vaccines administered in childhood. (Each of these concerns has been debunked.)“No amount of scientific evidence can ever be conclusive for this community,” Gordon said. “The debate is like a hydra. You cut off one head and they’re just going to try to emerge with another.”The Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to a request for comment.White House spokesperson Kush Desai said that “the President is right to express his commonsense opinion that Americans should use caution with all medications and adhere to FDA guidance, including the longstanding guidance regarding appropriate use and dosage of acetaminophen in young children.”A spokesperson for Kenvue, the maker of Tylenol, said the medication is “one of the most widely studied pain relievers and fever reducers in infants and children, and numerous randomized, controlled clinical trials support the safety of acetaminophen in infants and children when used as directed.”The spokesperson added that “independent, sound science clearly shows that taking acetaminophen does not cause autism.”Mandell said claims that Tylenol increases autism rates in babies and toddlers are based on low-quality studies that don’t prove causation.He pointed to a small study that found younger children with autism were significantly more likely to take acetaminophen for a fever compared to children without the disorder. Mandell said the study had limitations: Parents had to recall how often they gave their children acetaminophen, and children with autism are more prone to discomfort, which may lead their parents to give acetaminophen more frequently.One scientist in particular, immunologist William Parker, has fueled the theory that autism can be attributed to acetaminophen use in babies and young children. In his post on X, Kennedy cited a paper by Parker that says there is “overwhelming evidence” that acetaminophen triggers autism. But the paper hasn’t been peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal.Kennedy also mentioned a Danish study from 2015 that concluded that boys who are circumcised may have a greater risk of developing autism. But the study authors said they couldn’t attribute the purported effect to Tylenol.Dr. Sian Jones-Jobst, a pediatrician and the president of Complete Children’s Health, a pediatric network in Lincoln, Nebraska, said very few pediatricians administer Tylenol for circumcisions; instead, the common practice is injecting a numbing medication.She added that in other situations, Tylenol is a useful tool to reduce fever or pain.“You shouldn’t let your child suffer if they’re obviously uncomfortable,” Jones-Jobst said.Aria BendixAria Bendix is the breaking health reporter for NBC News Digital.
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