The remains of six people were recovered Friday at the site of a tour helicopter crash on a Hawaiian island, a fire official said.

There were no signs of any survivors among the seven people on board, said Solomon Kanoho, battalion chief of the Kauai Fire Department. He made the announcement Friday afternoon, hours after crews found the wreckage along the remote north coast of the island.

The search was suspended Friday due to fog and poor visibility. Kanoho said more searches will hopefully resume Saturday at first light.

Coast Guard Cutter William Hart moves toward the Na Pali Coast on the Hawaiian island of Kauai on Friday, the day after a tour helicopter disappeared with seven people aboard. Authorities say wreckage of the helicopter has been found in a mountainous area on the island, as well as the remains of six people.Lt. j.g. Daniel Winter / U.S. Coast Guard via AP

“There are no indications of survivors,” Kanoho said, adding the wreckage was in a steep area.

The tour helicopter was reported overdue at around 6 p.m. Thursday. The Safari Helicopter was conducting a tour over the Na Pali area with a pilot and six passengers on board, officials said.

Kauai is an island west of Oahu.

The last contact anyone had with the helicopter was around 4:40 p.m. Thursday when the pilot reported the tour was leaving the Waimea Canyon area, Kauai County officials said.

The aircraft had been scheduled to return around 5:30 p.m. at the landing pad in the town of Lihue.

The names of those whose remains were found were not released because officials were still notifying their families, Kanoho said. The Coast Guard had said their were two minors aboard.

Kanoho said earlier Friday that there were members of two families on board, a party of two and a party of four.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige said in a statement earlier Friday that “Our thoughts are with the families of those on-board as search and rescue crews work at the site of the helicopter crash on Kauaʻi.”

The National Transportation Safety Board said it was sending three investigators to the scene of the crash.

Ige said the state would do whatever it could to assist with the investigation.

Eighty percent of the island is uninhabited. Most of it is a state park, and visitors aboard tour helicopters from several companies are a daily occurrence, weather permitting, the Coast Guard said.

The Waimea Canyon is among several attractions that draw tours there, the agency said.

Derek Kawakami, mayor of the County of Kauai, said Friday afternoon that “we ask for your continued thoughts and prayers.”

The cause of the crash has not been determined, but it is the third helicopter crash in Hawaii this year, NBC affiliate KHNL of Honolulu reported.

U.S. Rep. Ed Case, a Democrat who represents a district in Hawaii that includes Honolulu, said in a statement Friday that more must be done to regulate the tour and small-aircraft industries and improve safety.

In September, Case introduced a bill he said would impose strict regulations on commercial tour operators, including helicopters and small planes. It would require that tour flight pilots focus on flying the aircraft and not also act as tour guides. It also would restrict where they can fly and how low.

“Tour helicopter and small aircraft operations are not safe, and innocent lives are paying the price,” Case said in a statement Friday.

The FAA said it conducts random and regular surveillance on all Hawaii air tour operators and ensures companies address any issues. Ian Gregor, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration, told The Associated Press the agency does not have concerns about the industry statewide.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/remains-6-people-found-scene-helicopter-crash-hawaii-n1108111

WASHINGTON – Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal stated Thursday that he believes some Senate Republicans are concerned with Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s approach to working with the White House on how to handle the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump in the Senate.

“I’ve talked to anywhere from five to 10 of my colleagues who have very severe misgivings about the direction that Mitch McConnell is going in denying a full, fair proceeding with witnesses and documents. My hope is that they will say publicly what Senator Murkowski did, and really hold Mitch McConnell accountable,” the Connecticut senator said during “Capitol News Briefing” on the Connecticut Network.

Earlier this week, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-AK, stated that she is “disturbed” by McConnell’s remarks that he is going to work “in total coordination” with the White House during the upcoming impeachment trial in the Senate, and that he wouldn’t be “impartial about this at all.”

Her comments come after an interview the Majority Leader had with Sean Hannity on Fox News where he declared that “everything” he does “during this, I’m coordinating with the White House counsel. There will be no difference between the president’s position and our position as to how to handle this, to the extent that we can.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/12/27/blumenthal-gop-have-misgivings-mcconnell-trump-impeachment-strategy/2758553001/

Radio shock jock Don Imus, one of the pioneers of his genre, died Friday less than two years after retiring, according to a family statement given to NBC New York.

He was 79.

He died Friday after being hospitalized at the Baylor Scott and White Medical Center in College Station, Texas, his family said. The cause of death was not divulged, but early this year Imus said on air that he had prostate cancer.

“Deirdre, his wife of 25 years, and his son Wyatt, 21, were at his side, and his son Lt. Zachary Don Cates is returning from military service overseas,” the family said.

