
Afternoon Briefing: Woman accused of using ICE to avoid drug case is detained
A judge ordered a British woman to remain jailed today after she was accused of trying to get herself deported to evade trial, finding too much risk that her release would result in her fleeing home or being sent there by immigration authorities.
Kimberly Hall, 29, is facing felony charges of drug trafficking and possession with intent to deliver after she was arrested Aug. 19 at O'Hare International Airport with nearly 100 pounds of cocaine. She was initially released on electronic monitoring while her case was pending.
Here's what else is happening today. And remember, for the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit chicagotribune.com/latest-headlines and sign up to get our alerts on all your devices.
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This past Memorial Day weekend saw an overall decrease in gun violence compared to last year, according to Chicago police data. Read more here.
More top news stories:
Lawmakers consider fixes to energy policy that's been outpaced by power-hungry technology
Indiana University closes DEI offices and ends programs on all campuses
Photos: Memorial Day weekend in Chicagoland
It's the last day to book a flight on Southwest Airlines without being hit with a fee to check bags after the airline abandoned a decades-long luggage policy that executives once described as key to differentiating the budget carrier from its rivals. Read more here.
More top business stories:
Skokie's LanzaTech to lay off 44 and downsize, despite honors for innovation
Trump indicates support for Nippon Steel's bid for U.S. Steel
Adrian Houser made 23 appearances last season with the New York Mets. Yesterday, he was on the mound for the White Sox facing his former team at Citi Field. Read more here.
More top sports stories:
Caitlin Clark out at least 2 weeks with quad strain — so Indiana Fever star will miss UC game vs. Chicago Sky
Napoli or Roma: Which Italian soccer club does Pope Leo XIV support?
My Pi, the pizzeria founded on deep dish in Chicago, which once had 17 restaurants across the country, will close its last shop after 54 years next month. Read more here.
More top Eat. Watch. Do. stories:
Tinley Park and the Park District pair up after spat on Fourth of July fireworks
Photos: Sueños Music Festival 2025
A 53-year-old British man who injured 65 people when he plowed his vehicle into a crowd of Liverpool soccer fans celebrating their team's Premier League championship has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, police said today. Read more here.
More top stories from around the world:
Trump administration moves to cut $100 million in federal contracts for Harvard
Mary Lou Retton, US gymnastics icon who survived health scare, arrested on suspicion of DUI
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USA Today
14 minutes ago
- USA Today
President Trump's new tariffs take effect, targeting dozens of trading partners
President Donald Trump's higher tariff rates of 10% to 50% on dozens of trading partners kicked in on Aug. 7, testing his strategy for shrinking U.S. trade deficits without massive disruptions to global supply chains, higher inflation, and stiff retaliation from trading partners. U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency began collecting the higher tariffs at 12:01 a.m. ET after weeks of suspense over Trump's final tariff rates and frantic negotiations with major trading partners that sought to lower them. Goods loaded onto U.S.-bound vessels and in transit before the midnight deadline can enter at lower prior tariff rates before Oct. 5, according to a CBP notice to shippers issued this week. Imports from many countries had previously been subject to a baseline 10% import duty after Trump paused higher rates announced in early April. But since then, Trump has frequently modified his tariff plan, slapping some countries with much higher rates, including 50% for goods from Brazil, 39% from Switzerland, 35% from Canada and 25% from India. He announced on Aug. 6 a separate, 25% tariff on Indian goods to be imposed in 21 days over the South Asian country's purchases of Russian oil. "RECIPROCAL TARIFFS TAKE EFFECT AT MIDNIGHT TONIGHT!," Trump said on Truth Social just ahead of the deadline. "BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, LARGELY FROM COUNTRIES THAT HAVE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF THE UNITED STATES FOR MANY YEARS, LAUGHING ALL THE WAY, WILL START FLOWING INTO THE USA. THE ONLY THING THAT CAN STOP AMERICA'S GREATNESS WOULD BE A RADICAL LEFT COURT THAT WANTS TO SEE OUR COUNTRY FAIL!" Eight major trading partners accounting for about 40% of U.S. trade flows have reached framework deals for trade and investment concessions to Trump, including the European Union, Japan, and South Korea, reducing their base tariff rates to 15%. Britain won a 10% rate, while Vietnam, Indonesia, Pakistan, and the Philippines secured rate reductions to 19% or 20%. Phones, jewelry, linens: Which products could cost more due to Trump's India tariffs? "For those countries, it's less-bad news," said William Reinsch, a senior fellow and trade expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. "There'll be some supply chain rearrangement. There'll be a new equilibrium. Prices here will go up, but it'll take a while for that to show up in a major way," Reinsch said. Countries with punishingly high duties, such as India and Canada, "will continue to scramble around trying to fix this," he added. Trump's order has specified that any goods determined to have been transshipped from a third country to evade higher U.S. tariffs will be subject to an additional 40% import duty, but his administration has released few details on how these goods would be identified or the provision enforced. Trump's July 31 tariff order imposed duties above 10% on 67 trading partners, while the rate was kept at 10% for those not listed. These import taxes are one part of a multilayered tariff strategy that includes national security-based sectoral tariffs on semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, autos, steel, aluminum, copper, lumber, and other goods. Trump said on Aug. 6 that the microchip duties could reach 100%. China is on a separate tariff track and will face a potential tariff increase on Aug. 12 unless Trump approves an extension of a prior truce after talks last week in Sweden. He has said he may impose additional tariffs on China's purchases of Russian oil as he seeks to pressure Moscow into ending its war in Ukraine. Guitars, bagels and booze: How Canadians became reluctant warriors in Trump tariff fight Revenues, price hikes Trump has touted the vast increase in federal revenues from his import tax collections, which are ultimately paid by companies importing the goods and consumers of end products. The higher rates will add to the total, which reached a record $27 billion in June. