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Peeping tom incidents reported near University of Michigan as students move in

Multiple incidents of a prowler peering into female students' windows have been reported near the University of Michigan campus in recent weeks, raising safety concerns during move-in week.

The Ann Arbor Police Department has received at least four reports of a peeping tom targeting off-campus housing. That includes the 500 block of East Kingsley Street, the 1100 block of White Street, 900 block Dewey Avenue and the 200 block of Thayer Street.

"Over the past few weeks, we have seen an increase in reports of a peeping tom out here in the city of Ann Arbor," said Sgt. Mark Pulford of the Ann Arbor Police Department.

"The suspect's been looking into college-aged female residences. Both on the first and second floors," Pulford said.

University of Michigan junior Katie Delaney has experienced multiple incidents at her residence on White Street.

"I was just in bed and I hear some scratching sound outside my window," Delaney recalled one instance. I had plants on my windowsill, so I had my blinds up a little bit so they could see some light. And I go a little closer to the window and I see it, a camera.

Delaney believes the suspect sometimes uses a GoPro camera to film her and flees whenever she tries to get a good look at him. Police confirm there are reports of filming as well.

"Earlier he was trying to come up through the fire escape to look in the shower cause our blinds are kind of messed up there, so you can see into the shower," Delaney said.

Even closed blinds haven't provided enough protection from the intrusive behavior.

"You know the little holes in the blinds from where they have the string running through? He was filming through that hole, so even the blinds closed weren't enough, so I just bought blackout curtains," Delaney said.

Police cannot yet confirm if these incidents are connected to similar peeping tom reports from last year that also targeted young women in the area.

The timing is particularly concerning as thousands of students are moving into campus housing this week. Police have increased patrols in response to the reports.

Parents dropping off students expressed appreciation for the police response while remaining concerned about safety.

"I appreciate [police] letting me know so that I can talk to my son so that hes aware of making sure hes safe," said Christine Slesak, a University of Michigan parent.

Ann Arbor police are asking the public to report any suspicious activity by calling AAPD at 734-794-6920, or emailing tips@a2gov.org, noting that tips can also be submitted anonymously through the Silent Witness program at https://aapd.a2gov.org/SilentWitness.

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This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Detroit youth football organization suspended for 1 year after coaches clash with referee

The Detroit Police Athletic League has suspended the Eastside Colts youth sports organization for one year following an altercation between coaches and a referee at a fundraising game.

The incident occurred at a non-PAL-sanctioned 12-and-under game nearly two weeks ago in Warren, where tempers flared as coaches from the Eastside Colts got into a confrontation with a referee.

Related Story: Detroit youth football coaches, referee suspended after altercation at benefit game Detroit youth football coaches, referee suspended after altercation at benefit game

Bobby Christian, president of the Eastside Colts, said the punishment is too severe and will ultimately hurt children who had nothing to do with the incident.

"PAL is a great organization, the only issue I have with PAL is we never fault children for adult matters," Christian said.

Christian acknowledged his coaches were wrong and said he suspended them personally after the incident.

Extended interview: President of Eastside Colts football team talks about the fallout after on-field incident WEb Extra: President of the Eastside Colts football team talks about the fallout after on-field incident

"My coaches are completely wrong. I suspended them myself. I suspended them personally. You guys are done. They're completely wrong, but I'm not sure how many times you can poke a person before they black out," Christian said.

Christian alleged the referee used inappropriate language during the game.

"What was this referee doing? A lot of things you can't say on TV," Christian said. "You B this. You A that. I'll kill you this."

PAL enforces zero-tolerance policy

Detroit PAL initially handed out indefinite suspensions for the coaches and referee involved. The organization has now expanded the punishment to include the entire Eastside Colts organization, which includes both football and cheer teams.

In a statement, Detroit PAL said:

"Detroit PAL is committed to ensuring that every child who participates in our programs has a safe, positive, and fun experience on and off the field. Following a recent incident at an unsanctioned football game involving a PAL team, Detroit PAL conducted a thorough review. As a result of that investigation, the team involved has been suspended from participation in PAL programming for one year.In addition, Detroit PAL has reiterated to all coaches, referees, players, and families that we are strictly enforcing a zero-tolerance policy regarding fighting and poor sportsmanship. These measures are necessary to uphold the values of respect, teamwork, and integrity that are central to our mission.Our priority will always be to protect our young athletes and provide them with a supportive environment to grow, learn, and enjoy the game."Impact on young athletes

The suspension has already affected other teams within the organization. Rachelle Copeland, an Eastside Colts mom and cheer coach, said her team was unable to participate in a cheer jamboree.

"We were supposed to do a cheer jamboree that was just this past Sunday and we couldn't participate," Copeland said. "My girls are suffering from that and a lot of my girls, this is the only thing that they really have that's fun, something that's structured, something that brings positivity to them."

Related Video: Altercation unfolds between coaches and referee at youth football game WEB VIDEO: Altercation between coaches and referee at youth football game

Christian argued the punishment should have been limited to the coaches of the 12-and-under team involved in the incident.

"Canceling the 12U coaches or maybe even the 12U completely would've been warranted, but canceling a 6U, a 8U, a 10U, a 13U, a 14U that wasn't even there, that didn't even know what was going on? That's completely unfair. And they told me they weren't going to do that," Christian said.

However, other PAL parents support the organization's decision. Kenthia Morton said a line has to be drawn.

"They have to take a stand somewhere, to let it know it's not going to be tolerated. Unfortunately, it involves kids, but kids can ... switch over to a different team," Morton said.

Christian says he's already lost roughly 50 players. He plans to appeal PAL's decision but admits he's not sure if that effort will be successful.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Appeals court allows Trump to end temporary protections for migrants from Central America and Nepal

A federal appeals court on Wednesday sided with the Trump administration and stayed a lower courts order keeping in place temporary protections for 60,000 migrants from Central America and Nepal.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco granted the emergency stay pending an appeal as immigrants rights advocates allege that the administration acted unlawfully in ending Temporary Protected Status designations for people from Honduras, Nicaragua and Nepal.

The district courts order granting plaintiffs motion to postpone, entered July 31, 2025, is stayed pending further order of this court, wrote the judges, who are appointees of Democrat Bill Clinton and Republicans George W. Bush and Donald Trump.