The controversial morning personality’s last day on the radio was March 29 of last year. He announced Jan. 22 that he was retiring, telling fans: “Turn out the lights … the party’s over.”

The grizzled radio man was best known for his outsize cowboy hat and penchant for making controversial, often offensive, statements.

In 2007, MSNBC dropped its simulcast of the “Imus in the Morning” radio program after he used a racial slur to describe Rutgers University’s mostly African American women’s basketball team.

Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of NBC News and MSNBC.

He was also fired from his gig on CBS radio for the same remark. He returned to the airwaves, at New York’s WABC (AM), after eight months of exile.

Imus was born in Riverside, California, raised on a cattle ranch near Kingman, Arizona, and started in radio in New York in 1971, according to a bio released by his family Friday.

A challenging childhood that included an arrest for fighting and the divorce of his parents culminated in an unremarkable public school career, the bio states.

“He graduated with no honors and no skills, a rare stroke of luck because a broadcasting career required neither,” it says.

Imus went on to take his acerbic tongue and steadfast identification with the American working man to the realm of ratings gold. He was inducted into the National Association of Broadcasters Radio Hall of Fame in 1989.

On Friday, friends and colleagues reacted to his demise.

“He will long be remembered as one of the true giants in the history of radio,” New York sports radio legend Mike Francesa said on Twitter.

Joe Scarborough of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” said on Twitter that the program “obviously owes its format to Don Imus. No one else could have gotten away with that much talk on cable news.”

Imus is also survived by four daughters: Nadine, Ashley, Elizabeth and Toni.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/radio-broadcaster-don-imus-has-died-n1108081

WASHINGTON – Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal stated Thursday that he believes some Senate Republicans are concerned with Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s approach to working with the White House on how to handle the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump in the Senate.

“I’ve talked to anywhere from five to 10 of my colleagues who have very severe misgivings about the direction that Mitch McConnell is going in denying a full, fair proceeding with witnesses and documents. My hope is that they will say publicly what Senator Murkowski did, and really hold Mitch McConnell accountable,” the Connecticut senator said during “Capitol News Briefing” on the Connecticut Network.

Earlier this week, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-AK, stated that she is “disturbed” by McConnell’s remarks that he is going to work “in total coordination” with the White House during the upcoming impeachment trial in the Senate, and that he wouldn’t be “impartial about this at all.”

Her comments come after an interview the Majority Leader had with Sean Hannity on Fox News where he declared that “everything” he does “during this, I’m coordinating with the White House counsel. There will be no difference between the president’s position and our position as to how to handle this, to the extent that we can.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/12/27/blumenthal-gop-have-misgivings-mcconnell-trump-impeachment-strategy/2758553001/

The trove of materials also includes thousands of text messages the SEALs sent one another about the events and the prosecution of Chief Gallagher. Together with the dozens of hours of recorded interviews, they provide revealing insights into the men of the platoon, who have never spoken publicly about the case, and the leader they turned in.

Platoon members said they saw Chief Gallagher shoot civilians and fatally stab a wounded captive with a hunting knife. Chief Gallagher was acquitted by a military jury in July of all but a single relatively minor charge, and was cleared of all punishment in November by Mr. Trump.

Video from a SEAL’s helmet camera, included in the trove of materials, shows the barely conscious captive — a teenage Islamic State fighter so thin that his watch slid easily up and down his arm — being brought in to the platoon one day in May 2017. Then the helmet camera is shut off.

In the video interviews with investigators, three SEALs said they saw Chief Gallagher go on to stab the sedated captive for no reason, and then hold an impromptu re-enlistment ceremony over the body, as if it were a trophy.

“I was listening to it, and I was just thinking, like, this is the most disgraceful thing I’ve ever seen in my life,” Special Operator Miller, who has since been promoted to chief, told investigators.

Special Operator Miller said that when the platoon commander, Lt. Jacob Portier, told the SEALs to gather over the corpse for photos, he did not feel he could refuse. The photos, included in the evidence obtained by The Times, show Chief Gallagher, surrounded by other SEALs, clutching the dead captive’s hair; in one photo, he holds a custom-made hunting knife.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/27/us/navy-seals-edward-gallagher-video.html

The Trump administration is likely to continue its aggressive trade actions in its fourth year, turning to negotiations with the United Kingdom, Europe and possibly India and Vietnam, said Peter Navarro, assistant to the president for trade and manufacturing policy, in an interview.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/12/27/trumps-quest-shatter-gop-economics-reached-its-culmination/

The West Roxbury woman who died along with her two young children in an apparent double murder-suicide at a Boston parking garage on Christmas Day was a Brown University graduate who worked at a biotech company.

