logo
Texas school bus carrying over 40 students crashes on 1st day of school

Texas school bus carrying over 40 students crashes on 1st day of school

Yahoo5 days ago
A school bus carrying over 40 children and one adult on the first day of the new school year rolled over onto its side in Austin, Texas, on Wednesday, leaving 12 injured, officials said.
The bus was carrying students from the Leander Independent School District in northwest Austin in Travis County.
Austin-Travis County emergency services were dispatched to the scene on Nameless Road in Travis County just after 3:15 p.m. local time.
MORE: School bus driver speaks out after rescuing 15 students from burning bus
Officials said there were 42 children and one adult on the bus at the time.
Photos from the scene show the yellow school bus rolled over into an embankment surrounded by trees, with the vehicle appearing to have significant damage.
Of those injured, 12 people were transported from the scene to a local hospital and the remaining people were taken to a reunification center for further evaluation and to be reconnected with family.
MORE: 15 injured when school bus overturns in New Jersey
One individual has a life-threatening injury and two others have potentially life-threatening injuries, Austin-Travis County officials said during a press conference Wednesday evening.
The rest have non-life-threatening injuries, officials said.
It has not yet been released whether the adult on board was among those transported.
ABC News' Irving Last contributed to this report.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NYPD, prosecutorial misconduct court settlement payouts exceed $77 million, Legal Aid report says
NYPD, prosecutorial misconduct court settlement payouts exceed $77 million, Legal Aid report says

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

NYPD, prosecutorial misconduct court settlement payouts exceed $77 million, Legal Aid report says

NEW YORK — City taxpayers shelled out more than $77 million to settle lawsuits alleging police and prosecutorial misconduct and overturned convictions through the first six months of the year, according to a new report by the Legal Aid Society. The payouts covered 592 cases of alleged misconduct against the NYPD and city prosecutors that were settled out of court. Two settlements had payouts of more than $10 million, with the largest payout topping $13 million, according to the Legal Aid report. If City Hall continues along this track, taxpayers could be on the hook for paying out more than $155 million in police misconduct cases, which would be a drop from the $206 million paid out last year, the highest annual total since 2018. The number of settlements exceeded the 416 made in the first half of 2024, the agency said. The data the Legal Aid Society pulled together for its report did not account for settlements with the New York City Comptroller's Office before a formal lawsuit was filed. An NYPD spokesman said 41% of the cases settled this year — about $72.5 million — were for lawsuits regarding overturned convictions that occurred decades ago in varied circumstances that were not immediately clear. 'Over a third of these payouts are for reverse conviction cases that happened more than 20 years ago,' the spokesman said. 'While these cases are very important, they tell you nothing about the state of policing today.' 'The NYPD works closely and collaboratively with the District Attorney's Offices and their conviction review units to get them the materials they need to review these cases, and ultimately secure these payouts,' the spokesman added. Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Hendry said that, despite the Legal Aid Society's report, 'lawsuit settlements are not a reflection on how police officers are doing their jobs.' 'The city routinely settles lawsuits for reasons that have nothing to do with police officers' conduct, often without informing those officers,' Hendry said. 'It is shameful that those settlements are being used to smear police officers' reputations without any regard for the facts in the case.' The payouts including a $5.7 million settlement to a Brooklyn man who was blinded in one eye when cops tasered him in the face, according to the report. Kenneth Bacote was walking through NYCHA's Kingsborough Houses during the pandemic lockdown on June 2, 2020, when he got into a confrontation with several officers, the lawsuit states. The officers tasered Bacote as they took him into custody, charging him with obstructing traffic, resisting arrest, harassment, and other misdemeanor charges, which were all eventually dropped, court documents show. A taser prong pierced his left eye, which needed to be surgically removed, the lawsuit stated. Doctors told Bacote that he likely won't recover his vision. 'No amount of money can compensate someone for losing sight in one eye, but at least he can live his life more comfortably,' Bacote's attorney, Sanford Rubenstein, said. Jennvine Wong, supervising attorney for the Cop Accountability Project, a special Legal Aid litigation unit, said the amount of settlements being made by the city remain 'disconcerting' even though they are lower than last year's numbers. She said she doesn't see these settlements slowing down anytime soon with Mayor Eric Adams continuing to promote a broken-windows philosophy to crime fighting, which is based on the theory that violent crimes could be stopped by clamping down on misdemeanor quality of life crimes. 'What that means is that the taxpayers are going to be paying for the Adams administration policies for many, many years, even after he's out of office,' Wong said. _____ Solve the daily Crossword

Infamous Mexican drug lord to plead guilty after being brought to US
Infamous Mexican drug lord to plead guilty after being brought to US

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Infamous Mexican drug lord to plead guilty after being brought to US

