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The Trump administration sued Harvard University, alleging discrimination in admissions. The lawsuit follows Trump's reversal on a deal with Harvard and an increase in a proposed fine. The article covers various news related to the Trump administration.
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- AI Headline
- Live Updates: Trump News
- Simplified Title
- Trump Administration Sues Harvard Over Admissions
- AI Excerpt
- The Trump administration sued Harvard University, alleging discrimination in admissions. The lawsuit follows Trump's reversal on a deal with Harvard and an increase in a proposed fine. The article covers various news related to the Trump administration.
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Trump Administration Harvard University Lawsuit Admissions Immigration Homeland Security Pardons
- Context Type
- News
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1.000
- Context Details
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{ "tone": "informative", "perspective": "neutral", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "reporting from Washington", "expert quotes" ] }
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- Donato V. Pompo
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- February 13, 2026 at 4:55 PM
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{ "source_type": "extension", "content_hash": "72c7d344b197d2ae44a1445275f420b491d03f8eee4a867bb0758006d2e46038", "submitted_via": "chrome_extension", "extension_version": "1.0.18", "original_url": "https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/live\/2026\/02\/13\/us\/trump-news?campaign_id=60&emc=edit_na_20260213&instance_id=171049&nl=breaking-news®i_id=122976029&segment_id=215237&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337", "parsed_content": "Harvard LawsuitFeb. 13, 2026, 11:23 a.m. ET32 minutes agoMichael C. Bender and Alan BlinderReporting from WashingtonImageThe lawsuit is the second government action targeting Harvard in the two weeks since President Trump\u2019s sudden reversal of his position on a potential deal to end the administration\u2019s pressure campaign on the university.Credit...Sophie Park for The New York TimesThe Trump administration sued Harvard University on Friday, accusing the Ivy League school of failing to produce documents sought as part of a Justice Department investigation into whether its admissions process discriminates against white applicants.The lawsuit is the second government action against Harvard in the two weeks since President Trump abruptly reversed his position on a potential deal to end the administration\u2019s pressure campaign on the university.After a report in The New York Times on Feb. 2 that Mr. Trump had agreed to give up his demand for Harvard to pay a $200 million fine in order to help finalize a deal, the president responded on social media with a series of late-night and early morning posts that called for a criminal investigation of Harvard and announced that he had increased the fine to $1 billion.Four days later, the Defense Department severed its academic ties with Harvard.The Justice Department\u2019s lawsuit on Friday stems from an investigation opened in April examining Harvard\u2019s admissions process for its undergraduate, law and medical schools.Harvard has maintained that the schools have complied with a Supreme Court ruling in 2023 that forced colleges to stop considering race in admissions. A university spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Show moreFunding StandoffFeb. 12, 2026, 5:01 p.m. ETFeb. 12, 2026Karoun Demirjian and Madeleine NgoReporting from WashingtonImageAbout 95 percent of T.S.A.\u2019s employees are expected to report to work through a shutdown without pay.Credit...Jason Henry for The New York TimesFunding for the Department of Homeland Security is set to lapse early Saturday morning, barring a breakthrough in negotiations, with no clear sign of when it may be revived.The looming shutdown of the sprawling department is the result of a bitter impasse over the Trump administration\u2019s immigration crackdown in cities including Minneapolis, where two U.S. citizens were fatally shot by federal agents last month. Democrats do not want to fund the department unless Congress imposes rules requiring immigration officers to identify themselves during operations, remove their masks and obtain judicial warrants to make arrests on private property. Republicans have rejected those demands as overly burdensome.But a lapse in funding is not expected to bring the department\u2019s immigration enforcement operations to a screeching halt. And the department is also home to several agencies unrelated to immigration, including the Coast Guard and FEMA, that will be affected.During last fall\u2019s record-long federal shutdown, more than 90 percent of the department\u2019s employees were required to work. The department has not updated its public guidance for funding lapses since then, but it is expected to handle a D.H.S.-focused shutdown similarly.\u201cD.H.S. essential missions and functions will continue as they do during every shutdown,\u201d the department said in a statement. \u201cHowever, during a shutdown, many employees will be forced to work without pay, putting strain on the frontline defenders of our nation.\u201dHere\u2019s how a shutdown could affect some of the department\u2019s most visible activities.Immigration Enforcement: ICE and Customs and Border ProtectionThe agencies at the heart of the dispute over D.H.S. funding would almost certainly be among the least affected by a department shutdown. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which employs about 22,000 officers, and Customs and Border Protection, which employs over 60,000 officials, perform work seen as essential to public safety, and employees can therefore be legally required to work, even without pay. (Under a 2019 law, they \u2014 like others employed directly by the federal government \u2014 are entitled to back pay once funding resumes.)ICE in particular has an extra cushion: Last summer, Congress drastically expanded its operating budget as part of a sweeping domestic policy bill with an extra $75 billion, resources it can use to ride out a lapse in funding.Airport Security: The Transportation Security AdministrationAbout 95 percent of the Transportation Security Administration\u2019s roughly 60,000 employees are required to report to work through a shutdown without being paid, according to the agency\u2019s acting administrator, Ha Nguyen McNeill.Still, during the fall\u2019s shutdown, that open-ended requirement proved untenable to many workers, who found it difficult to ride out what became a 43-day shutdown without taking side jobs. T.S.A. saw a spike in resignations after that shutdown, Ms. McNeill told lawmakers this week, while she noted that the agency was trying to increase hiring before the World Cup later this year.Staffing shortages did cause screening delays at Houston\u2019s two airports during the later weeks of shutdown after employees had missed multiple paychecks.The Homeland Security secretary, Kristi Noem, awarded $10,000 bonuses to some T.S.A. officials after the shutdown ended for going \u201cabove and beyond.\u201d It is not clear if the potential for another windfall \u2014 though Ms. Noem has not promised one \u2014 will keep more T.S.A. employees reporting to work through another shutdown.Disaster Response: Federal Emergency Management AgencyDisasters pay no heed to federal funding lapses, and for that reason, nearly 85 percent of Federal Emergency Management Agency employees are expected to work without pay through any shutdown, based on how the agency handled last fall\u2019s lapse in funding.FEMA\u2019s disaster relief fund has enough money to carry out its current and anticipated emergency response activities, according to Gregg Phillips, the associate administrator for the agency\u2019s Office of Response and Recovery. But if a catastrophic disaster were to occur during a Homeland Security Department shutdown, the fund \u201cwould be seriously strained,\u201d he told lawmakers on Wednesday.FEMA would find it difficult to reimburse states for disaster relief operations quickly, Mr. Phillips said. Those delays could in turn slow recovery efforts, he added.Immigration Benefits: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration ServicesU.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency that processes green cards, naturalization and other benefit applications, is largely funded by fees it charges applicants, so most operations would typically continue during a shutdown. During the last shutdown, a vast majority of the agency\u2019s roughly 22,000 employees continued working.Some programs do receive appropriated funds, including E-Verify, which allows employers to check their employees\u2019 eligibility to work in the country. During the last shutdown, the program was temporarily suspended. In a statement on Thursday, Matthew Tragesser, an agency spokesman, said the administration would \u201ctake decisive action to keep E-Verify open during a shutdown.\u201dCoast GuardThough the Coast Guard is part of the Homeland Security Department, it operates like any other branch of the military when it comes to government shutdowns: Uniformed personnel must keep coming to work, even though most of them will not be paid until after the shutdown is over.Vice Admiral Thomas Allan, the acting vice commandant of the Coast Guard, has warned that a prolonged shutdown would erode mission readiness and hurt morale. Certain training for pilots, aircrews and boat crews would stop, Mr. Allan said. Aircraft and boats could also degrade as scheduled maintenance is deferred, he added.Cybersecurity Operations: Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security AgencyMost employees at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which helps protect the country\u2019s election system, power grids and water utilities, would be furloughed during a shutdown. The agency would require 888 of its 2,341 employees to continue working, many of them without pay. Although the agency would continue operations that are \u201cessential to protecting life and property,\u201d it would delay strategic planning and development of cybersecurity guidance.Secret ServiceAbout 94 percent of the Secret Service\u2019s work force of more than 8,000 would stay on the job, many without pay, during a shutdown. Matthew C. Quinn, the deputy director of the agency, said on Wednesday that agents would continue to protect the president and vice president, along with their families. They would also continue to protect former presidents and their spouses, in addition to visiting heads of state and other top government officials. Still, Mr. Quinn warned about fading morale \u201cas bills come due.\u201dHe also said critical agency priorities would be delayed, such as efforts to hire or train agents and officers.Show moreImmigration CrackdownFeb. 12, 2026, 8:00 p.m. ETFeb. 12, 2026Christina MoralesImageLaw enforcement officers outside the Whipple Federal Building near Minneapolis last month.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York TimesA federal judge on Thursday ordered the Trump administration to give detainees at an immigration facility near Minneapolis adequate access to lawyers, saying the government could have isolated thousands of immigrants from proper legal services.In the lawsuit, filed in Federal District Court in Minnesota, lawyers for Advocates for Human Rights, a nonprofit, had argued that the detainees at the B.H. Whipple Federal Building have not been given access to lawyers for at least a month during the Trump administration\u2019s immigration enforcement surge in the Twin Cities.But lawyers for the federal government had argued that they could not arrange detainees to meet with lawyers in person because they did not have space to accommodate them in the Whipple facility. The government lawyers also said that the detainees were given access to phones to make calls for legal services.Judge Nancy E. Brasel, a Trump appointee, said in her order on Thursday that it appeared \u201cthe government failed to plan for the constitutional rights of its civil detainees. The government suggests \u2014 with minimal explanation and even less evidence \u2014 that doing so would result in \u2018chaos.