Erin Pascal. —Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office

Erin Pascal, 40, was the director of corporate social responsibility and community relations for Sanofi Genzyme, a position she had held since October, according to her LinkedIn profile. She began working at the Cambridge-based company in June 2013 as an associate director of corporate communications.

“Our hearts are with the family,” said Ashleigh Koss, a spokeswoman for the company, also confirming that Pascal worked there before she died.

Pascal and her two children, identified as 4-year-old Allison and 1 ½-year-old Andrew, were found unresponsive on a sidewalk next to the Renaissance Park Garage near the Ruggles MBTA station following the incident, thought to have occurred between 1:25 and 1:35 p.m. They were taken to a nearby hospital and pronounced dead.

“This entire family in a matter of minutes, aside from the father who survives them, is gone,” Suffolk County District Attorney Rachael Rollins said in a press conference on Thursday.

Earlier in the day, Rollins said it’s believed the children fell from the garage first and then their mother.

Years ago, Pascal studied English at Brown University, graduating in 2001, according to her LinkedIn profile. Back then, she was Erin Emlock, worked for The Brown Daily Herald, and was a “very serious journalism student,” according to Tracy Breton, who instructed her at the university, The Providence Journal reports.

“She was very intense,” Breton told the paper. “She was always willing to go the extra mile. She really loved interviewing people. She was always looking for ways to make things better.”

After college, Pascal spent two years as an intern at The Providence Journal, the paper reported, before moving onto communications roles at Milton Hospital, Genzyme, and Vertex Pharmaceuticals. Her former colleague at the newspaper’s South County bureau, Jennifer Jordan, remembered her as “really mature.”

“She had a lot of energy,” Jordan told the Journal. “When we would finish work, we’d often take long walks on Blackstone Boulevard [in Providence]. She was a very sensitive young woman, wise beyond her years.”

“I have so many fond memories of her,” she added.

Former South County bureau chief David McCarthy described Pascal as outgoing and “wonderful” and said she “really stood out as among the best.”

“I just can’t believe it,” he told the paper.

Source Article from https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2019/12/27/erin-pascal

Two U.S. senators have been barred from visiting the Philippines over a measure that seeks to punish Philippine officials involved in the detainment of a top critic of President Rodrigo Duterte’s anti-drug crackdown.

Salvador Panelo, a spokesman for Duterte, said during a news conference Friday that the Philippine president ordered the Bureau of Immigration to deny Senators Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois, and Patrick Leahy, a Democrat from Vermont, entry into the country.

“We will not sit idly if they continue to interfere with our process as a sovereign state,” Panelo said during a news conference.

The provision protested by the Philippine government was included in the spending package passed by Congress last week. It denies entry to the U.S. to those involved in the incarceration of Philippine Senator Leila de Lima, according to Reuters.

De Lima, an ardent critic of Duterte’s anti-drug campaign, was arrested in 2017 and led an investigation into mass killings that took place during the Philippine president’s drug war.

David Carle, a spokesman for Leahy, said the senator has no plans to visit the Philippines in the near future and is not aware at this time of any Philippine officials planning to visit the U.S. who may be subject to the new restrictions.

“This is about the right of Filipino citizens — and people everywhere — to freely express their opinions, including opinions that may be critical of government policies that involve the use of excessive force and the denial of due process,” Carle said.

In addition to prohibiting Durbin and Leahy from entering the Philippines, the Philippines will require American citizens to secure a visa before entering the country if the restrictions are enforced by the U.S. against Philippine officials.

U.S. citizens can enter the Philippines without a visa for visits under 30 days, according to the State Department.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/two-u-s-senators-banned-from-visiting-philippines/

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi holds her gavel after being elected during the beginning of the 116th Congress. A lot of Pelosi’s decisions have come to define 2019.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images


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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi holds her gavel after being elected during the beginning of the 116th Congress. A lot of Pelosi’s decisions have come to define 2019.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

An overarching and important theme of 2019 was the shifting power dynamic in Washington. The 2018 midterm elections put Democrats in control of the House of Representatives after eight years of Republican control — and made Nancy Pelosi House speaker for the second time in her career.

That had consequences, including the use of the ultimate check on presidential authority, impeachment.

Many of this year’s most-read political stories on NPR.org centered on what the newly minted majority Democrats would do and how they’d use their power.

Other major stories of the year include the release of Robert Mueller’s report on Russian interference in the 2016 election and the Democratic presidential primary race kicking into high gear.

