The New York Times reviewed a guest list and social media posts to identify who was invited to President Trump’s private event for customers of his cryptocurrency business on Thursday and a White House tour on Friday. Here are some of them.
Author: Usama Nisar
The chief justice put a temporary hold on a lower court ruling that Elon Musk’s government efficiency team and the Office of Management and Budget turn over internal records.
The decision was nearly identical to another involving the law firm Perkins Coie. Judges in both cases found the orders coercive.
The affidavit describes video of the killings, cites witness accounts and lists evidence found at the scene, including a 9-millimeter handgun.
The financial penalties are part of an effort to get people to “self-deport.”
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After decades of conflict between two African countries, President Trump and an adviser said the two sides, with U.S. help, had created an agreement that was now being finalized.
Ms. Powell Jobs has privately said her philanthropy needed to practice more austerity, according to people who heard her remarks.
A Maryland man’s deportation to El Salvador set off a fierce debate among officials in three cabinet agencies, despite agreement there had been a mistake.
There’s a moment in Shweta Harve’s “What the Troll?” music video—just a flicker—when the camera holds on her face, half-lit, half-shadowed, as she sings, “I won’t feed you, nor react.” Her voice is steady. Her eyes? Unflinching. It’s not a performance…it’s a declaration. With her latest single, Harve isn’t just releasing a song. She’s launching a counteroffensive against one of the most insidious forces of the modern age: cyberbullying. “What the Troll?” is a razor-edged pop anthem that pulls no punches, blending bold lyrical clapbacks with sleek production and an emotionally charged visual story. It’s Harve’s sharpest, and most socially…