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miércoles, 11 de diciembre de 2024

The Evening: The F.B.I. director’s resignation

Also, A.D.H.D. diagnoses are surging among older Americans.
The Evening

December 11, 2024

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

  • The F.B.I. director's plan to step down
  • A search for the disappeared in Syria
  • Plus, a Broadway play that smells like bacon
Christopher Wray sits behind a microphone in a blue suit.
Christopher Wray, the F.B.I. director, in September. Kenny Holston/The New York Times

The F.B.I. director said he would resign

Christopher Wray, the F.B.I. director, told bureau employees today that he would resign before Donald Trump took office in January. In his address, Wray said he believed the move was "the best way to avoid dragging the bureau deeper into the fray."

Wray still had more than two years left of his 10-year term, a length that Congress established in part to distance the bureau from partisan politics. But Trump announced last month that he planned to replace Wray, whom he said he was "very unhappy with," with a longtime loyalist, Kash Patel. Trump greeted Wray's announcement by declaring it "a great day for America."

Wray, whom Trump appointed in 2017 after he fired James Comey, oversaw one of the most consequential and tumultuous periods in the agency's history. His bureau juggled high-profile investigations of political figures, including Trump and President Biden, along with mass shootings, cyberattacks and threats from geopolitical rivals like China, Iran and Russia.

His apparent successor could not be more different. Patel, a former federal prosecutor and public defender, is a fierce critic of the F.B.I. and has vowed to fire its leadership and root out the president-elect's perceived enemies in what he calls the "deep state."

In other politics news:

A police officer walks in front of an area cordoned with yellow tape where yellow markers indicate bullet casings.
The scene of the killing of Brian Thompson in Manhattan. Karsten Moran for The New York Times

Suspect's notes described motive for killing of C.E.O., police said

Luigi Mangione, who was charged this week with murder in the fatal shooting of a health insurance executive, was arrested with a notebook that detailed plans for the shooting.

"What do you do? You wack the C.E.O. at the annual parasitic bean-counter convention. It's targeted, precise, and doesn't risk innocents," was one passage in the notebook, police said.

The executive who was killed, Brian Thompson, was laid to rest at a private funeral service in his Minnesota hometown. He was remembered as a devoted father to his two sons.

An overhead shot through barbed wire of a sandy prison yard with treeless hills in the background.
Sednaya Prison in Damascus, Syria. Daniel Berehulak/The New York Times

Syrians search for the disappeared

For over a decade, tens of thousands of people in Syria were tortured and killed in President Bashar al-Assad's vast network of prisons. After he fell, thousands of people searched Sednaya, a notorious prison, for loved ones. My colleagues went inside.

The leader of the rebel force that overthrew Syria's government promised to hold accountable anyone involved in the torture or killing of prisoners. But the rebels face a struggle to uphold the rule of law while seeking retribution. Here's the latest.

In related news, President Biden's two top national security officials left today for trips to the Middle East in a diplomatic scramble to discuss the future of Syria.

Tanya Murphy sits in a chair in an apartment lobby.
Tanya Murphy, 56, wrestled with depression and lack of focus for years. Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times

A.D.H.D. diagnoses are surging among older Americans

Over the last 20 years, clinicians have increasingly recognized that symptoms for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or A.D.H.D., can linger into adulthood.

Now, with the rise of telemedicine and changing attitudes about mental health treatment, new A.D.H.D. diagnoses are surging among older Americans. Many say they are relieved to finally have an explanation after decades of struggle.

More top news

TIME TO UNWIND

A black-and-white photograph of Maria Callas, her hair coifed in a 1950s style, wearing several strands of pearls, large pearl earrings and a large wool coat. She holds a pair of eyeglasses in one hand and rests the other hand a music stand.
Maria Callas in 1959. Associated Press

The legend of Maria Callas continues

Maria Callas has managed to achieve a cultural reach far surpassing what one might expect of a 20th-century opera star. Today, Netflix released a biopic about her, starring Angelina Jolie.

Her power extended well beyond her voice. Callas's au courant hairstyles and her haute couture fashions helped establish her as the cultural icon she remains today.

For more: We invited Jolie to the Metropolitan Opera to watch the performance and talk about Callas.

Two very large tigers lounge on a rock partially covered in snow in the woods.
Boris and Svetlaya, Amur tigers observed by a trail camera in 2018. ANO WCS

More than 100 miles of forest couldn't keep these tigers apart

Amur tigers, the world's largest big cats, are endangered. In an effort to save the species, a group of scientists released a pair of orphaned cubs into the wild in a remote corner of Russia's far east. What they created instead was an unlikely love story.

The tigers, Boris and Svetlaya, were released more than 100 miles apart with the goal of expanding the distribution of released tigers as much as possible. But eventually, Boris walked the entire distance, almost in a straight line, to Svetlaya. Six months later, Svetlaya gave birth to a litter of cubs.

A close-up portrait of Nicole Kidman, with a focused look on her face.
Thea Traff for The New York Times

Dinner table topics

WHAT TO DO TONIGHT

Date and ginger pudding topped with whipped cream in a green bowl. The bowl is next to a tray of pudding.
Linda Xiao for The New York Times

Cook: This sticky toffee pudding is among the best low-stress holiday desserts.

Watch: Check out our critics' favorite science fiction, horror and international films of 2024.

Read: Lutz Seiler's "Star 111" is one of the best new historical novels.

Create: These Danish handmade paper decorations bring holiday cheer.

Style: Our critic offers guidance on wearing corduroy.

Shop: Wirecutter recommends gifts for people who are always cold.

Move: You don't have to be injured to benefit from physical therapy.

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

ONE LAST THING

A woman in a bacon costume removes slices of bacon from aluminum foil.
Jonah Rosenberg for The New York Times

The characters are fictional. The bacon is real.

During every performance of "Our Town," the Broadway revival of Thornton Wilder's 1938 play, two pounds of bacon are fried just offstage. The scent is blown into the crowd to heighten a breakfast scene.

The production first tried to recreate the smell with a synthetic fragrance, like the heliotrope and vanilla scents they use at other points during the show, but quickly realized that wasn't good enough. So the head of props buys 16 pounds of bacon every other week, and the cast eats BLTs every Wednesday.

Have an aromatic evening.

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

Vi Nguyen was our photo editor today.

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

Evening Briefing Newsletter Logo

Writer: Matthew Cullen

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

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