Stories that just missed the top 10 covered Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s health, the early 2019 government shutdown, whether President Trump’s tax returns would have to be released, several on the Ukraine affair that led to Trump’s impeachment and Trump’s Hurricane Dorian Sharpie moment.

Here are the headlines that did make the cut:

10. After Stinging Presidential Loss, Popular Vote Movement Gains Momentum In States

After Hillary Clinton lost in 2016 despite winning the popular vote by some 3 million votes, additional states have pushed for legislation to essentially eliminate the Electoral College.

That isn’t likely to happen anytime soon because of states controlled by Republicans, but it’s proof of just how much Democrats are smarting since 2000. In two of the three presidential elections that Democrats lost this century, they won the popular vote.

Americans appear conflicted. A Pew Research Center poll last year found that 55% want the Constitution amended so the candidate who receives the most votes wins. But a July NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll found just 42% of Americans thought eliminating the Electoral College was a good idea.

9. Ted Cruz And Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Team Up To Ban Lawmakers From Lobbying

Twitter is not normally a place where people with polarized views find consensus. But it was the platform where it started for two of the most outspoken politicians of this era — liberal Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and conservative Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.

The duo teamed up on legislation that would impose a lifetime ban on members of Congress becoming lobbyists. Not everyone thinks that’s such a great idea, because there could be unintended consequences.

No ban has passed since this story got attention. In June, Rep. David Cicilline of Rhode Island introduced a bill prohibiting members of Congress from lobbying. But it only had one cosponsor and it went nowhere. As of August, Ocasio-Cortez said her legislative team was in discussion with Cruz’s.

Cruz and Ocasio-Cortez looked like they might team up again on making birth control available over the counter, but Ocasio-Cortez balked, saying she wants something done about affordability of birth control, too.

8. FACT CHECK: Trump’s Oval Office Pitch For A Border Wall

Trump used his first Oval Office address to try and make the sale on his desired border wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

NPR fact-checked six of the claims the president made, including that his rhetoric overstates the criminal threat of immigrants and that most of the illegal drugs entering the country go through legal ports of entry that a border wall would not stop.

Trump also said the wall would be paid for “indirectly” by the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement. That’s a far cry from his original campaign claim that Mexico would pay for a wall — the country isn’t.

President Trump speaks during an address on border security in the Oval Office on Jan. 8.

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President Trump speaks during an address on border security in the Oval Office on Jan. 8.

Carlos Barria/Bloomberg via Getty Images

7. Poll: Trump Approval Down, Slips With Base

During the record-long partial government shutdown in January, Trump’s approval rating fell to 39% in the NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll.

That time saw him with his lowest average score for the year. His approval rating has since recovered slightly, up to about 45% in the average of the polls and 42% in the most recent NPR poll.

Trump’s approval rating has never been above 45% in the NPR poll or below 35% (in August 2017 after his response to the racist violence in Charlottesville, Va.). In the past year, it’s been a range of 39% to 44%.

Trump’s ratings are historically low on average and seemingly immovable, signaling a potentially brutal 2020 presidential election to come.

6. Democrats Unveil Changes To House Rules On Debt Ceiling, Ethics

With Democrats’ takeover of the House in early 2019, it meant not just the dawning of a check on Trump but also a new way of doing business after eight years of GOP control.

A lot of what Democrats implemented was in response to the tense intra- and inter-party fighting of the Boehner years. When Republican John Boehner was speaker, he faced a debt-ceiling crisis because conservative hard-liners looked to force spending cuts. Pelosi moved to make debt-ceiling raises automatic.

She also created a committee to address climate change, revived a rule to give lawmakers 72 hours to read major legislation before they can vote and amended rules on discrimination to allow religious headwear to be worn in the House chamber.

And looking to avoid the coup attempts faced by Boehner, she made it tougher to oust a sitting speaker. Pelosi’s tight grip on her caucus would show again in the push to impeach Trump. Just two Democrats — one of whom switched to become a Republican — defied Pelosi and voted against the most significant article of impeachment against Trump, abuse of power.

5. Where Does Illegal Immigration Mostly Occur? Here’s What The Data Tell Us

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The issue of illegal immigration has been dominated by talk of migrants coming across the nation’s southernmost border because of Trump’s campaign for a border wall.

But the reality is that most people in the United States illegally didn’t cross the border; they came legally and didn’t leave.

4. READ: The Mueller Report, With Redactions

The Mueller report on Russian interference in the 2016 election was arguably the most anticipated document of 2019.

That 400-page report noted that while the Justice Department’s guidance is not to indict a sitting president, the findings did not “exonerate” Trump.