IN RELATED NEWS | Judge blocks Trump administration's move to end Haitian migrants' protections

Temporary Protected Status is a designation that can be granted by the Homeland Security secretary, preventing migrants from being deported and allowing them to work. The Trump administration has aggressively sought to remove the protection, thus making more people eligible for removal. Its part of a wider effort by the administration to carry out mass deportations of immigrants.

Secretary Kristi Noem can extend Temporary Protected Status to immigrants in the U.S. if conditions in their homelands are deemed unsafe for return due to a natural disaster, political instability or other dangerous conditions.

Noem had ruled to end protections for 51,000 Hondurans and nearly 3,000 Nicaraguans after determining that conditions in their homelands no longer warranted them. Their designations are set to expire Sept. 8 after more than two dozen years working in the U.S. after Hurricane Mitch devastated both countries in 1998.

TPS designations for an estimated 7,000 people from Nepal were scheduled to end Aug. 5.

The National TPS Alliance did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT | Supreme Court allows President Trump to strip deportation protections from some Venezuelans

In a sharply written July 31 order, U.S. District Judge Trina L. Thompson in San Francisco kept the protections in place while the case proceeds. The next hearing is Nov. 18.

She said the administration ended the migrant status protections without an objective review of the country conditions, such as political violence in Honduras and the impact of recent hurricanes and storms in Nicaragua.

In response, Tricia McLaughlin, the assistant secretary at DHS, said, TPS was never meant to be a de facto asylum system, yet that is how previous administrations have used it for decades.

The Trump administration has already terminated TPS designations for about 350,000 Venezuelans, 500,000 Haitians, more than 160,000 Ukrainians and thousands of people from Afghanistan and Cameroon. Some have pending lawsuits in federal courts.

Lawyers for the National TPS Alliance argued that Noems decisions are unlawful because they were predetermined by President Donald Trumps campaign promises and motivated by racial animus.

But Drew Ensign, a U.S. deputy assistant attorney general, said at a hearing Tuesday that the government suffers an ongoing irreparable harm from its inability to carry out the programs that it has determined are warranted.

In May, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to end TPS designations for Venezuelans. The justices provided no rationale, which is common in emergency appeals, and did not rule on the underlying claims.

Trump calls on Federal Reserve official to resign after official accuses her of mortgage fraud

By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Wednesday called on Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook to resign after a member of his administration accused Cook of committing mortgage fraud, the latest example of the Trump administration’s efforts to gain control over the central bank.

Bill Pulte, director of the agency that oversees mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, urged the Justice Department to investigate Cook, who was appointed to the Fed’s governing board by former president Joe Biden in 2022. She was reappointed the following year to a term that lasts until 2038, the longest remaining term among the seven governors.

Pulte, in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, alleged that Cook claimed two homes as her principal residences in 2021 to fraudulently obtain better mortgage lending terms. On June 18 of that year she purchased a home in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and then two weeks later bought a condo in Atlanta, Georgia, the letter said. Before joining the Fed, Cook taught at Michigan State University.

Pulte also charged that Cook has listed her condo in Atlanta, Georgia, for rent. Mortgages for homes used as principal residences typically carry lower interest rates than properties that are purchased to rent, the letter said.

The Federal Reserve declined to comment on the accusation. A Justice Department spokesperson also declined to comment.

The allegation represents another front in the Trump administration’s attack on the Fed, which has yet to cut its key interest rate as Trump has demanded. If Cook were to step down, then the White House could nominate a replacement. And Trump has said he would only appoint people who would support lower rates.

Just last month, Trump blasted Powell for the ballooning cost of the renovation of two of the Fed’s headquarters buildings, even suggesting that the run-up in costs could constitute a firing offense. He backed off his threats to fire Powell after receiving a tour of the project.

Pulte also suggested that Cook’s alleged actions could constitute a fireable offense. Fed officials are protected by law from being removed by a president, except “for cause,” which is generally seen as some kind of malfeasance or dereliction of duty.

Either way, if Trump seeks to fire Cook, it could lead to a court battle over a president’s power to remove Fed governors.

FILE - Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve member Lisa Cook, speaks during a conversations with leaders from organizations that include nonprofits, small businesses, manufacturing, supply chain management, the hospitality industry, and the housing and education sectors at the Federal Reserve building, Sept. 23, 2022, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)
FILE – Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve member Lisa Cook, speaks during a conversations with leaders from organizations that include nonprofits, small businesses, manufacturing, supply chain management, the hospitality industry, and the housing and education sectors at the Federal Reserve building, Sept. 23, 2022, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

Senate Democrats, including New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, expressed support for Cook and slammed Trump’s actions.

“Trump is a liar. Lisa Cook—stand tough and don’t let Trump intimidate you,” Schumer wrote in a post on social media platform X.

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren said in a statement that Trump “has been scrambling for a pretext to intimidate or fire Chair Powell and members of the Federal Reserve Board while blaming anyone but himself for how his failed economic policies are hurting Americans.”

“The President and his administration should not weaponize the Federal government to illegally fire independent Fed Board members,” Warren added.

Trump will be able to replace Chair Jerome Powell in May 2026, when Powell’s term expires. Yet 12 members of the Fed’s interest-rate setting committee have a vote on whether to raise or lower interest rates, so even replacing the Chair doesn’t guarantee that Fed policy will shift the way Trump wants.

But the more members of the Fed’s governing board that Trump can appoint, the more control he will be able to assert over the Fed, which has long been considered independent from day-to-day politics.

All seven members of the Fed’s governing board are able to vote on rate decisions. The other five voters include the president of the Fed’s New York branch and a rotating group of four of the presidents of the Fed’s other 11 regional branches.

Trump appointed two members of the Fed’s board in his first term, Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman. Both dissented July 30 from the central bank’s decision to keep its rate unchanged, in favor of a rate cut.

Another Fed governor, Adriana Kugler, stepped down unexpectedly Aug. 1, and Trump has nominated one of his economic advisers, Stephen Miran, to fill out the remainder of her term until January.

If Trump is able to replace Cook, the first Black woman to serve on the Fed’s board, as well as Kugler, that would give him a clear majority on the board of governors. If Powell leaves the board when his term as chair ends next May, then Trump will be able to fill a fifth spot. However, Powell could stay on the board until early 2028 after finishing his term as chair.

