
US citizen mistaken for migrant films his arrest by Border Patrol
Kenny Laynez-Ambrosio captured the moment Border Patrol agents arrived after Florida Highway Patrol officers stopped the vehicle his mom was driving, taking him and two co-workers to a landscaping job. The encounter turned violent and unbeknownst to the agents, Laynez' phone recorded the incident along with the agents' candid conversation.
04:12 - Source: CNN
Vertical Trending Now 16 videos
US citizen mistaken for migrant films his arrest by Border Patrol
Kenny Laynez-Ambrosio captured the moment Border Patrol agents arrived after Florida Highway Patrol officers stopped the vehicle his mom was driving, taking him and two co-workers to a landscaping job. The encounter turned violent and unbeknownst to the agents, Laynez' phone recorded the incident along with the agents' candid conversation.
04:12 - Source: CNN
Watch brown water gush out of the ceiling at Atlanta airport
A ceiling leak at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Monday has been contained and the source of the leak is being investigated, according to a spokesperson for the airport. The leak did not impact overall airport operations, the spokesperson said.
00:37 - Source: CNN
Tornado hits Inner Mongolia
Footage shows a tornado hitting Inner Mongolia on Monday. No casualties were reported from the incident, according to a state media report.
00:29 - Source: CNN
Inside Laura Loomer's hunt for disloyalty to Trump
Laura Loomer, the controversial far-right activist with a direct line to President Donald Trump, has taken credit for a slew of recent high-profile administration firings. CNN's Steve Contorno spoke with Loomer about her campaign to root out government employees she says aren't loyal to Trump.
01:29 - Source: CNN
Firefighters battle California's Gifford Fire
The Gifford Fire has now burned over 72,000 acres across San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties in California. Containment is still at just 3% after five days. The fire is the second largest wildfire of the year in California so far.
00:56 - Source: CNN
Passengers rush to evacuate smoke-filled train
Video shows passengers rushing to evacuate a smoke-filled PATH train in New Jersey. Thirteen people were treated for smoke inhalation and 9 were transported to the hospital, according to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
00:24 - Source: CNN
Sean 'Diddy' Combs' ex petitions judge for his release
Virginia Huynh, who goes by 'Gina,' is an ex-girlfriend of Sean 'Diddy' Combs. The prosecution planned to have her testify against him in his criminal case, but she mysteriously dropped out days before the trial began. CNN's Elizabeth Wagmeister reports on Huynh's past comments alleging assault by Combs and the details in her letter to the judge.
02:15 - Source: CNN
AI puts pressure on recent college grads' first job search
From resume bots to automated hiring systems, AI is complicating the job search for recent college grads. The Wall Street Journal's Lindsay Ellis tells CNN's Audie Cornish about the challenges young professionals are facing.
02:01 - Source: CNN
Justin Trudeau sings 'Firework' at Katy Perry concert
Former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was seen singing and dancing at a Katy Perry concert in Montreal in late July. Two days earlier, Trudeau and Perry were seen having dinner together, sparking dating rumors across social media.
00:59 - Source: CNN
New research reveals origin of potatoes
Scientists traced the lineage of potatoes to a wild genetic fusion about 9 million years ago between a tomato ancestor and a tuberless plant.
01:04 - Source: CNN
Blake Lively to be deposed against Justin Baldoni
Blake Lively is set to be deposed Thursday in her legal battle against Justin Baldoni.
00:24 - Source: CNN
Amusement park ride splits in half in Saudi Arabia
At least 23 people were injured, three of them critically, when a fairground ride buckled in Saudi Arabia, sending passengers crashing to the ground, according to state media.
00:33 - Source: CNN
Jet2 holiday singer speaks out after White House uses meme
British singer Jess Glynne responded to the White House's decision to use the viral TikTok sound, which includes her 2015 song "Hold My Hand" and Jet2's commercial. Glynne criticized the White House for using the audio to show the ongoing mass deportations in the United States.
01:10 - Source: CNN
Fans pay tribute as emotional Sharon Osbourne lays flowers at Ozzy memorial
Thousands of fans paid their respects to Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne as his hearse made its way through the streets of Birmingham, the English city where he grew up and where the band was formed in 1968. Osbourne died last Tuesday at the age of 76.
00:46 - Source: CNN
Crocodile gets caught underneath moving truck
A bystander captured video of a crocodile caught underneath a truck driving through high water in Australia at Kakadu National Park.
00:25 - Source: CNN
Beyoncé brings out Destiny's Child during final show
Beyoncé reunited Destiny's Child during her concert at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, with Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland joining her on stage to perform a medley of the group's biggest hits, as part of her final Cowboy Carter show.
00:45 - Source: CNN