“The evidence we obtained about the President’s actions and intent presents difficult issues that prevent us from conclusively determining that no criminal conduct occurred,” the report noted. “Accordingly, while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”

Former FBI Director Robert Mueller is sworn in before he testifies before the House Judiciary Committee on his report on Russian election interference in July.

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Former FBI Director Robert Mueller is sworn in before he testifies before the House Judiciary Committee on his report on Russian election interference in July.

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In fact, it found multiple contacts between Trump campaign officials and Russians, that Russia was trying to get Trump elected, and that Trump campaign officials welcomed it. The report also found several potential instances of obstruction of justice committed by the president.

“[T]he Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing,” Mueller said in a news conference, a month after his report was released.

But that process — impeachment — would not come, as it related to the Mueller report, especially after the special counsel’s shaky public testimony in July. After the Ukraine affair, Democrats did consider an obstruction of justice charge, as it relates to the Mueller report, to show a broader pattern from the president, but they ultimately opted against it.

3. FACT CHECK: Trump’s State Of The Union Address

This was Trump’s first State of the Union address after the Democrats’ takeover of the House. But rather than graciously acknowledge the new power dynamic in Washington, like past presidents have, Trump jumped right in.

He touted an “unprecedented economic boom” (it’s not), wages that are “rising at the fastest pace in decades” (they aren’t) and took credit for unleashing “a revolution in American energy,” making the U.S. “now the No. 1 producer of oil and natural gas anywhere in the world” (even though the record fracking expansion predates his time in office).

Trump also warned, “If there is going to be peace and legislation, there cannot be war and investigation.”

Obviously, that threat did not stop Democrats from impeaching him.

2. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Releases Green New Deal Outline

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was one of the breakout figures of the 2018 election.

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was one of the breakout figures of the 2018 election.

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Ocasio-Cortez was one of the breakout figures of the 2018 election. She ran as an unabashed and uncompromising progressive who stood for the opposite of Trump.

And her bold Green New Deal, introduced with Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey, grabbed headlines and attention.

The Green New Deal — as described by NPR’s Danielle Kurtzleben — is “a massive policy package that would remake the U.S. economy and, [Ocasio-Cortez and Markey] hope, eliminate all U.S. carbon emissions. That’s a really big — potentially impossibly big — undertaking.”

Support for the proposal became something of a litmus test for progressives, but its boldness also made it a lightning rod that conservatives have used to target Democrats.

For Democrats, though, especially younger ones, climate change is an increasingly important issue. In the latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll, climate change is the No. 2 issue for Democrats and tops the list for progressives and Democratic men. (Democratic women picked health care first, with climate not too far behind.)

1. Speaker Pelosi Revokes Vice President Pence’s House Office Space

This story highlighted the newfound power of House Democrats.

As a sign of the close relationship between Republican former Speaker Paul Ryan and Vice President Pence, a former congressman from Indiana, Ryan set aside office space for Pence on the House side.

But soon after Pelosi was sworn in, she reversed that.

Vice presidents generally maintain an office on Capitol Hill on the Senate side, given their role technically as president of the Senate. If there’s a tie in the Senate, the vice president breaks it.

Pence, in fact, has so far been called on to break ties 13 times during the Trump administration, including on the nomination of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, to begin debate on repealing the health care law and on a bill to give states permission to withhold federal family planning funds from Planned Parenthood.

Life in the minority in the House is tough. The majority rules — and makes them, and this showed that in a very tangible way.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/12/27/790803528/our-10-most-read-political-stories-of-2019-reflect-a-shifting-capitol-power-dyna

Forty-nine people were hospitalized, 18 of them in critical condition, according to Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs. Among the dead are the captain of the aircraft, Marat Muratabaev, and Kazakh journalist Dana Kruglova, of informburo.kz, the ministry said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/passenger-jet-crashes-shortly-after-takeoff-in-kazakhstan-killing-at-least-14/2019/12/27/30d37adc-2868-11ea-9cc9-e19cfbc87e51_story.html

There’s finally some good news for holiday travelers who have been unable to drive on some of Southern California’s most crucial freeways.

Officials were forced to close the Grapevine portion of the 5 Freeway since a Christmas Day storm dropped several inches of snow on the roadway, cutting the main connector between Southern California and the Central Valley.

The freeway has finally reopened after being closed from Parker Road in Castaic to Grapevine Road in Kern County, Caltrans said.

Drivers will initially be escorted by California Highway Patrol vehicles.

Snow conditions also forced officials to keep the 15 Freeway closed between Baker and Primm, Nevada, for much of Friday morning.

Caltrans announced the roadway had reopened in both directions just after 9 a.m.

The Cajon Pass portion of the freeway, which was also temporarily closed, was reopened on Thursday. That closure had caused miles-long backups, and drivers were stuck on the freeway for hours.