The presidents of the regional Federal Reserve banks are selected by the boards of directors of those banks, but are subject to the approval of the Fed’s board of governors. The terms of all 12 of the regional Fed presidents end next February.

Trump has for months demanded that the Federal Reserve reduce the short-term interest rate it controls, which currently stands at about 4.3%. He has also repeatedly insulted Powell, who has said that the Fed would like to see more evidence of how the economy evolves in response to Trump’s sweeping tariffs before making any moves. Powell has also said the duties threaten to raise inflation and slow growth.

Trump says that a lower rate would reduce the government’s borrowing costs on $37 trillion in debt and boost the housing market by reducing mortgage rates. Yet mortgage borrowing costs and other interest rates, including many of the ones the government pays, do not always follow the Fed’s rate decisions.

The Trump administration has made similar claims of mortgage fraud against Democrats that Trump has attacked, including California Sen. Adam Schiff and New York Attorney General Letitia James.

FILE – Federal Reserve Board of Governors member Lisa Cook, right, talks with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell before an open meeting of the Board of Governors at the Federal Reserve, June 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

Batch Brewing Company partners with Wayne State to create healthier soda alternative

A Detroit brewery is expanding beyond beer to meet growing demand for healthier beverage options, partnering with Wayne State University to develop a low-calorie, fiber-rich soda.

Batch Brewing Company on Detroit's east side has launched Gut Soda, a non-alcoholic beverage that CEO Stephen Roginson says represents the changing landscape of consumer preferences.

"My job as the owner of a brewery is to come up with ways to get people to come in," Roginson said.

The brewery has developed three flavors of the low-calorie, low-sugar, fiber-rich soda. The latest offerings blackberry lemon and lemon lime ginger launched this summer with assistance from Wayne State University's Department of Nutrition and Food Science.

Ph.D. student Md Abdul Alim served as the main researcher, testing Gut Soda's caloric, carbohydrate and sugar levels in the university's lab.

"It's a very proud moment for me because I'm coming from another country," Alim said.

Hear more from CEO Stephen Roginson below: Web extra: Bach owner speaks on new sodas

The testing process required significant time and expertise.

"Two to three weeks is needed to do this job because caloric analysis from liquid is not easy it is tough," Alim said.

The brewery packages 24 cans per minute of the product, which Roginson is careful to distinguish from traditional soft drinks.

"Yeah, people in Michigan call it pop, but this is not pop. Pop is sweet, it's heavy. This is soda. It has more in common with an old-school seltzer," Roginson said.

Watch the canning process of the drinks below: Web extra: Canning process of Batch Brewing sodas

Roginson credits the Wayne State partnership with making the healthier product both affordable and feasible to develop.

"Whether it's for food or for beer... in addition to have products for the people that are not consuming alcohol, and that's where Gut Soda comes in," Roginson said.

Diane Cress, chair of Wayne State's Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences, said the collaboration provided valuable real-world experience for students while breaking new ground for the university.

"Students learn the science behind doing this, but we've never applied it to local businesses before, so that was new," Cress said.

Cress hopes the partnership between Wayne State and Batch Brewing will create additional opportunities for students and staff in the future.

"So, that's what this work was the beginning of," Cress said.

To try Gut Soda, go to drinkgutasoda.com. In Detroit, SuperCrsip, Ima Noodles and Dirty Shake carry Gut Soda with dozens of other metro Detroit retailers also in the mix.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Detroit Evening Report: Duggan endorses Sheffield for mayor

Duggan Endorses Sheffield 

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan has endorsed City Council President Mary Sheffield in her run to become Detroit’s next mayor.  The two appeared together this morning at a news conference on the city’s west side. 

Sheffield says she’s ready to move the city forward. 

“I am thankful for Mayor Duggan’s support.  I am ready,” says Sheffield. “I am prepared to lead Detroit to its next chapter.”  

Sheffield won just over 50 percent of the vote in this month’s primary election.  She’ll face Pastor Solomon Kinloch in the November general election. 

Additional headlines

Chandler Park upgrades 

Detroit officials gathered in Chandler Park this afternoon to celebrate upgrades to the eastside park. 

Top of the list is the new Chandler Park Fieldhouse.  The 130-thousand square foot facility includes an indoor sports turf field, multi-sports courts and fitness areas. 

Chandler Park already has an 18-hole golf course and the Wayne County Aquatic Center.  It’s Detroit’s fourth largest park. 

Duggan gains endorsements for governor

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan continues to collect endorsements for his gubernatorial campaign.  He appeared at Michigan Central Station Tuesday to tout 215 endorsements from current and former Democratic and Republican elected officials from around the state.  

Duggan says he’s making a statement with his decision to run for governor as an independent. 

“I know it would be a lot easier to get elected as a Democrat.  It would be a lot easier for all these folks up here not to have to step out and endorse an independent.  But I would have been part of the same old politics in Lansing.  And it is time to send an unmistakable message to tell the folks in Lansing that politics as usual is over.” 

Duggan announced last year that he would not run for a fourth term as mayor of Detroit.  Instead, he’s running to become Michigan’s next governor.  That election takes place in November 2026. 

WSU move-in traffic 

You can expect pedestrian and vehicle traffic to be heavy in Midtown Detroit over the next few days.  That’s because students are headed back to Wayne State University. 

Expect to see U-Hauls and other trucks carrying furniture and other belongings.  Move in at the school’s dorms began today. 

Classes begin on Monday.   

UDM volunteers during orientation

First year students at the University of Detroit Mercy are volunteering for projects in northwest Detroit today and tomorrow. 

They’ll work in parks and gardens and on block clubs in the area near the university. 

The volunteer work is the final part of the school’s orientation for incoming students.  It’s goal is to connect students with the area’s social and cultural networks. 

Federov #91 retired 

The Detroit Red Wings are retiring the jersey of All-Star Sergei Federov. 

Federov played 13 seasons with the Redwings, from 1990 to 2003.  He helped the team win three Stanley Cup Championships.  The Hockey Hall of Fame center scored 400 goals and had 554 assists for the Red Wings. 

A special ceremony to honor Federov and hang his jersey from the rafters at Little Caesars Arena will take place on January 12th

 

Listen to the latest episode of the “Detroit Evening Report” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

The post Detroit Evening Report: Duggan endorses Sheffield for mayor appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Appeals court allows Trump to end temporary protections for migrants from Central America and Nepal

By JANIE HAR, Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal appeals court on Wednesday sided with the Trump administration and halted for now a lower court’s order that had kept in place temporary protections for 60,000 migrants from Central America and Nepal.

