
Elderly man drives down Rome's Spanish Steps and gets stuck
An 80-year-old man has told police he was 'wrong' to drive down Rome's famed Spanish Steps, after firefighters had to recover his vehicle from the landmark in the early hours of Tuesday.
The man was not injured in the incident but he was nonetheless taken to the hospital, where he tested negative for both drug and alcohol consumption, city police said in a statement.
The driver, who has not been identified, told officers he was 'going to work' and had taken a wrong turn, according to Italian media reports. It is unclear if he was using a GPS device.
The gray Mercedes-Benz A-Class car got stuck halfway down the 18th-century staircase around 4 a.m. on Tuesday, the Italian Fire Brigade said in a statement. The car had been stopped by police officers who were patrolling the area.
The fire department said it had to use a crane at the foot of the steps to lift the vehicle off the stairway. Some damage to the vehicle was visible, but it is unclear whether that was the result of Tuesday's incident.
The steps are currently closed to the public. The normal procedure when Rome's historic monuments are involved in an incident is for archaeologists to inspect them for damage.
The man had a valid driver's license, according to Italian media. Under Italian law, drivers over the age of 80 are obliged to renew their license every two years and undergo a medical examination, which includes basic cognition questions.
Back in 2022, a Saudi man tangled with the law after he drove a Maserati down the Spanish Steps. He was charged with aggravated damage to cultural heritage and monuments after the car caused fractures to the 16th and 29th steps of the right-hand flight rising up from the Piazza di Spagna.
That same year two American tourists were fined and briefly banned from Rome's city center after damaging the steps with electric scooters.
The steps owe their name to the Spanish Embassy to the Holy See, which is hosted in a palazzo in the square below.
A two-year, 1.5 million-euro ($1.7 million) restoration of the landmark — which has appeared in numerous movies, most notably 1953's 'Roman Holiday,' starring Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck — was completed in 2015.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
an hour ago
- Miami Herald
After labeling transfers to Guantánamo as ‘fake news,' Trump deports Haitians from there
Only days after Trump administration officials denied plans to transfer undocumented migrants to an American naval base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, before deporting them, a U.S. military plane flew 20 Haitians from the military installation to Port-au-Prince on Tuesday. While 11 of the migrants who landed back in Haiti's gang-controlled capital had been picked up at sea near The Bahamas while reportedly en route to Florida, nine others had been transferred to Guantánamo from Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention in the United States, two sources told the Miami Herald. 'Some said they had been in two [detention] facilities in a week,' a Haitian official told the Miami Herald after confirming the U.S. military flight's quiet arrival in the Caribbean nation. The aircraft landed at 12:05 p.m. Tuesday at Toussaint Louverture International Airport in Haiti's capital, where armed gangs control most of the roads in the surrounding area and the metropolitan area was plunged into blackout hours later after the main Péligre hydroelectric power plant was forced to shut down by protests. Deemed too dangerous for U.S. citizens, the airport has been off limits to U.S. commercial and cargo flights since November, when gangs opened fire on Spirit Airlines and also hit JetBlue Airways and American Airlines with bullets, forcing the Federal Aviation Administration to issue an ongoing ban. The Trump administration has scheduled the repatriation of another 61 Haitians back to the country on Wednesday. That flight is going to land in Cap-Haïtien, according to a source with knowledge of the plans. With the only international airport accessible to the outside world, Cap-Haïtien has received an average of one U.S. deportation flight a month. Tens of thousands of Haitians have also been deported home from the neighboring Dominican Republic. The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to Miami Herald questions about why the Haitian migrants were transferred from the United States to the naval base in Cuba. Last week, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt labeled reports that the administration planned to send thousands of migrants, including nationals from Western European countries, to the controversial detention facility at Guantánamo Bay as 'fake news.' 'Not happening,' Leavitt posted on X. Guantánamo Bay, which has a prison for suspected terrorists tied to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, has long had a facility to house migrants, mostly Cubans and Haitians picked up at sea while their asylum claims are heard or they are resettled in a third country. But one of President Donald Trump's first official acts upon returning to the White House earlier this year was ordering officials to prepare Guantánamo to hold as many as 30,000 migrants. Trump's directive marked a dramatic expansion of the facility's use for immigration enforcement as part of his mass deportation campaign. In February, the administration sent more than 150 Venezuelans to Guantánamo before deporting them back to their home country. At the time, advocates and lawyers raised alarms that jailing them there was inhumane and violated the immigrants' constitutional rights. The following month, an undisclosed number of migrants at the facility were then transferred to a detention center in Louisiana. In recent weeks, top White House adviser Stephen Miller has put pressure on immigration officials to ramp up immigrant detentions to 3,000 a day —a goal that is likely to overcrowd already full detention centers. Guerline Jozef, executive director of the San Diego-based Haitian Bridge Alliance, said the transfer of Haitian nationals to Guantánamo Bay was 'covert' and their deportation from the base 'is not just a humanitarian crisis. It is a flagrant violation of international human rights and civil liberties. 