The 138 Freeway has reopened after being closed in both directions between the 15 Freeway and Angeles Crest Highway. Some 3 feet of snow fell in the Wrightwood area during this week’s storm, dumping on ski resort Mountain High.

Angeles Crest Highway to Islip Saddle and State Route 33 north of Ojai both reopened shortly after noon. Those roadways has also been shut down due to snow and ice.

Weather conditions have improved Friday, with sunny skies over most of the Southland.

Drivers should be aware that chains are still required for all mountain roads heading to the Big Bear area. Updated road conditions and chain requirements can be found here.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/2019/12/27/weather-conditions-keep-road-closures-in-place-on-grapevine-15-freeway/

The Boston mother found dead with her two young children at the bottom of a parking garage in what authorities said was very likely a double murder-suicide was an Ivy League graduate and an executive at a prominent Cambridge biotechnology firm.

Erin Pascal, 40, and her two children, Allison, 4, and Andrew, 15 months, were found Christmas Day at the bottom of the Renaissance Park Garage at Northeastern University.

Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office

Pascal worked for Sanofi Genzyme, an international biotechnology company headquartered in Cambridge, as the company’s director of social responsibility and community relations.

A Sanofi Genzyme representative confirmed Pascal’s position and that she had worked at the company since 2004.

“There’s not much we can say; we’re very limited about what we can say about the situation,” company spokeswoman Ashleigh Koss told NBC News on Friday. “Our hearts are with her family.”

Pascal graduated from Brown University in 2001 as Erin Emlock with a bachelor’s degree in English, school officials confirmed Friday. She apparently took those skills to her position as a reporter for the Providence Journal.

“She was a really mature, together young person,” former Providence Journal reporter and onetime Pascal colleague Jennifer Jordan told the newspaper.

Pascal was a reporting intern for two years at the Rhode Island newspaper between 2001 and 2003, working out of its South County bureau.

“She did a really good job in South County,” Jordan said. “But she realized that while she liked reporting, she might not love it enough to stick with it.”

If you or someone you know is in crisis, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255, text HOME to 741741 or visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources for additional resources.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/boston-mom-likely-double-murder-suicide-kids-was-biotech-exec-n1107801

A 20-year-old woman went missing while hiking with her boyfriend in Oregon — and authorities said Thursday they found “some interesting items and clues” while searching for her.

Allyson Watterson and her boyfriend Benjamin Garland, 21, were hiking in a wooded area about 18 miles outside Portland on Sunday when he claims the two became separated, according to ABC News.

Garland was later found sleeping in his truck by a resident. He returned to the hiking area with his father to search for Watterson, but couldn’t find her, the report said.

The boyfriend and his dad then notified Watterson’s family, who reported her missing on Monday.

Garland was later arrested on several charges not related to the disappearance of his girlfriend, the report said.

Since then, trained search and rescue teams have fanned out across the area looking for Watterson — even on Christmas Day.

Allyson WattersonTwitter

On Thursday, when the new discovery was made, an Oregon National Guard helicopter with heat-sensing cameras was being used to aid the search.

“[We] have found some interesting items and clues that we’re going to try to find out more information tomorrow with a different type of search,” Washington County Sheriff’s Deputy Tony Morris said at a press conference.

“I’m not free to say what it is at this point. Just know that it’s something that’s going to change the type of searching we’re doing.”

Watterson’s parents were grateful for the search efforts.

“We just really, really want to thank everyone, and we want this to keep going until we find Allyson,” her father, Alan Watterson, said at the press conference.

Her mother, Misty Watterson, said, “She’s just a very special person, and I will do anything to get her home. Anything.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/12/27/interesting-items-found-during-search-for-missing-oregon-hiker-cops/

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Three teenagers killed in a Christmas car crash near Pleasanton were all sophomores at Dublin High School.

The Dublin Unified School District identified the boys killed as Javier Ramirez, 16, and twin brothers Mark Anthony Urista and Michael Angelo Urista, both 16.

A fourth Dublin High Student, junior Samantha Vargas Arceo, 16, remains in the hospital, a school district spokeswoman said. Another teen — the Urista twins’ cousin, Jared Reynoso — was also injured and taken to the hospital as well, according to the twins’ mother, Ana Reynoso.

She described the boys as “full of life” and said their loss was “devastating.”

“Our entire community is mourning the loss of three Dublin High School students whose lives were taken much too soon,” school district superintendent Dave Marken said in a written statement. “We’d like to share our deepest condolences to the family and friends of our students and let them know they are in our thoughts during this difficult time.”

