¿Tienes información sobre alguna noticia interesante? aliazon.comercialyventas@gmail.com

jueves, 18 de enero de 2024

The Evening: Uvalde failure was ‘unimaginable,’ Justice Department finds

Also, a slowdown in fighting in northern Gaza.
Continue reading the main story
Ad
The Evening

January 18, 2024

Good evening. Here's the latest at the end of Thursday.

  • The Justice Department's Uvalde report
  • Slowdown in northern Gaza fighting
  • Plus, where (and how) to travel in 2024
Police officers carrying weapons are seen in the hallway of a school building.
Surveillance footage from Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, in 2022. The New York Times

'Unimaginable failure' in Uvalde response

A near-total breakdown in policing protocols hindered the response to the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, in 2022 that left 21 people dead, the Justice Department concluded today after a nearly two-year investigation.

"Lives would have been saved, and people could have survived" if officers had not refused to rapidly confront the killer, Attorney General Merrick Garland said.

The department blamed "cascading failures of leadership, decision-making, tactics, policy and training" for a passive law enforcement response that allowed an 18-year-old gunman to remain inside Robb Elementary School for more than an hour before he was confronted and killed. (Here's a minute-by-minute timeline of the 78-minute ordeal.)

The most significant failure, investigators concluded, was the decision by local police officials to classify the incident as a barricaded standoff rather than an "active-shooter" scenario, which would have demanded instant and aggressive action. Most of the officials in charge that day have been fired or have retired.

The nearly 600-page report, compiled from 260 interviews and 14,000 documents and videos, is the most comprehensive assessment to date of a killing spree that continues to haunt Uvalde. Vanita Gupta, a top Justice Department official who oversaw the investigation, said the shooting caused "a loss of faith and trust" in law enforcement. "It was an unimaginable failure," she added.

A large group of people on a road with city buildings in the background, and a plume of smoke.
Palestinians on the Al-Rashid coast road after crossing from northern to southern Gaza, today. Mohammed Saber/EPA, via Shutterstock

Fighting has eased in northern Gaza

Israel has dialed back its military campaign in the northern Gaza Strip, where Israeli officials say their military succeeded in degrading Hamas's local battalions. Airstrikes are no longer as common and many Israeli troops have pulled out of the area. Residents there have said they can now walk around without the sounds of guns or explosions.

Northern Gaza is largely in ruins, with entire neighborhoods rendered unrecognizable and displaced Palestinians squatting in abandoned homes. Food is scarce and few aid shipments are reaching the north. Makeshift markets have popped up with vendors selling what many residents presume are stolen goods.

In related news, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to rule out a postwar peace process that would lead to the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Fani T. Willis stands at a lectern with a television camera directed toward her.
Fani Willis, the Fulton County District Attorney. Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Trump prosecutor in Georgia tries to quash a subpoena

Fani Willis, the district attorney in Georgia prosecuting a criminal case against Donald Trump, is trying to quash a subpoena seeking her testimony in the divorce proceedings of a prosecutor she hired to manage the case. Last week, she was accused of having an improper romantic relationship with the prosecutor, Nathan Wade.

In a legal filing today, Willis said there was no reason for her to testify because both Wade and his wife had declared their marriage to be "irretrievably broken." Willis also accused Wade's wife of conspiring with one of Trump's co-defendants "to annoy, embarrass and oppress" her.

Separately, my colleague Richard Fausset obtained emails in which Willis and another member of her team suggested that some of Trump's lawyers were disrespecting them because they are Black. "In the legal community (and the world at large)," Willis wrote, "some people will never be able to respect African Americans."

A security guard with a face mask stands outside a closed seafood market in Wuhan. The market doors are blue and there is blue police tape falling from posts at each stall's entrance.
The Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan in January 2020. Hector Retamal/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Chinese scientists sent Covid's code to the U.S. in late 2019

Chinese scientists sent eight pages of the coronavirus's genetic code to a U.S. data repository on Dec. 28, 2019, according to new documents released by House Republicans. That was two days before Chinese officials warned of an unexplained pneumonia sickening patients in Wuhan.

With the importance of the code not yet clear, the U.S. never published the submission and instead asked for more details. It took two more weeks until other scientists put the code online, setting off a frantic effort to build tests and vaccines. That delay reinforced questions about when China learned of the virus that was causing its unexplained outbreak — and about gaps in the American system of monitoring dangerous pathogens.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

An illustration of a plane window with a map pin in the middle that has a question mark, surrounded by weather and price icons
Chanelle Nibbelink

What travelers should expect in 2024

This year, London, Paris, Las Vegas and Tokyo will assuredly see an influx of tourists. But after a rush to hot spots last year following the pandemic's peak — which were especially warm during the summer — some travelers are now looking for cooler, less crowded destinations. Top picks include Norway and Denmark, or even Malta.

Unfortunately, international ticket prices are rising. But travel is easing in other ways: A.I. bots could help you plan, biometrics will expand at airports and hotels will adopt more residential features.