'Guantánamo is a black site designed for secrecy and exclusion. Haitian immigrants—and asylum seekers—are once again being subjected to the same cruel, barbaric and inhumane treatment they were subjected in the 1990s, held without access to counsel, without notice to their families or legal advocates and deported under the cover of darkness,' Jozef said. 'These individuals have been stripped of their most basic rights under U.S. and international law.' Jozef, who lobbied against such a plan during the Biden administration and denounced the Trump administration's directive in January, said she and other advocates 'are deeply familiar with Guantánamo protocols. This is not how immigration detention is supposed to work. The decision to disappear Haitians and others into this military pipeline reveals the racialized logic of U.S. immigration enforcement. We cannot allow a system built for indefinite detention and torture to become the new front line of migrant removal. This is a human rights emergency and a moral disgrace.' For Haitians, the infamous military base in Cuba has a troubled history. About 34,000 Haitians were detained at the base in the early 1990s after the Haitian military led a coup against the country's democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The Haitians were detained at sea by the U.S. Coast Guard while trying to reach Florida in makeshift boats. At the base, they were held behind barbed wire fencing where, along with similarly detained Cuban refugees, they were subjected to inhumane conditions. The base was finally ordered closed in 1993 after a federal court ruling found that the government had unlawfully held migrants at the offshore detention center. Despite the court order, the U.S. maintained its right to hold refugees at the base and has long operated a migrant facility there where individuals picked up at sea and who claim fear of persecution in their home countries are taken for interviews.

Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
LA's immigrant street vendors fear ICE raids but are still slinging tacos
Immigrant street vendors were out selling tacos and crêpes in Los Angeles during ICE raids and protests. Their customers, many undocumented, were afraid to leave their homes to patronize the businesses. Despite legal work permits, vendors said they felt insecure, facing financial and emotional challenges. The normally bustling streets of Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles were quiet except for the commotion of sirens and gusty helicopters. Loud bangs punctuated the night, but LA's street vendors were still slinging tacos and crêpes to the few pedestrians who had ventured out. It was the evening of Monday, June 9, the week that the LA Times reported that Immigration and Customs Enforcement detained several hundred immigrants in Southern California. In response, the streets of downtown had been embroiled in four consecutive days of uproar. From the taco stand where Celeste Sughey works as a cashier, we could hear protesters and law enforcement clashing. Sughey and her co-workers have continued to sell food despite the risk of being undocumented because their families depend on the paychecks. "This is our only job, this is how we get to survive," Sughey said. She asked that the business not be named out of fear that it could be targeted by federal law enforcement. Two other vendors I spoke to said they had work authorization in the US but aren't citizens. They feared being swept up in what they see as indiscriminate arrests targeting Latino workers. "If you are present in the United States illegally, you will be deported," Abigail Jackson, a spokesperson for the White House, wrote in an email to Business Insider. "This is the promise President Trump made to the American people that the administration is committed to keeping it." The White House and ICE did not confirm with Business Insider the number of people detained or whether warrants had been issued in all instances. All the street vendors I spoke to said they've lost money, estimating that business has dropped by 75% because customers were avoiding ICE raids and the protests. The city hadn't announced the 8 p.m. curfew yet, but with all the ruckus, Sughey's taco stand would be closing that evening before 9 p.m. instead of the usual 2 a.m. At the time, she was hopeful that the raids and protests would die down. "Hopefully, this is just for a little bit and then it goes away," she said. A week later, the curfew in downtown had ended, but a sense of unease still lingers in the atypically quiet district. Business is slow, tensions are high, and vendors' families need the paychecks Less than 5 miles away, another immigrant neighborhood had slowed down as well. Benny Moreno, 52, operates El Patrón, a family-owned business that makes Mexican favorites like tacos, tortas, sopes, and burritos in Koreatown. The area is one of LA's most densely populated neighborhoods, known for its Korean American and Oaxacan communities. Since the ICE arrests ramped up in LA County, Moreno said he's noticed a dramatic drop in foot traffic, unlike anything he's witnessed in his 12 years of running his business. "Most of my people, they're Latinos, we don't have papers," Moreno said of his undocumented customers on the evening of Wednesday, June 11. "My support comes from them," he said. "They come