The five teenagers were in a car traveling south on Foothill Road near Castlewood Drive around 10 p.m. on Christmas when the car veered into the northbound lanes and lost control, according to California Highway Patrol Officer Tyler Hahn. The car hit the power pole, causing it to break off at its base, before colliding with a large tree just east of the roadway and rolling over.

The three boys were pronounced dead at the scene, Hahn said. He added that the two teens who were injured and hospitalized had both been ejected from the vehicle.

Reynoso remained in critical condition at the hospital on Friday, according to his family members, but the condition of Vargas Arceo was not immediately known as of Friday morning.

When Dublin High students go back to school on Jan. 6, there will be grief counselors available to them, according to the superintendent’s statement.

“Our hearts hurt for our students, families and Dublin High School colleagues,” he said. He also noted that there will be a candlelight vigil for the students on Sunday, Dec. 29 at Dublin High School at 5 p.m.

Source Article from http://www.mercurynews.com/three-teenagers-killed-in-christmas-crash-identified-as-dublin-high-students

“This chair good?” “Yeah.” “Which team are you assigned to right now?” “Team 7.” “You’re SEAL Team 7.” “I’m at SEAL Team 7—” The Navy SEALs are probably the most elite commandos in the military. “Why do you think you’re here, first of all?” “What have you heard this is about?” “The prisoner issue.” “O.K.” Reporting on the SEALs is extremely tough. “So I’m going to have you tell me everything you know first.” “O.K. I brought my notes just because—” There’s a culture of being a silent professional. You don’t talk about what you do. “I walked over there to check it out. And somebody told me, he was like, hey, grab your med bag.” “Did you actually see it happen?” “Yeah, I saw it happen.” In the summer of 2019, we get leaked a trove of Navy materials that includes thousands of documents, helmet cam footage, photos, text messages, and all these confidential interviews with the SEALs, stuff that no one has ever seen before. “I have heard more rumors and stuff like that of Eddie targeting civilians.” “I saw Eddie take a shot at probably a 12-year-old kid.” “What was Eddie’s— I know he was a chief. But what was his official position?” “He was the platoon chief.” This massive leak gives us insight into a very secretive brotherhood of commandos that otherwise we would never get to see. “The guy got crazier and crazier.” “And you could tell he was perfectly O.K. with killing anybody.” “I see Eddie leaning over him with a knife.” This is a case where some SEALs who are not supposed to take things outside the family turned in their own chief. “The guy was toxic.” “You can’t let this continue.” It’s [BLEEP] up. They’re these guys who believe in doing good and had the courage to act, it’s just that things didn’t turn out how they thought. “There were civilians everywhere.” ”[BLEEP], we have a problem.” “He’s a psychopath.” “Hey!” “Ah!” “The guy’s freaking evil, man.” [MUSIC PLAYING]

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/27/the-weekly/eddie-gallagher-navy-seal.html

December 27 at 11:19 AM

A coast-to-coast storm system is throwing a speed bump in holiday return travel plans, bringing the worst weather of every season to an extensive swath of the Lower 48. Heavy rain and even a tornado already struck Southern California as the storm moved ashore on Thursday, with hefty snows and severe weather likely in the Central United States during the next few days. Disruptions to air and ground travel are likely in some locations.

The storm first drenched the Pacific coast, with Los Angeles picking up 3.34 inches of rain in five days from back-to-back systems. Meanwhile, a weak tornado moved ashore in Ventura Harbor, Calif., as strong thunderstorms rumbled across parts of the Golden State. In the higher elevations, feet of snow have fallen. And that’s just the beginning.

A meteorological domino effect

The storm stirring up all the inclement weather is a series of several storms all wrapped up beneath the same surge of cold air and atmospheric spin aloft. Like a row of toppling dominoes, one area of surface low pressure is expected to hand off its energy to the next in the next few days. This relay race of storms is likely to bring a smorgasbord of weather threats from the Southwest to the Upper Midwest, and eventually to New England.

The first installment of the multi-act atmospheric tango should begin overnight as a zone of low pressure takes shape from northern Chihuahua, Mexico, up through west Texas, eastern New Mexico and into Colorado. This area of storminess should eventually consolidate into an intensifying low pressure center over the High Plains on Saturday morning.

Southwestern U.S. impacts

Snow is already falling in the higher elevations of the Desert Southwest and the Four Corners region, particularly in northern New Mexico. Winter storm warnings are up for 8 to 12 inches of snowfall possible above 7,500 feet. A few pockets of 12 to 18 inches are possible in the San Juan Mountains of southwest Colorado, where an avalanche watch is also in effect.

In the valleys and lower elevations, a general 3 to 6 inches is likely over a broad area.