This means that the Republican administration can move toward removing an estimated 7,000 people from Nepal whose Temporary Protected Status designations expired Aug. 5. The TPS designations and legal status of 51,000 Hondurans and 3,000 Nicaraguans are set to expire Sept. 8, at which point they will become eligible for removal.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco granted the emergency stay pending an appeal as immigrants rights advocates allege that the administration acted unlawfully in ending Temporary Protected Status designations for people from Honduras, Nicaragua and Nepal.

“The district court’s order granting plaintiffs’ motion to postpone, entered July 31, 2025, is stayed pending further order of this court,” wrote the judges, who are appointees of Democrat Bill Clinton and Republicans George W. Bush and Donald Trump.

Temporary Protected Status is a designation that can be granted by the Homeland Security secretary, preventing migrants from being deported and allowing them to work. The Trump administration has aggressively sought to remove the protection, thus making more people eligible for removal. It’s part of a wider effort by the administration to carry out mass deportations of immigrants.

Secretary Kristi Noem can extend Temporary Protected Status to immigrants in the U.S. if conditions in their homelands are deemed unsafe for return due to a natural disaster, political instability or other dangerous conditions.

Immigrants rights advocates say TPS holders from Nepal have lived in the U.S. for more than a decade while people from Honduras and Nicaragua have lived in the country for 26 years, after Hurricane Mitch in 1998 devastated both countries.

“The Trump administration is systematically de-documenting immigrants who have lived lawfully in this country for decades, raising U.S.-citizen children, starting businesses, and contributing to their communities,” said Jessica Bansal, attorney at the National Day Laborer Organization, in a statement.

Noem ended the programs after determining that conditions no longer warranted protections.

In a sharply written July 31 order, U.S. District Judge Trina L. Thompson in San Francisco kept the protections in place while the case proceeds. The next hearing is Nov. 18.

She said the administration ended the migrant status protections without an “objective review of the country conditions,” such as political violence in Honduras and the impact of recent hurricanes and storms in Nicaragua.

In response, Tricia McLaughlin, the assistant secretary at DHS, said, “TPS was never meant to be a de facto asylum system, yet that is how previous administrations have used it for decades.”

The Trump administration has already terminated TPS designations for about 350,000 Venezuelans, 500,000 Haitians, more than 160,000 Ukrainians and thousands of people from Afghanistan and Cameroon. Some have pending lawsuits in federal courts.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs argued that Noem’s decisions are unlawful because they were predetermined by President Donald Trump’s campaign promises and motivated by racial animus.

But Drew Ensign, a U.S. deputy assistant attorney general, said at a hearing Tuesday that the government suffers an ongoing irreparable harm from its “inability to carry out the programs that it has determined are warranted.”

In May, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to end TPS designations for Venezuelans. The justices provided no rationale, which is common in emergency appeals, and did not rule on the underlying claims.

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, with Ecuador’s Minister of Interior John Reinberg, not shown, speaks during a press briefing at the Ecuadorian Presidential Palace, Thursday, July 31, 2025, in Quito, Ecuador. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)

Governor Whitmer stresses importance of free pre-K as state's education budget in limbo

Inside the home of a Romulus family, where Beyond the Bell Pre-K is based, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer read to kids on Wednesday and stressed support of free pre-K education.

As for the school budget in Michigan being unresolved this late, the governor says, "Im concerned about it. Schools need to get started.

Interview: Gov. Gretchen Whitmer speaks on budget controversy Gov. Gretchen Whitmer speaks on budget controversy

Parent Samuel Miller emphasized to me why his son thrives from an early start, hes now 4 years old.

Im very active in his extracurriculars and education life," said Miller.

Owner of the Beyond the Bell, Michelle Cook, highlighted how her program is making a difference for kids with early support, learning and healthy meals.

She, too, hopes lawmakers on both sides can reach a deal, so more programs like hers can open up.

Its more intimate. I dont have all the testing, but we do assessments," said Cook.

On the other side of the aisle, Republican Senator Joe Bellino (R-Monroe) weighed in on sticking points such as school lunches, free pre-K, and he says giving more to students ahead of unions.

If the governor wants to get it done, call Matt Hall and leader Brinks. As a Republican with a heart, Im not against school lunches for kids in need, but why buy them for upper-middle-class people? Same with pre-K. For kids in need, I want to fund it. The best way out of poverty is education," said Sen. Bellino.

Governor Whitmer says, were engaging in conversations. We have been doing the work all summer, but its slower than it should be.

For parents like Miller, nothing comes above education. It's a concept he hopes our leaders will prioritize, one that becomes more pressing each day.

Whitmer hopes to see a deal by September 15.

Where Your Voice Matters

US attorney won’t pursue felony charges for carrying rifles, shotguns in DC

Federal prosecutors in the nation's capital will no longer bring felony charges against people for possessing rifles or shotguns in the District of Columbia, according to a new policy adopted by the leader of the nations largest U.S. attorneys office.

That office will continue to pursue charges when someone is accused of using a shotgun or rifle in a violent crime or has a criminal record that makes it illegal to have a firearm. Local authorities in Washington can prosecute people for illegally possessing unregistered rifles and shotguns.

U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said in a statement that the change is based on guidance from the Justice Department and the Office of Solicitor General and conforms with two Supreme Court decisions on gun rights.

Pirro, a former Fox News host, has been a vocal critic of local officials' crime-fighting efforts since Republican President Donald Trump installed her in office in May. Her policy shift means federal prosecutors will not purse charges under the D.C. law that made it illegal to carry rifles or shotguns, except in limited cases involving permit holders.

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The change also overlaps with Trumps declaration of a crime emergency in the city, flooding the streets of Washington with patrols of hundreds of federal agents and National Guard members. The White House says 76 firearms have been seized since the crackdown started this month.

The new policy also coves large-capacity magazines, but it does not apply to handguns.

We will continue to seize all illegal and unlicensed firearms, and to vigorously prosecute all crimes connected with them, Pirro said, adding that she and Trump "are committed to prosecuting gun crime.

Pirro said a blanket ban on possessing shotguns and rifles violates the Supreme Court's ruling in 2022 that struck down a New York gun law and held that Americans have a right to carry firearms in public for self-defense. She also pointed to the high court's 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller striking down the citys ban on handguns in the home.