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said that U.S. tariff revenues could top $300 billion a year. The move will drive average U.S. tariff rates to around 20%, the highest in a century and up from 2.5% when Trump took office in January, the Atlantic Institute estimates. Commerce Department data released last week showed more evidence that tariffs began driving up U.S. prices in June, including for home furnishings and durable household equipment, recreational goods, and motor vehicles. Costs from Trump's tariff war are mounting for a wide swath of companies, including bellwethers Caterpillar, Marriott, Molson Coors, and Yum Brands. All told, global companies that have reported earnings so far this quarter are looking at a hit of around $15 billion to profits in 2025, Reuters' global tariff tracker shows. 'America's big case': What happens next in the court battle over Trump's tariffs? (Reporting by David Lawder and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Lincoln Feast)


New York Post
14 minutes ago
- New York Post
Trump claims Howard Stern's SiriusXM show ‘went down' after the shock jock endorsed Hillary Clinton in 2016
President Trump claimed Howard Stern's longtime SiriusXM show 'went down' because the legendary radio host endorsed Hillary Clinton before the 2016 presidential election. Trump was fielding questions from reporters inside the Oval Office when he was briefed on the reported uncertainty surrounding the 71-year-old and his titular show. 'Howard Stern is a name I haven't heard – I used to do his show, we used to have fun – but I haven't heard that name in a long time,' Trump said Wednesday in the White House. 5 President Donald Trump speaks to reporters in the Oval Office of the White House on Aug. 6, 2025. REUTERS 'What happened? He got terminated?' he asked. Real America's Voice correspondent Brian Glenn, who brought up the topic with the president, claimed Stern and SiriusXM were parting ways over salary disagreements. 'You know when he went down? When he endorsed Hillary Clinton,' Trump said. 'He lost his audience. People said, 'Give me a break.' 'He went down when he endorsed Hillary Clinton,' the 79-year-old commander in chief emphasized. The longtime shock jock's future on the air remains uncertain as his five-year, $500 million contract with SiriusXM winds down. 5 Howard Stern attends the 2025 North Shore Animal League America Celebration of Rescue at Tribeca 360 in New York City on June 12, 2025. Getty Images Stern, who made a surprise episode of his famed show on Tuesday morning, would be open to a short-term contract at the right price, but is also considering retiring, the US Sun reported. The host promised he would be returning to his regular schedule on Sept. 2. with no indication of if and when he is leaving. 'We'll be back on the air live. I've been refueling, so to speak,' Stern told his listeners. The second reiteration of Stern's legendary show began in 2006 and was renewed by SiriusXM in 2020. At it's height, it drew 20 million daily listeners. 5 Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Beth Ostrosky and Howard Stern sit courtside at the Washington Wizards – New York Knicks game on Nov. 4, 2005. WireImage 5 Howard Stern interviews Donald Trump during a radio show on 1994. MediaPunch via Getty Images Trump and Stern are former friends, having attended each other's weddings and the two-time president being a frequent guest on the radio show. Their relationship went south following the radio host's endorsement of Hillary Clinton for the White House in 2016. In June 2022, Stern said he wanted to run for president if Trump was the GOP nominee in 2024. 5 Howard Stern interviews Paul Simon during an episode of 'The Howard Stern Show' on Sept. 22, 2023. The Howard Stern Show 'I'll beat his ass,' Stern told his listeners at the time. During the lead up to the Nov. 5, 2024, general election, Stern was one of the rare media personalities to get an interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris, who was the Democratic presidential nominee. Trump fumed at Stern after the episode aired, claiming he gave Harris softball questions. 'BETA MALE Howard Stern made a fool of himself on his low rated radio show when he 'interviewed' Lyin' Kamala Harris, and hit her with so many SOFTBALL questions that even she was embarrassed,' Trump wrote on Truth Social. 'He looked like a real fool, working so hard to make a totally incompetent and ill-equipped person look as good as possible, which wasn't very good,' he added. Stern endorsed Harris, claiming he would vote for a wall before Trump. 'I don't even understand how this election is close,' Stern told Harris. 'Why do my fellow Americans want this kind of chaos overseas?'


CNBC
15 minutes ago
- CNBC
Toyota Motor June-quarter profit beats estimates — but drops 11% as U.S. tariffs bite
Toyota Motor on Thursday reported higher-than-expected operating profit for the June-quarter, even as the world's largest auto company by sales volumes grapples with U.S. tariffs. Here are Toyota's results compared with the mean estimates from LSEG: Operating profit for the quarter, however, dropped 11% year on year. This Toyota's Toyota's third consecutive quarterly decline in operating profit. Net income attributable to the company fell 37% to 841.3 billion yen. Toyota has seen strong global demand. Last week the automaker reported record worldwide sales in the first half of the year. Japanese carmakers have been cutting prices to retain market share in the U.S. after President Donald Trump's 25% tariffs on imported vehicles came into effect in April. In June, the value of Japan car exports to the U.S. fell 25.3% year over year, even though car export volumes to the U.S. rose by 4.6% in the same period, according to data from Japan's trade ministry. Trump, however, announced a new trade deal with Tokyo last month with tariffs expected to fall to 15%, though the timeframe for the change remains unclear. Auto exports to the U.S. are a cornerstone of Japan's economy, making up about 24% of its global auto shipments in 2024, Japan's customs data showed.