Precipitation should wind down abruptly by Saturday morning as the storm intensifies to the east, pulling in drier air from the west.

A Plains snowstorm, severe weather trigger

As the low ejects from the Rockies into the High Plains, it should quickly intensify. The exact path of the low’s center hasn’t been determined, but the best zone for heavy snow will be on its northwestern flank, whereas the warm sector to the storm’s south and east is likely to spur heavy rain and even severe thunderstorms.

The low is likely to march through Kansas, bringing moderate to heavy rainfall along the Interstate 35 corridor in Oklahoma and Kansas. One to 2 inches of rain is possible throughout this zone. In this “warm sector” of the storm, severe weather is possible for Saturday, with a few tornadoes not out of the question, although the threat of a large-scale tornado outbreak is low. The severe thunderstorm risk extends from Louisiana and Arkansas into the Missouri Ozarks and eastern Oklahoma.

Additional chances at severe weather are possible in the Deep South on Sunday. The place to watch looks to be Mississippi and Alabama, though a severe threat could hit southern Tennessee, as well.

Then there’s the snow. Snow is predicted to break out across most of South Dakota by daybreak Saturday, spreading into northern and western Nebraska during the afternoon as cold air filters into the region amid a tightening temperature battleground beneath the storm. Recent periods of unusually mild air could make it hard for the snow to stick initially.

Snow is then likely to make it to eastern North Dakota and Minnesota on Saturday evening, becoming heavy overnight into Sunday. The long-duration snowstorm is expected to rage in northeastern Nebraska and the Dakotas on Sunday, walloping western and northern Minnesota. Minneapolis proper may dodge the snow, as snow bands pinwheel about to the north of the city.

A widespread 10 to 12-plus inches is expected for much of northern Nebraska, particularly north of Highways 20 and 275. Similar snowfall amounts are also predicted for a large chunk of the Dakotas and Minnesota. The storm should be accompanied by progressively higher winds as it intensifies, blowing and drifting the snow.

Snow looks to wind down west to east on Monday.

Great Lakes impacts

As that storm system “occludes” and essentially wraps itself up in cold air, it is expected to transfer energy to a new storm center gathering strength to the east, over the Great Lakes. That should set up heavy snows falling over northern Wisconsin and especially Michigan’s Upper Peninsula on Monday.

This phase of the storm is more difficult to forecast, but indications are that a general 6 to 12 inches will be possible in northern parts of the Great Lakes.

New England forecast

The storm’s third and final act, this time in New England, could come in two rounds.

On Monday, the low over the Great Lakes could bring a narrow ribbon of precipitation into parts of New England, from the New York/Canada border through portions of central New Hampshire and Maine. This is a finicky feature associated with warm air riding north, preceding the main storm. Several inches of snow or a period of mixed precipitation are possible during this time.

Then things become interesting as the storm system — by that point in eastern Ontario and western Quebec — will likely spur yet another new low pressure center, this time off the New England coast. However, it’s not expected to fully mature before it pulls away, meaning the Northeast may be hit by both disturbances. This is known as a “double-barreled low” pressure setup.

As such, Tuesday could feature snow for northern New England amounting to several inches as cold air drains south behind the low off the coast of New England.

However, the precipitation won’t all fall in the form of snow. Rain, freezing rain, and sleet are all possible, with the potential for significant icing in some areas. The exact forecast details are tough to nail down right now.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2019/12/27/coast-to-coast-storm-system-bring-heavy-snow-severe-weather-much-nation/

  • A plane carrying 98 people crashed in Kazakhstan early on Friday, killing at least 12 people, authorities have said.
  • The plane, a Fokker 100, was operated by Bek Air, and crashed into a building in the village of Almerek, near the city of Almaty, just after take-off.
  • 66 passengers are in hospital, Reuters reported, citing Kazakh officials. The captain is among the dead.
  • Scroll down to see photos of the devastation caused by the the crash.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories. 

A passenger plane carrying 98 people crashed shortly after taking off in Kazakhstan on Friday, killing at least 12 people, including the captain.

The plane, operated by Bek Air, crashed in the village of Almerek just outside the city of Almaty in the central Asian nation.

The Fokker 100 craft was heading for the capital Nursultan from Almaty and crashed through a two-storey building as it hit the ground, Kazakhstan’s Civil Aviation Committee said in a statement, according to Reuters.

The committee said the plane “lost altitude during takeoff and broke through a concrete fence.”

At least 12 people are dead and 66 are in hospital, the Almaty mayor’s office said, according to Reuters.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/photos-12-dead-plane-carrying-98-crashes-kazakhstan-2019-12