Mother seeks justice after she says her son was beaten to death near college campus

Amanda Pal says her son Jozsef was beaten to death.

He attended the University of Oklahoma when the alleged incident took place in March, near campus. Five months later, authorities have taken few actions in response, so she called the Scripps News Group in Tulsa.

No ones been handling it well. No one expects their brother or their son to die. No one should have to bury their kid, Pal said, I never get to hug him again, I never get to hear his voice again. [Jozsef and his sisters] were just getting to that stage where they werent just siblings anymore, they were becoming best friends.

Jozsef had his sights set on an engineering degree, but a change of heart led him to the National Guard for training to become a medic. After a year off, he returned to school in Norman, Oklahoma, where he joined the rugby team and briefly walked on the football team. But when he left, it was the last time his family saw him alive.

FROM THE ARCHIVES | Nonbinary Oklahoma teen involved in high school fight died by suicide

His mom said a night of celebrations at the bars turned deadly and someone beat her son to death. The Scripps News Group obtained a police report from police.

I was dispatched to a reported altercation at 305 E Boyd St. This report is being completed for assault. All involved parties have been identified. No one has been arrested. One individual was taken to the hospital in critical condition, the report says.

Five days into a hospital stay, Jozsefs parents made an impossible decision: taking him off life support.

We made [the decision] after we talked to the neurosurgeon that did the surgery on him. He couldnt breathe on his own, he couldnt eat on his own, he couldnt move his legs, he couldnt respond, he couldnt blink, Pal said, He was so full of life. He never stopped moving, hes never stopped doing, and I knew he wouldnt want that. He wouldnt wanna live like that.

Pal said the Cleveland County district attorney had not charged anyone in the case, nor publicly identified suspects.

Merydith Harmon, the first assistant DA, said the office is meeting with the Pal family in the coming weeks to discuss our review of the investigation of the death of Jozsef Pal. We will refrain from making any comment on our charging decision until after that meeting.

Pal said her limited conversations with the DAs office have not gone far.

They cant prove that he wasnt fatally wounded in the two hours, that we dont know exactly where he was, she said.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT | Illinois man charged with killing college gymnast in Wisconsin

In a death certificate, provided by Pal, it lists Jozsefs cause of death as acute trauma, caused by assault. But she is speaking out, hoping someone will come forward with the key evidence to bring about justice.

Even though, their friend, cousin, their nephew, their child needs to have some consequence for their actions, and that those consequences might take them away," Pal said. "At least theyre still going to be able to talk to that person, theyre still going to be able to see that person. Theyre still going to be able to hug that person. I dont get that ever again. As a mother, I never get that ever again."

Norman police can be reached by calling (405) 321-1600.

The Cleveland County District Attorney can be reached by calling (405) 321-8268 or emailing d21da@dac.state.ok.us

This story was originally published by Brodie Myers with the

Scripps News Group in Tulsa.

At least 600 CDC employees are getting final termination notices, union says

By MIKE STOBBE, Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — At least 600 employees of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are receiving permanent termination notices in the wake of a recent court decision that protected some CDC employees from layoffs but not others.

The notices went out this week and many people have not yet received them, according to the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents more than 2,000 dues-paying members at CDC.

Officials with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

AFGE officials said they are aware of at least 600 employees being cut.

But “due to a staggering lack of transparency from HHS,” the union hasn’t received formal notices of who is being laid off,” the federation said in a statement on Wednesday.

The permanent cuts include about 100 people who worked in violence prevention. Some employees noted those cuts come less than two weeks after a man fired at least 180 bullets into the CDC’s campus and killed a police officer.

“The irony is devastating: The very experts trained to understand, interrupt and prevent this kind of violence were among those whose jobs were eliminated,” some of the affected employees wrote in a blog post last week.

On April 1, the HHS officials sent layoff notices to thousands of employees at the CDC and other federal health agencies, part of a sweeping overhaul designed to vastly shrink the agencies responsible for protecting and promoting Americans’ health.

Many have been on administrative leave since then — paid but not allowed to work — as lawsuits played out.

A federal judge in Rhode Island last week issued a preliminary ruling that protected employees in several parts of the CDC, including groups dealing with smoking, reproductive health, environmental health, workplace safety, birth defects and sexually transmitted diseases.

But the ruling did not protect other CDC employees, and layoffs are being finalized across other parts of the agency, including in the freedom of information office. The terminations were effective as of Monday, employees were told.

Affected projects included work to prevent rape, child abuse and teen dating violence. The laid-off staff included people who have helped other countries to track violence against children — an effort that helped give rise to an international conference in November at which countries talked about setting violence-reduction goals.

“There are nationally and internationally recognized experts that will be impossible to replace,” said Tom Simon, the retired senior director for scientific programs at the CDC’s Division of Violence Prevention.


The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

FILE – The campus of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is seen in Atlanta, on Wednesday, June 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File)

State Department halts humanitarian health visas for sick Gaza children

Days after several sick and injured children arrived in the U.S. from Gaza for medical treatment, the State Department halted a program that grants visitor visas to people from Gaza.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio says multiple congressional offices reached out to the State Department asking how those medical-humanitarian visas came to be granted to the children and the adults accompanying them.

Last week, the nonprofit Heal Palestine brought several children to the U.S. from Gaza for medical treatment in cities like Seattle and Houston.

Conservative commentator Laura Loomer called them refugees and a national security threat.

But Secretary Rubio says several congressional offices also provided evidence that they claim shows some of the organizations involved in acquiring these visas have links to Hamas.

Over the weekend, Rubio did not elaborate on what that evidence is, nor which organizations are supposedly involved.

"We are not going to be in partnership with groups that are friendly with Hamas. So, we're going to pause those visas, there was just a small numbers of them issued to children, but they come with adults accompanying them, obviously and we are going to pause this program and re-evaluate how those visas are being vetted and what relationship there has been, if any, by these organizations to the process of acquiring those visas," Rubio said on CBS' Face the Nation.

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In a statement on social media, Heal Palestine said in part that they are "Distressed by the State Department's decision."

"This is a medical treatment program, not a refugee resettlement program. Our mission gives children a renewed chance at life," the group said.

