
10:35 AM ET: Sean 'Diddy' Combs guilty on prostitution charges, acquitted on others - CNN Breaking News Alerts - Podcast on CNN Podcasts
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Yahoo
a minute ago
- Yahoo
Trump Asks Senate Leader to Cancel Summer Recess to Confirm His ‘Incredible Nominees'
President Donald Trump said Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) should cancel the Senate's summer break and long weekends in order to confirm Trump's nominees, which include some controversial picks, more quickly in a Truth Social post Saturday. 'Hopefully the very talented John Thune, fresh off our many victories over the past two weeks and, indeed, 6 months, will cancel August recess (and long weekends!), in order to get my incredible nominees confirmed,' Trump wrote. 'We need them badly!!!' The Senate is expected to go on recess from Aug. 4 to Sept. 1. It is one of 14 breaks or long weekends on the 2025 calendar. Their most recent break was June 30 to July 4, and then there is another break toward the end of September. Even when the Senate is in session, lawmakers are generally only in their Capitol Hill offices a few days a week, with ample time to travel back home. Senators are scheduled to vote on six nominations on Monday, including Bradley Hansell for under secretary of defense for intelligence and security, and John Hurley for under secretary for terrorism and financial crimes. The Senate is also slated for a major vote on a funding bill. The Senate could soon vote on Emil Bove, a controversial nominee to become a judge on a federal appeals court. He served as one of Trump's personal lawyers before taking a role at the Justice Department. A whistleblower said in June that Bove told lawyers at the Justice Department they 'would need to consider telling the courts 'fuck you' and ignore any such court order' that would block Trump from sending immigrants to prison in El Salvador. A Senate Judiciary Committee advanced his nomination earlier this week, prompting Democrats to walk out. 'I have respect for you Mr. Chairman, but this is outrageous, this is unacceptable, this is wrong,' said Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.). 'This is an abuse of power. It is an undermining of the wellbeing and the integrity of this Senate.' More than 75 former judges asked the Senate Judiciary Committee to reject Bove's nomination. 'Mr. Bove's egregious record of mistreating law enforcement officers, abusing power, and disregarding the law itself disqualifies him for this position,' the group wrote. Another controversial nominee is former Fox News host Jeanine Pirro, who is up for the role of U.S. Attorney in Washington, D.C. Trump's first choice for the position was Republican lawyer Ed Martin, but he dropped the bid amid opposition. The Senate Judiciary Committee also voted to advance Pirro's nomination. Brian Christine, Trump's nominee for assistant health and human services secretary, is an Alabama urologist who said the issue of teen pregnancy should be left to 'the purview of the parents.' He also said that 'society works best when men and women are fulfilling their roles, when they are doing what they're supposed to do, raising children and propagating the species.' Dozens of people in Malaysia protested the possibility of 'alpha male' influencer Nick Adams becoming U.S. ambassador to the country over his posts criticizing Islam and supporting the Israeli military. Another nomination drawing controversy is that of law professor Jennifer Mascott, Trump's nominee for a federal appeals court seat in Delaware, who is not licensed to practice law in the state. More from Rolling Stone Tulsi Gabbard Helps Boost Trump's Russia Crusade, Calling for Prosecution of Obama Officials Democrats Are Preparing a Deliberately Incomplete 2024 Election Autopsy These Right-Wingers Won't Shut Up About Epstein, No Matter What Trump Says Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence


CBS News
3 minutes ago
- CBS News
Modesto man dies after 3-vehicle crash that shut down road for hours
A man died in a three-vehicle crash that closed down a road for several hours in Modesto on Saturday afternoon, police said. The Modesto Police Department said the crash happened around 2:20 p.m. on Sick Road at Standiford Avenue. Police said one driver was taken to a hospital, where he later died. The identification of the driver has not been released, but police said he was from Modesto. An investigation revealed the driver was heading south on Sisk Road when he crashed into a pole in the center median. The vehicle continued and struck another pole before crossing the median into the northbound lane, where the vehicle struck two vehicles, police said. All people remained at the scene and cooperated with the investigation and no other injuries were reported. Officers said it appears to be a medical-related crash.


CBS News
3 minutes ago
- CBS News
44 dogs rescued from Harford County home following citizen's report of suspected animal cruelty
44 bully-type breed dogs were removed from a Harford County home following a citizen's report of suspected animal cruelty on Thursday. Harford County Deputies and Animal Control Officers were called to the residence on the 1400 block of Eagles Grove Court, in Whiteford, on Friday, July 11, 2025, following the complaint of suspected inhumane conditions. When officers arrived, they found multiple violations of Maryland Criminal Law (Title 10, Section 604) and Harford County Code (Section 64-18) due to the mistreatment, abuse, or neglect of animals. These violations included the lack of access to drinkable water, improper shelter, and poor air quality, along with insufficient space, according to the Harford County Sheriff's Office. Officers also observed extremely soiled bedding inside the kennels, insufficient ventilation, and temperature controls where the animals were housed. On Thursday, July 17, 2025, after officers secured safe kenneling for the dogs, they executed a search warrant at the residence with support from numerous agencies, including the Criminal Investigations Division and Forensic Sciences Unit, the Harford Humane Society, and the Harford County Department of Emergency Services Special Operations Division, Hazardous Materials Unit. The 44 dogs were then safely transported to a local shelter for evaluation and care. As the investigation is ongoing, police ask anyone with information relating to this crime to call Animal Control at 410-638-3505. Those who wish to remain anonymous may report their information through Metro Crime Stoppers Tipline at 1-866-7Lockup. Earlier this month, a pharmacist in Harford County was sentenced to one year in prison for using prescription drugs to kill his dog. After 38-year-old Ryan Kenneth Ball, of Bel Air, tried to pay people to take his 6-year-old Plott Hound, Louie, Ball took it upon himself to kill the dog. Harford County deputies found syringes and two prescription drug vials in a neighbor's trash can. The drugs are often used to relax a patient's muscles during surgery, which can lead to breathing issues and even death if the patient is not ventilated, according to court documents. Ball was a licensed pharmacist at Upper Chesapeake Medical Center. In a separate case of animal cruelty, Harford County residents rescued a 4-month-old pitbull after witnessing her get abandoned on Winters Run Road back in May. "It felt like a movie," Jonathan Izer, a neighbor, told WJZ. "It was devastating, really sad, just to watch the puppy run after the car, and they didn't stop or slow down or anything. It was quite heartbreaking." Izer reportedly watched the entire abandonment from his porch, which he then alerted the Harford County Sheriff's Office. Offenders may face up to a $1,000 fine and or 90 days in jail for abandoning an animal in Harford County.