For more, check out all of our 2024 travel predictions.

Crystal Hefner posing in a pink dress and leaning against a beige covering. Behind her is a hedge wall with four pink roses.
Crystal Hefner at her home in Los Angeles. Amy Harrity for The New York Times

Life outside the mansion

Hugh Hefner died more than six years ago, and around the same time, Crystal Hefner, his third and last wife, moved out of the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles. But she is still adjusting to life on the outside.

Next week, she will step back into the public view with a tell-all memoir titled "Only Say Good Things." In the book, Hefner re-examines her initiation into the Playboy world, details the objectification and misogyny she said she experienced under Hefner, and mines the trauma that she's still processing.

People stand in a cramped underground tunnel in a black and white image. To the right, a man stands upright. To the left,at least five men wearing suits squat on their knees.
Harrison Dyar's tunnels in Dupont Circle in Washington in 1924. Library of Congress

Dinner table topics

Continue reading the main story

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Scott Loitsch and Vaughn Vreeland/The New York Times

Cook: This buffalo chicken dip is a quick one-pan snack.

Read: "Gator Country" is one of the nine new books that our editors recommend.

Listen: Our music critic picked eight songs to get you excited about upcoming albums.

Nourish: Nuts and seeds are nutritional powerhouses.

Cut back: There are easy ways to reduce your screen time.

Scrape: Wirecutter found the best snow brush to keep in your car.

Hunt: Which Manhattan apartment would you buy with an $800,000 budget?

Play: Here are today's Spelling Bee, Wordle and Mini Crossword. Find all our games here.

Continue reading the main story

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

ONE LAST THING

Cars on a busy urban interstate highway drive beneath a safety sign with the message
A sign in Boston urges drivers to "Use Yah Blinkah" when changing lanes. Associated Press/Michael Dwyer

Don't laugh and drive

American highways for several years have been scattered with humorous safety messages that get drivers to chuckle (or groan). In Iowa there was "Texting & Driving? Oh Cell No!" In New Jersey, drivers were warned to "Slow Down. This Ain't Thunder Road."

The federal government now wants to get rid of them. In the latest guidance, officials warned that attempts at humor or pop culture references can be distracting or misunderstood. But amid conflicting research, some states said they plan to keep them up.

Have a witty evening.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Matthew

We welcome your feedback. Write to us at evening@nytimes.com.

Continue reading the main story
Evening Briefing Newsletter Logo

Writer: Matthew Cullen

Editorial Director: Adam Pasick

Editors: Carole Landry, Whet Moser, Justin Porter, Jonathan Wolfe

Photo Editor: Brent Lewis

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for The Evening from The New York Times.

To stop receiving The Evening, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario

TODAS LAS ENTRADAS DIARIAS

HOY EN ANDORRA

Bondia - Diari digital gratuït d'Andorra

Diari d'Andorra

ÚLTIMAS NOTICIAS

ÚLTIMAS NOTICIAS

PORTADAS

RSS de noticias de portada

    NOTICIAS NACIONALES ESPAÑA

    Noticias nacionales | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

    HISTORIA

    Canal Historia // Diariocrítico.com

    SOCIEDAD

    CRÓNICA ROSA

    Noticias del Corazón // Diariocrítico.com

    LO MÁS LEÍDO

    Lo más leido de la semana // Diariocrítico.com

    CIENCIA

    LIBROS

    ECONOMÍA

    COMENTARIOS DE ECONOMÍA

    Comentarios de la Economía // Diariocrítico.com

    Noticias economicas | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

    EMPRESAS

    BOLSAS

    TOROS

    SEGUROS

    VIDEOJUEGOS

    Videojuegos // Diariocrítico.com

    EDUCACIÓN

    Educación // Diariocrítico.com

    MEDIO AMBIENTE

    OPINIÓN

    Opinión y análisis // Diariocrítico.com

    RSS de noticias de opinion

    DEPORTES

    MOTOCICLISMO

    MOTOR

    Últimas noticias de motociclismo // Diariocrítico.com

    Noticias deportivas | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

    BALONCESTO

    CICLISMO

    FÚTBOL

    Noticias de fútbol // Diariocrítico.com

    GOLF

    Últimas noticias de golf // Diariocrítico.com

    TENIS

    FÓRMULA 1

    OTROS DEPORTES

    MÚSICA

    ▷ La mejor de la música internacional y nacional, conciertos, cantantes, // Diariocrítico.com

    OCIO

    Noticias ocio | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

    MASCOTAS

    HORÓSCOPO

    CINE

    Noticias de cine // Diariocrítico.com

    EMPRENDEDORES

    Pymes, emprendedores autónomos, Startups | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

    COCINA Y GASTRONOMÍA

    TECNOLOGÍA

    Noticias recopiladas // Diariocrítico.com

    TELEVISIÓN

    Televisión // Diariocrítico.com