Scripps news spoke with Sean Carroll, president of Anera, a nonprofit that is working on the humanitarian situation in Gaza, including trying to get medical supplies to facilities there. He says medical facilities in Gaza are in terrible shape because of the war.

"People will lose their lives over that decision and others will may not lose their lives, but they'll lose hope of getting better treatment, of getting of getting better faster, of getting better care," Carroll said, speaking about the State Department's decision. "And I don't think that if we are to be humane and be humans, we should recognize that innocent civilians, children who are, who are severely injured or who are, who need medical care because of a combination of factors of not enough food, of bad hygiene conditions, because of the destruction of water and sanitation systems - they should be helped. And, and I think the U.S. should be at the top of the list of countries that's helping people, innocent civilians, Palestinians from Gaza who need medical care."

It's not clear for how long the State Department plans to halt the visitor visa program for Gaza.

The World Health Organization says there are more than 14,000 people in Gaza currently in need of life-saving medical care.

Before the war, between 50 to 100 people from Gaza traveled for needed medical care every day. Right now, the borders are closed with very few people able to leave for medical treatment.

Gabbard slashing intelligence office workforce by 40%, cutting budget by more than $700 million

By AAMER MADHANI, ERIC TUCKER and ALI SWENSON, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Office of the Director of National Intelligence will dramatically reduce its workforce and cut its budget by more than $700 million annually, the Trump administration announced Wednesday.

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said in a statement, “Over the last 20 years, ODNI has become bloated and inefficient, and the intelligence community is rife with abuse of power, unauthorized leaks of classified intelligence, and politicized weaponization of intelligence.”

She said the intelligence community “must make serious changes to fulfill its responsibility to the American people and the U.S. Constitution by focusing on our core mission: find the truth and provide objective, unbiased, timely intelligence to the President and policymakers.”

The reorganization is part of a broader administration effort to rethink its evaluation of foreign threats to American elections, a topic that has become politically loaded given President Donald Trump’s long-running resistance to the intelligence community’s assessment that Russia interfered on his behalf in the 2016 election.

In February, for instance, Attorney General Pam Bondi disbanded an FBI task force focused on investigating foreign influence operations, including those that target U.S. elections. The Trump administration also has made sweeping cuts at the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which oversees the nation’s critical infrastructure, including election systems.

Gabbard’s efforts to downsize the agency she leads is in keeping with the cost-cutting mandate the administration has employed since its earliest days, when Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency oversaw mass layoffs of the federal workforce.

It’s the latest headline-making move by a key official who just a few months ago had seemed out of favor with Trump over her analysis of Iran’s nuclear capabilities but who in recent weeks has emerged as a key loyalist.

She’s released a series of documents meant to call into question the legitimacy of the intelligence community’s findings on Russian election interference in 2016, and this week, at Trump’s direction, revoked the security clearances of 37 current and former government officials.

The ODNI in the past has joined forces with other federal agencies to debunk and alert the public to foreign disinformation intended to influence U.S. voters.

For example, it was involved in an effort to raise awareness about a Russian video that falsely depicted mail-in ballots being destroyed in Pennsylvania that circulated widely on social media in the weeks before the 2024 presidential election.

Notably, Gabbard said she would be refocusing the priorities of the Foreign Malign Influence Center, which her office says on its website is “focused on mitigating threats to democracy and U.S. national interests from foreign malign influence.”

It wasn’t clear from Gabbard’s release or fact sheet exactly what the changes would entail, but Gabbard noted its “hyper-focus” on work tied to elections and said the center was “used by the previous administration to justify the suppression of free speech and to censor political opposition.”

The Biden administration created the Foreign Malign Influence Center in 2022, responding to what the U.S. intelligence community had assessed as attempts by Russia and other adversaries to interfere with American elections.

Its role, ODNI said when it announced the center’s creation, was to coordinate and integrate intelligence pertaining to malign influence.

In a briefing given to reporters in 2024, ODNI officials said they only notified candidates, political organizations and local election offices of disinformation operations when they could be attributed to foreign sources. They said they worked to avoid any appearance of policing Americans’ speech.

Sen. Tom Cotton, the Republican chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, hailed the decision to broadly revamp ODNI, saying it would make it a “stronger and more effective national security tool for President Trump.”

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Wednesday, July 23, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

Oakland County deputy executive files to run for state senate seat

An Oakland County deputy executive, Sean Carlson, launched a state senate campaign for the District 13 seat currently held by Sen. Rosemary Bayer, a West Bloomfield Democrat.

Bayer, in her final term of office, published a farewell letter to constituents on Aug. 12. She endorsed Carlson for the seat this week.

District 13’s new boundary goes into effect in 2026 and includes all of Commerce Township, Keego Harbor, Lyon Township, Milford Township, Orchard Lake Village, South Lyon, Sylvan Lake, Walled Lake, West Bloomfield Township, Wixom and parts of Novi and Waterford townships.

Carlson, 55, has been a deputy county executive since 2019 and is responsible for information technology and economic development.

He worked for Michigan’s Department of Management & Budget from 2003 to 2006 and was the Michigan Defense Center’s executive director. His state jobs were under former Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican, and former Gov. Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat. He is considered a key architect of Michigan’s “Protect & Grow” strategy to retain, grow and attract aerospace and defense industries to the state. He is a former vice president of international trade at the Michigan Economic Development Corporation.

Carlson left the MEDC to be an Oakland County deputy executive, where he earns more than $215,853 a year. State senators are paid nearly $72,000 a year with an expense allowance just under $11,000 a year.

“I’ve been given a great opportunity with all the state, county and school positions to really understand and make a difference,” he said. “It’s never been about the money for me, it’s always been about the service.”

This is not Carlson’s first foray into politics. In 2001 he ran for the 15th District senate seat.

He was elected to Huron Valley school board in 2008 and re-elected three times; he was the board’s president for more than four years.

His campaign treasurer is White Lake resident and certified public accountant Tom Wiseman, a current Huron Valley school board member.

Carlson left his Upper Peninsula hometown at 17 for the U.S. Army, switched to the U.S. Air Force and later to the Air National Guard. He retired at the rank of lieutenant colonel after 20 years of service.