Ismael Mario Zambada García, the former drug lord and top leader of the Sinaloa Cartel known as El Mayo, will plead guilty to federal drug charges brought by the United States Attorney's Office in Brooklyn, according to an entry on the court docket. El Mayo is due in court next week for a conference that, according to the docket, is now a "change of plea" hearing. Federal prosecutors said earlier this month they would not seek the death penalty for Zambada, who helped build the Sinaloa Cartel from a regional group to a major smuggler of cocaine, heroin and other illicit drugs into U.S., authorities have said. MORE: 'El Mayo' in plea talks in Brooklyn federal drug case, prosecutor says He was charged with 17 counts related to drug trafficking, firearms offenses and money laundering. It was not immediately clear to what charge or charges he would plead guilty. Zambada was arrested in Texas last summer after arriving in a private plane with one of Joaquin Guzmán's sons, Joaquín Guzmán López. Joaquín Guzmán López remains in custody in the U.S. and pleaded not guilty to drug trafficking charges last year. Another of El Chapo's sons, Ovidio Guzman Lopez, pleaded guilty to two counts of drug conspiracy and two counts of knowingly engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise last month, according to the Justice Department. As part of the plea, he is also set to forfeit $80 million. Ovidio Guzman Lopez admitted, through the plea, that he and his three brothers took over control of the Sinaloa Cartel after the dramatic arrest of their father, El Chapo, in 2016. He was arrested in January 2023 and extradited to the U.S. later that year. MORE: Top Sinaloa cartel leaders, including son of El Chapo, taken into US custody: DOJ El Chapo's other two sons -- Ivan Archivaldo Guzman Salazar and Jesus Alfredo Guzman Salazar -- have been charged in the U.S. but are not in custody. There are $10 million awards from the U.S. government for each man's arrest and conviction. Violence has surged in Sinaloa since the arrest of Zambada last year. There were about four times as many murders in the first half of 2025 as there were in the first six months of 2024, Reuters reported last month. ABC News' Meredith Deliso contributed to this report.

Sinaloa cartel leader Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada set to plead guilty in drug trafficking case
Sinaloa cartel leader Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada set to plead guilty in drug trafficking case

CBS News

time29 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Sinaloa cartel leader Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada set to plead guilty in drug trafficking case

Former Mexican cartel kingpin Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada is set to plead guilty next week in a drug trafficking case that accuses him of ordering torture, plotting murders and flooding the U.S. with cocaine, heroin and other illicit drugs. A Brooklyn federal judge on Monday scheduled an Aug. 25 change of plea hearing for Zambada, a longtime leader of Mexico's Sinaloa cartel. The development comes two weeks after federal prosecutors said they wouldn't seek the death penalty against him. Zambada, 77, pleaded not guilty last year to drug trafficking and related charges, including gun and money laundering offenses. Under Zambada and co-founder Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán's leadership, prosecutors allege, the Sinaloa cartel evolved from a regional player into the largest drug trafficking organization in the world. Judge Brian M. Cogan's order on Monday didn't provide details about Zambada's guilty plea and didn't list the charges he's expected to plead guilty to. The same judge sentenced Guzmán to life behind bars after he was convicted on drug trafficking charges in 2019. Messages seeking comment were left for Zambada's lawyers. A spokesperson for the U.S. attorney's office in Brooklyn declined to comment. Zambada was arrested in Texas last year after what he has described as a kidnapping in Mexico. Sought by U.S. law enforcement for more than two decades, he was taken into custody after arriving in a private plane at a Texas airport with Guzmán's son, Joaquín Guzmán López. Guzmán López has pleaded not guilty to federal drug trafficking charges in Chicago; his brother, Ovidio Guzmán López, pleaded guilty last month. Zambada has said he was kidnapped in Mexico and hauled to the U.S. by Guzmán López, whose lawyer denies those claims. According to prosecutors, Zambada presided over a vast and violent operation, with an arsenal of military-grade weapons, a private security force akin to an army, and a corps of "sicarios," or hitmen, who carried out assassinations, kidnappings and torture. Just months before his arrest, he ordered the murder of his own nephew, prosecutors said. On Aug. 5, prosecutors told Cogan in a letter that Attorney General Pam Bondi had directed them not to pursue the death penalty for Zambada. Following the July arrests and Zambada's allegations of kidnapping, horrific fighting erupted in Mexico between a cartel faction loyal to him and another tied to the "Chapitos," Guzmán's sons. The Chapitos have used corkscrews, electrocution and hot chiles to torture their rivals while some of their victims were "fed dead or alive to tigers," according to an indictment released by the U.S. Justice Department. In recent months, bodies have appeared across Sinaloa, often left slung out on the streets or in cars with either sombreros on their heads or pizza slices or boxes pegged onto them with knives. The pizzas and sombreros have become informal symbols for the warring cartel factions, underscoring the brutality of their warfare. Last week, Mexico sent 26 high-ranking cartel figures to the United States in the latest major deal with the Trump administration as American authorities ratchet up pressure on criminal networks smuggling drugs across the border. Those handed over to U.S. custody include Abigael González Valencia, a leader of "Los Cuinis," a group closely aligned with notorious cartel Jalisco New Generation, or CJNG. Another defendant, Roberto Salazar, is wanted in connection to the 2008 killing of a Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy. Other prominent figures have ties to the Sinaloa Cartel and other violent drug trafficking groups. Earlier this month, Mr. Trump directed the military to target drug cartels in Latin America, a source familiar with the matter confirmed to CBS News. It's not clear if or when the military could take action. Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum responded by saying there would be "no invasion of Mexico."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store