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US teen influencer pilot accused of unauthorized Antarctic landing reaches deal to leave Chile
A judge in Chile has agreed to suspend proceedings against a teenage American pilot and social media influencer who has been stuck on a remote Antarctic island since late June after he was accused of landing there without permission. Ethan Guo was attempting to fly to all seven continents solo, raising funds for cancer research, when he landed on a part of Antarctica where the South American country maintains a territorial claim. Prosecutors accused him of providing false information to ground control about his landing point. On Monday, a judge approved an agreement between Guo's lawyers and prosecutors to suspend the proceedings on the condition that he donate $30,000 to a children's cancer foundation within 30 days. He must also leave the country and will be prohibited from reentering Chilean territory for three years. Chilean prosecutor Cristián Crisosto told CNN on Tuesday that if Guo does not meet the conditions, the agreement would become void and the court proceedings would continue. CNN is attempting to reach Guo for comment. Crisosto said Guo and his plane were still in Antarctic territory and that he would also have to pay the costs of 'aircraft security and personal maintenance.' In previous cases, he said, such costs have been roughly $600 a day. Guo has several options to leave the Antarctic, Crisosto added, including boarding a military ship or commercial plane. The next commercial flight is expected to take off from the southern Chilean city of Punta Arenas in early October. Chilean authorities said that Guo had submitted a false flight plan and took off from Carlos Ibáñez del Campo Airport in Punta Arenas as the sole passenger and crew member aboard a Cessna 182Q aircraft, registered as N182WT, in late June. At one point during that flight, authorities say he turned off course toward Antarctica. Guo's lawyer has previously said that the young pilot experienced 'complications' while flying. 'While already in the air, he began to experience a series of complications,' Karina Ulloa said, adding that Guo claims 'that he was conducting an exploratory flight to see if he could follow this route or not.' Guo, whose website states he was trying to raise $1 million for cancer research by becoming 'the first person ever to fly to all seven continents solo,' had broadcast his continent-hopping journey since last September to more than a million Instagram followers. Solve the daily Crossword

Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Oil Trade Caught in Trump's Global Tariff Crossfire
The Trump-Putin meeting this Friday and the oil trade spat with India have been hogging the headlines these days, but meanwhile, the tariff war continues—and it may end with a complete rearrangement of global supply chains. The central target, of course, is China. Amid the latest negotiations between Beijing and Washington, China faces a 30% blanket tariff on goods sold to the United States. And in a positive turn of events, the deadline for the entry of these tariffs into effect has been pushed back by 90 days. This has provided space for some hope that any disagreements about trade balance could be resolved without blood being spilled, figuratively. But if the tariffs do take effect, there will be blood. All Asian countries became targets for Trump's tariff offensive, as did India and Brazil, and every other trade partner that the United States has. Yet Asia is one of the most important parts of the trade equation due to its lead role as exporter to the U.S.—mostly of Chinese goods. The Financial Times recalled in a recent analytical piece how Chinese companies had spent billions on building manufacturing capacity in neighboring countries in Southeast Asia with the precise purpose of insulating themselves against a potential tariff war initiated by the White House. Yet Trump has easily seen through that and imposed tariffs on all those Southeast Asian countries as fairness, those tariffs are lower than the ones for China, but the so-called transshipment tariffs for goods originating in China but being routed via third countries before getting shipped to the United States are not. Those are at a hard 40%. 'It's a gut punch to these countries and they need to try to negotiate it lower,' Dan Ives, global head of research at financial services provider Wedbush Securities, told CNN this week. 'The worry is US is trying to cut off China's export routes and it speaks to the high tariffs facing these nations.' If the U.S. is trying to cut off China's export routes, Chinese exporters would have to work hard to forge new ones, and that may well start by returning home. 'The China plus one strategy is going to come under tremendous stress,' Louise Loo, Asia economist at Oxford Economics, told the Financial Times. 'The upfront cost to move to new markets is going to be exorbitantly high,' Loo added, noting that the tariff pressure will prompt many to retrench. This means that Chinese investments overseas, notably in Southeast Asia, would diminish, if not dry up completely, affecting the economies of these countries, including Vietnam, Malaysia, Cambodia, and Indonesia, and not in a positive way because there isn't a line of companies from other countries waiting their turn to pour some billions into, say, solar panel manufacturing capacity in Vietnam. This means that, if implemented, all these tariffs may well spark a race for new low-cost manufacturing locations in low-tariff jurisdictions, wherever they might be. Some analysts suggest Mexico. Others note that the tariffs might actually do what Trump wants them to do, namely, revive local manufacturing in the United States. Or Chinese manufacturers will get more creative. 'The new punitive treatment would either short-circuit this Southbound shift in manufacturing we'd seen over the past decade, or incentivise more creative ways of rerouting by Chinese manufacturers,' Oxford Economics' Louise Loo told CNN. None of this, however, would make goods cheaper. This means that whichever way supply chains shift, chances are that imported goods will likely become more expensive for U.S. buyers in the near future—if all those tariffs enter into effect, of course. By Irina Slav for More Top Reads From this article on

Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
What to know about Pete Hegseth's connection to an archconservative church network
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says he's proud to be part of the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, an archconservative network of Christian congregations. He recently shared a CNN video on social media about CREC, showing its pastors arguing women should not have the right to vote.