Deputy County Executive Sean Carlson, left, jokes about the cold weather as Oakland County Executive Dave Coulter laughs during a press conference at the Phoenix Center on Tuesday, April 8, 2025. (Peg McNichol/MediaNews Group)

Scientists, advocates blast EPA plan to undo climate finding

The EPA is proposing to bury its head in the sand and ignore the mounting costs of climate change for all Americans, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes expressed in front of Environmental Protection Agency officials Tuesday, the start of the public comment period for the EPAs proposal to revoke the endangerment finding.

The proposed repeal is wrong on the science and its unlawful, Mayes added.

Public health advocates, like Nissa Shaffi, who spoke on behalf of the Allergy & Asthma Network, warned of an increase in harmful air pollution that would exacerbate asthma and other health conditions, especially as the government is reducing spending on Medicaid and other affordable care programs.

More than 700 individuals consisting of environmentalists, public health advocates, state and local officials, and private citizens are listed on the schedule this week to share their opinions and criticism around the EPAs plan to toss the key scientific determination that has underpinned U.S. climate policy for nearly two decades. The EPAs effort has been met with consistent outrage from both science and legal communities in the weeks since the announcement.

This would amount to the largest deregulatory action in the history of the United States, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said during the proposal announcement in Indiana earlier this summer.

The endangerment finding traces back to a 2007 Supreme Court decision that recognized greenhouse gases including carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide as air pollutants. Two years later, the Environmental Protection Agency determined that those emissions endanger public health, leading to new limits on coal and gas-fired power plants, vehicle exhaust, and methane emissions from the oil and gas industry.

Now, the Trump administrations EPA is working to dismantle that framework as a part of a list of 31 environmental rules Zeldin seeks to roll back, on elements from clean air to clean water and climate change.

The EPA tells Scripps News it relied on a variety of sources and information in drafting its proposal to assess whether the endangerment finding actually requires the EPA to serve as an authority under the Clean Air Act. One of those sources includes a 140-page Department of Energy assessment that argued, in part, that mitigation policies could prove more detrimental than beneficial.

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But scientists whose research was cited in the report say their work was twisted and fundamentally misrepresented.

I think the word I used was gobsmacked, said Ben Santer, a climate scientist who spent 30 years at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, run by the DOE. The misrepresentation of the research that my colleagues and I had done was so bad, so egregious that it was shocking.

Santers research helped prove the human link to climate change, work that was central to the original endangerment finding. He told Scripps News the DOEs role in producing the recent report is alarming.

That is just so deeply concerning to me that the Department of Energy is now a nexus of climate denialism in the United States, Santer said. They're failing in that prime directive of keeping us all safe from climate harm by ignoring the reality and seriousness of climate change. Full stop.

Zeke Hausfather, a climate researcher who has previously contributed to the U.S. governments National Climate Assessment, was dismayed to see his work used in a way that reinforced sort of a skeptical narrative.

Part of my work was cherry-picked, sometimes taken out of context, Hausfather explained. This was not an objective search for truth. This was not trying to give policymakers the best information about whats actually happening to the climate. We can disagree about solutions - whether we should focus on nuclear, wind or solar - thats fine. But if the actual science in question becomes politicized, policy ping pongs every four or eight years means were never going to be able to solve the problem.

One of his projects cited in the report indicates the potential projections of greenhouse gas emissions to continue to plateau and potentially decrease as time ticks towards 2100, acknowledging that current policies in place have contributed to that projection. Hausfather warned in his Climate Brink blog, to use current policy scenarios in order to justify the repeal of current policies (as the EPA is attempting to do) rests on a fundamentally flawed premise it would potentially push us to a higher emissions scenario. He also noted that the fact that the world has made some progress in bending down the curve of future emissions should not be used as a justification that climate change is not a problem.

He, alongside about 70 other researchers, is prepping a rebuttal to the DOE report to be submitted as part of the written public comment period.

Hausfather also pointed out that while climate change is a global problem, the U.S. is currently the second-highest emitting country after China, and is historically the largest emitter and therefore should play a role in the solution. He says if the U.S. doesnt work towards building up renewable technology of the future, we really lose out and are already falling behind in terms of global competition, as China is capitalizing on building up that market right now.

A Carbon Brief review found Hausfather and Santer arent alone in their disputes, identifying more than 100 false or misleading claims in the DOE report.

Energy Secretary Chris Wright, however, defended the document in an interview with Scripps News.

We werent mis-citing anyones data or altering anyones data The report, of course, walks through the rise in atmospheric CO2 concentration. They do lead to a warming. That's uncontroversial, Wright said. He added that the reports reference to science fiction was aimed at when people exaggerate claims that aren't there.

He maintained, though, that the DOE doesnt recognize a connection between climate change impacts and increases in severe weather.

You can never hear a politician, a media, or that tiny subset of climate scientists that get to go on TV without saying that storms are more frequent and more intense, or that damages keep growing, that Americans and the world cant afford this havoc from climate change, Wright told Scripps News. Thats just wrong.

However, the growing field of attribution science research focuses on reviewing severe weather events to determine the extent to which human activities have influenced specific extreme weather or climate events.

A recent State of the Climate report from the American Meteorological Society found 2024 was a record-breaking year in terms of greenhouse gas concentrations, air and ocean temperatures, global sea level and glacial ice melt.

Sec. Wright acknowledged that if errors are expressed during this weeks public comment period, the department will issue corrections in the report. But for researchers like Santer, the damage is already done.

I think it's disingenuous, Santer said. Sadly, the bottom line is that the error-rich DOE report is already muddying the waters on the reality and seriousness of climate change. If Secretary Wright was truly interested in getting the science right, he should have done so before the DOE report was released. And he should have ensured that the review process for the report was rigorous and transparent. He failed to do that.

Its not just scientists and environmentalists that are outraged over the move so is the legal community. A new lawsuit alleges the DOE quietly arranged five handpicked skeptics to author the report in violation of federal policymaking law.

Federal law requires that when the government brings together a group of people to provide expertise or advice, the public deserves to know what is going on. But the Trump administration violated that requirement, said Erin Murphy, a senior attorney with the Environmental Defense Fund, which, alongside the Union of Concerned Scientists, filed the lawsuit against Energy Secretary Wright, DOE, EPA and Administrator Zeldin.

What were seeing here is the Trump administration trying to do things in secret to undermine the basic reality that were all facing, which is that climate change is harmful to us, Murphy added. These deeply harmful actions will worsen pollution and raise costs for Americans.

