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| | A visit from the comforter-in-chief | President Joe Biden visited the collapsed condo in Miami. And here's what's going on with the Trump Organization's tax charges. It's Thursday's news. | | |
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President Joe Biden visited the site of a collapsed condo building in Florida. The Trump Organization and its CFO were charged with tax crimes. And the battle over Britney Spears' conservatorship intensified after Bessemer Trust asked to withdraw. |
👋 It's Laura. It's Thursday. I'm up to my eyeballs in news, so let's get to it. |
But first, holy ugly couches, Batman. 😱 Y'all, IKEA launched these couch slipcovers meant to honor LGBTQ communities and while I love the inclusivity – I can't even with these designs. What do you think? |
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Biden visits site of condo collapse |
Reprising his role as comforter-in-chief, Biden highlighted Thursday the "life and death" situation that has brought together all levels of the government as he visits a south Florida community reeling from the collapse of a 12-story condo building where scores of people are still missing. Keep up with the latest coverage on Biden's visit here. |
Rescue efforts were halted overnight Thursday because of concerns about the instability of a condo section still standing. Rescuers stopped work at the site overnight when on-site engineers identified that one column had shifted 8 to 10 inches and three cracks were expanding. Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said search-and-rescue teams will continue as soon as it is safe to do so. |
The death toll continues to slowly climb: Levine Cava announced that two of the six bodies found in the rubble Wednesday were children, ages 4 and 10. This raises the death toll to 18; 147 people are still missing. |
• | Condo collapse mystery: Why did the building fall? Investigation may take years. | • | 'What can you do?' He was in Paris. His wife was 4,500 miles away in a condo that had started to collapse. | • | Remembering those who died in the condo building collapse in Surfside, Florida. | |
Trump Organization, CFO charged with tax fraud |
Criminal charges were unsealed Thursday against the Trump Organization and its chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg, detailing an alleged tax evasion conspiracy spanning more than a decade, representing the most serious threat yet to the Trump family real estate enterprise long managed by former President Donald Trump. The Trump Organization and its CFO Weisselberg were charged with criminal tax fraud, conspiracy and falsifying business records. Weisselberg, who was walked to the courtroom in handcuffs, was also charged with grand larceny in connection with failing to pay taxes on $1.7 million on fringe benefits from the company. |
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| Trump Organization finance chief Allen Weisselberg appears in a New York court after turning himself in to authorities on July 01, 2021 in New York City. | Seth Wenig, Getty Images | |
What everyone's talking about |
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Washington Football Team fined $10M after sexual misconduct investigation |
With the investigation into the allegations of rampant sexual misconduct within the Washington Football Team organization complete, the NFL has fined the franchise $10 million, the league announced on Thursday. The investigation, conducted by independent counsel, spanned roughly a year and included interviews with more than 150 people, many of them being current and or former employees of the team who received anonymity in exchange for their testimony. News of the long-running misconduct and harassment allegations first became public following a lengthy investigation by The Washington Post last summer. The reports detailed incidents in which cheerleaders were secretly videotaped in various stages of undress, and other female employees were subjected to sexual advancements and lewd comments from team employees. |
| FILE - Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder, left, and his wife Tanya Snyder, listen to head coach Ron Rivera during a news conference at the team's NFL football training facility in Ashburn, Va., in this Thursday, Jan. 2, 2020, file photo. Dan Snyder's wife Tanya was named co-CEO of the Washington Football Team on Tuesday, June 29, 2021, giving her bigger influence in the club that is currently in the midst of an independent investigation into workplace conduct the NFL is overseeing. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) | The Associated Press | |
Real quick |
• | Judge blocks Trump-inspired Florida law cracking down on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube; DeSantis vows to appeal. | • | In a seismic shift for college sports, NCAA adopts temporary policy on name, image and likeness. | • | Another gender option will be added to passports. Here's what you need to know. | • | He risked his life helping U.S. troops in Afghanistan before seeking asylum in Iowa. So why is he facing deportation? | • | Puerto Rican man confirmed as world's oldest living male at 112 years old. | |
A statue fit for a princess |
To honor their mother on what would have been her 60th birthday, Prince Harry and Prince William reunited publicly Thursday for the unveiling of Princess Diana's new statue. William, 39, and Harry, 36, entered a Kensington Palace garden side by side, smiling, before greeting guests separately. Together, they revealed the bronze statue of Diana, which is slightly larger than lifesize, surrounded by three bronze children, meant to symbolize her universal and generational impact on humanitarian causes. Harry and William commissioned the statue of their mother in 2017 to honor her legacy after she died in a Paris car wreck in 1997. The new statue sits in the Sunken Garden at the palace, one of her favorite spots during her time there. |
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| Britain's Prince William, left and Prince Harry unveil a statue they commissioned of their mother Princess Diana, on what woud have been her 60th birthday, in the Sunken Garden at Kensington Palace, London, Thursday July 1, 2021. | Pool Photo by Dominic Lipinski | |
Judge denies Britney Spears' conservatorship request; trust asks to withdraw |
A week after Britney Spears spoke out in court and condemned her conservatorship, managed by her father James "Jamie" Spears, a judge denied the singer's request to have him removed as conservator. And "due to changed circumstances," Bessemer Trust is requesting to withdraw as co-conservator of Spears' estate, according to court documents filed Thursday. In the filing, the firm said they believed Spears' conservatorship was "voluntary" and that she consented to the firm acting as co-conservator, until the singer publicly revealed she wants the arrangement to end during an explosive court hearing on June 23. Catch up on the latest here. |
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| Britney Spears supporter Biblegirl holds a sign outside a court hearing concerning the pop singer's conservatorship. | Chris Pizzello, AP | |
A break from the news |
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