to my taco truck and they buy my food, and now they don't want to spend money because they are not even working right now because they are scared." Denise, a regular at Moreno's truck who works in a dental office downtown, said there's usually a long line. From 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. I saw two paying customers stop by. "This is the worst I've ever seen," said the 33-year-old US citizen. Denise was ordering steak fries and tacos for her family, including her parents, who are undocumented and have been too afraid to leave the house. Denise, whose mom emigrated from Vera Cruz, Mexico, like Moreno, came out to support his business. Members of Moreno's indigenous Zapotec community were detained during ICE sweeps in the fashion district the previous Friday, Denise said. "We were just getting back up from COVID," Denise said of the street vendors. "It feels like we're getting shut down all over again. It's very hard." The slowdown is hurting Moreno's bottom line. He said he pays around $2,000 a month to rent his truck and maintain a permit to park on the streets. "I'm worried because my bill is too high," Moreno said, adding that he has no choice but to continue his late-night operation from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. to support his wife and two kids. "I'm working hard to support my family to pay my bills and my rent." Claudia Antonio and Abel Pacheco are in a similar position. They started selling $12 crêpes last fall to set themselves apart from street vendors who serve traditional Mexican food. The couple said their business, La Chinantla, used to pull in about $200 a night; recently, it's been as low as $60 a night in Koreatown. "We get prepared, we have to throw it away because it won't be good for the next day," Antonio said of having to dispose of fresh fruit because of low sales. The Oaxacan immigrants, who have three children, live in subsidized housing in downtown Los Angeles, paying a little over $1,000 a month for a three-bedroom apartment. "We're barely surviving," Antonio said. Selling on the street, she said, varies so much day to day, it's hard to make a consistent income. "Now the rent is coming up. That's why we're outside right now. Otherwise, we stay home." Work authorization is not enough for immigrant vendors to feel secure Antonio and Moreno both said they have work authorization to operate their food businesses, but since they aren't citizens, they've been feeling more anxious than ever. Publications including the Los Angeles Times and LA Taco have published videos showing street vendors and their employees detained by federal officers. ICE officials have been tracking down non-citizens who pay taxes at their places of business and home addresses using records from the Internal Revenue Service, according to reporting in the New York Times. "I'm worried," said Moreno. "ICE, they take people, even if they're citizens, they do not even ask for the papers. They just take people." A viral video of a US citizen being detained, published by The New York Times, stoked outrage that ICE may be racially profiling Latinos. Antonio and Pacheco are also applying for adjustment of status to become lawful permanent residents with green cards. "It's very stressful," Pacheco said of the expensive legal process. "Every time we have to go see the lawyer or they call you, they expect you to come out with some more money every single time." Antonio said her immigration lawyer charges her $1,200 every time they update documents in their application for a green card. It hasn't been cheap for Antonio and Pacheco to realize their American dream. Antonio has been building up her business for over 14 years, buying new appliances and slowly saving up for her fridges, which cost $250 each, and a customized illuminated business sign, which cost $400. "We want our business to grow," said Antonio, who hopes one day to open up a brick-and-mortar location with her husband. "That's our dream, why we're still working hard, and that's why we're still here, even though it's not been easy."


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Border Patrol announces 'phenomenal' turnaround as number of monthly migrant releases drops to zero
New Border Patrol data shows not a single illegal migrant was released into the United States last month, signaling an overwhelming turnaround since 62,000 were released into the country under the Biden administration at the same time last year. "It's phenomenal," U.S. Border Patrol chief Michael Banks told Fox News Wednesday. "Anybody that cares about national security knows that, under the last administration, we were breaking record numbers of people that were coming into the country illegally and that were being released into the country… And to go from over 62,000 down to zero, we're breaking record numbers in the right direction now." Banks told "Fox & Friends" co-host Ainsley Earhardt that, while the Border Patrol is refraining from declaring victory on the issue, "we are fast approaching it." "We are closer to operational security of the border than we've ever had," he shared. "Two days ago, we broke another record – 141 entries at the southwest border. Those entries are all apprehended, and none of them will be released." Banks thanked President Donald Trump for supporting his agency and for providing its agents with the tools necessary to make communities – and the nation – safer. "We've said all along that the United States Border Patrol knows how to secure the border. We just need leadership, and with the leadership of President Trump and Secretary Noem, we are proving exactly what we've been saying for years: Let us enforce the laws, and we'll get the job done." "I think the American people are seeing that... And we're just getting started. We're not even close to being done."