The Environmental Defense Fund tells Scripps News the government has not yet responded to its lawsuit. Secretary Wright, meanwhile, dismissed the claims as crazy in an interview with Scripps News.

They want control over an alarmist narrative because that's the way they can raise money for fear-mongering groups and for special interests, he said.

The public comment period continues this week; if the proposal ultimately goes through, overturning the endangerment finding would mean the EPA no longer has the obligation legally to limit how much greenhouse gas pollution is dumped into the air.

Man nabbed after alleged rampage at Planet Fitness, followed by high-speed police chase

A man who reportedly attacked staff at a Planet Fitness in West Bloomfield on Wednesday morning, attempted to run over a police officer who responded to the scene, crashed into several patrol cars and then led police on a high-speed chase was eventually taken into custody, officials said.

The police officer and suspect appeared to have suffered minor injuries during the incident and were transported to an area hospital, officials said.

According to the West Bloomfield Township Police Department, detectives continue to investigate the alleged rampage which reportedly unfolded at around 9:30 a.m. when a 911 call reported a man was punching staff at the fitness facility, located at 6433 Orchard Lake Rd. While officers were enroute, they learned the man was charging at staff with a metal object, then exited the facility and got into a vehicle in the parking lot, where he was met by officers including one on foot who the man allegedly tried to run over.

The man then drove away — striking several police vehicles — leading officers on a high-speed pursuit which continued on a main roadway and into a residential subdivision, police said. After crashing into more patrol cars, the man’s vehicle was forced to a stop by officers and he was arrested, police said.

The Oakland Press reached out to the West Bloomfield Police Department for information on the suspect’s age and hometown, but neither are being released yet.

Anyone who witnessed the incident or has more information on it is asked to contact Detective Michael Kozemchak of the West Bloomfield Police Department at 248-975-8999.

file photo (Aileen Wingblad/MediaNews Group)

US attorney will no longer bring felony charges against people for carrying rifles or shotguns in DC

By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal prosecutors in the nation’s capital will no longer bring felony charges against people for possessing rifles or shotguns in the District of Columbia, according to a new policy adopted by the leader of the nation’s largest U.S. attorney’s office.

That office will continue to pursue charges when someone is accused of using a shotgun or rifle in a violent crime or has a criminal record that makes it illegal to have a firearm. Local authorities in Washington can prosecute people for illegally possessing unregistered rifles and shotguns.

U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said in a statement that the change is based on guidance from the Justice Department and the Office of Solicitor General and conforms with two Supreme Court decisions on gun rights.

Pirro, a former Fox News host, has been a vocal critic of local officials’ crime-fighting efforts since Republican President Donald Trump installed her in office in May. Her policy shift means federal prosecutors will not purse charges under the D.C. law that made it illegal to carry rifles or shotguns, except in limited cases involving permit holders.

The change also overlaps with Trump’s declaration of a crime emergency in the city, flooding the streets of Washington with patrols of hundreds of federal agents and National Guard members. The White House says 76 firearms have been seized since the crackdown started this month.

The new policy also coves large-capacity magazines, but it does not apply to handguns.

“We will continue to seize all illegal and unlicensed firearms, and to vigorously prosecute all crimes connected with them,” Pirro said, adding that she and Trump “are committed to prosecuting gun crime.”

Pirro said a blanket ban on possessing shotguns and rifles violates the Supreme Court’s ruling in 2022 that struck down a New York gun law and held that Americans have a right to carry firearms in public for self-defense. She also pointed to the high court’s 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller striking down the city’s ban on handguns in the home.

U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro speaks during a newss conference first about the indictment of an alleged Haitian gang leader and then about murders in Washington in 2024 and 2025, Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025, at the U.S. Attorney’s office in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

The 'perfect salary' for most Americans isn’t six figures. Here's what it is

How much money would make Americans feel content? According to a new Talker Research survey, the perfect salary comes out to about $74,000 a year.

The study of 2,000 U.S. adults, conducted for SurePayroll by Paychex, found that while many view that figure as enough to be happy, nearly one in five believe theyd need to earn six figures to truly enjoy their lifestyle. Half of respondents admitted their current income doesnt cover their needs, and about a quarter said theyre outright unhappy with their pay.

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How would people spend money if they got a bump in pay? The survey found most people would put the money toward savings and investments (46%) or paying off bills (42%). Others pointed to everyday essentials like groceries (35%) or bigger goals such as travel (23%).

Still, many arent waiting around for their dream salary to appear. About a third of Americans are actively job hunting, and more than two-thirds are exploring ways to bring in extra income, including side hustles.

When it comes to what they are looking for in a new job, it's not always about money. The survey showed that 28% want more benefits, while 20% said a better work-life balance and more flexibility were important.

Detroit opens new $14 million field house in Chandler Park

Families on Detroit's east side now have access to a new state-of-the-art community recreation center after city leaders officially opened the doors to the renovated Chandler Park Field House.

The sprawling 130,000-square-foot facility underwent a $14 Million renovation using American Rescue Plan Act funds and now features courts for basketball, pickleball and volleyball, along with fields for soccer, lacrosse and football.

Watch below: Get an inside look at the Chandler Park Field House

An exclusive inside look at Detroit's new Chandler Park Dome

"The east side deserves this: $14 million center with basketball, volleyball, soccer, indoor football, a track. This is just phenomenal," Mayor Mike Duggan said.

The opening represents more than just recreational opportunities for area families, according to city leaders.

"The City of Detroit closed 20 recreation centers in the decade leading up to bankruptcy and one by one, we've been reopening them and this is the biggest one yet. This east side community hasn't had an indoor recreation center in decades and now they do," Duggan said.

East side resident Linda Driscoll, who has lived in the neighborhood for over 20 years, watched the construction progress daily.

"I've been seeing it as I go past every day and looking forward to it. Just excited for advancement in the neighborhood because I've been here over 20 years," Driscoll said.

Driscoll brought her grandchildren to explore the new facility on opening day.

"Looking forward for things for them to play in and get involved more sports. Keep 'em busy after school and stuff," she said.

"It was really nice. I like how it looks. It's nice. I like the field and I play football," one of Driscoll's grandchildren said.

Iris Whiting, another community member checking out the facility, expressed excitement about Detroit's progress.

"We just came to see everything. Detroit is really doing it now," Whiting said.

Programming at the facility will begin Monday, Sept. 8.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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