\u2019\u201dGranting the plaintiffs\u2019 request for a temporary restraining order, the judge said the immigrants must receive access to phones for legal services within one hour of their detention and before being transferred out of the center. She also ordered the government to keep the detainees in Minnesota during the first three days of their detention so they have the chance to retain a local lawyer.\u201cThe constitution does not permit the government to arrest thousands of individuals and then disregard their constitutional rights because it would be too challenging to honor those rights,\u201d the judge wrote.Michele Garnett McKenzie, the executive director of the Advocates for Human Rights, said the ruling \u201crecognizes the fundamental importance of access to counsel in ensuring basic due process.\u201d\u201cWhen the government deprives people of liberty, it cannot avoid its constitutional responsibilities because it finds them inconvenient,\u201d she said in a statement. \u201cIt\u2019s appalling that we required a court ruling to defend this fundamental right.\u201dThe Department of Homeland Security countered in a statement about the ruling that \u201call detainees receive due process.\u201d The agency did not say whether it would appeal.The order comes as the Trump administration said on Thursday that it would end its aggressive immigration crackdown in Minnesota, which has resulted in tense clashes between protesters and law enforcement officers, the killing of two American citizens by federal agents and thousands of arrests. The operation also led to several lawsuits challenging the tactics and legality of sending about 3,000 immigration agents to Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.In its complaint, the plaintiffs accused the government of not providing detainees with \u201cconstitutionally adequate or statutorily compliant access to counsel\u201d since at least Jan. 11. The group added that federal agents at the building \u201chave told attorneys for detainees that no visitation between detainees and attorneys is or has ever been permitted at Whipple.\u201dLawyers for the government countered that the detained immigrants were \u201cverbally informed that they can make calls, including to attorneys, family, friends or the consulate.\u201d They added that the Whipple detention center was a short-term holding facility, and therefore, \u201cit is not possible to provide facilities for in-person visitation by legal services providers at Whipple.\u201dBecause Judge Brasel felt that the detention conditions at the Whipple building were \u201cat the heart of this lawsuit,\u201d she ordered lawyers for the government to visit the facility and to give the plaintiffs\u2019 lawyers equal access to it as well.On Tuesday, two lawyers for the plaintiffs who made the visit told the court that there were dozens of phones at the facility, but that the instructions to use them were confusing. They added that detainees told them they could not speak to a lawyer or make a phone call.One of the lawyers, Hanne Sandison, said that some phone numbers for free legal services were listed incorrectly. The other lawyer, Kimberly Boche, said when they tried using one of the phones to call their own cellphone, the number that came up was from a detention center in Kentucky, instead of Whipple.Sabrina Tavernise contributed reporting.Show moreFeb. 12, 2026, 7:50 p.m. ETFeb. 12, 2026Mitch SmithImageFederal agents clashed with protesters near the site of the shooting in Minneapolis.Credit...David Guttenfelder\/The New York TimesIn an extraordinary court filing, the top federal prosecutor in Minnesota acknowledged on Thursday that officials had provided incorrect information about a shooting by an immigration agent last month.The prosecutor, Daniel N. Rosen, asked a judge to dismiss charges against a man who was wounded in that shooting, as well as another man who had been accused of attacking the agent. Mr. Rosen wrote that \u201cnewly discovered evidence in this matter is materially inconsistent with the allegations\u201d that federal officials made in a charging document and in courtroom testimony.\u201cAccordingly, dismissal with prejudice will serve the interests of justice,\u201d wrote Mr. Rosen, who was nominated by President Trump to be U.S. attorney in Minnesota.Judge Paul A. Magnuson dismissed the charges on Friday with prejudice, meaning the case cannot be refiled.The shooting on Jan. 14 of Julio C. Sosa-Celis by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent touched off hours of tense protests in Minneapolis, where thousands of federal agents had been sent as part of the Trump administration\u2019s immigration crackdown in the state.The details of what happened that night are unclear, and the government\u2019s account of the shooting has shifted. Initially, federal officials described Mr. Sosa-Celis and his co-defendant, Alfredo A. Aljorna, as violent agitators who had attacked an agent with a shovel and broom. The government has said both men are from Venezuela and are in the United States illegally. Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, accused them of trying to kill the agent.But inconsistencies soon emerged in the government\u2019s description of the episode. Officials changed their account of which of the two men had fled from agents in a car before the shooting. And instead of three people attacking the agent, as the Department of Homeland Security had first claimed, charging documents suggested that there were only two.Still, prosecutors pushed ahead with felony cases against the men and sought to keep them detained ahead of trial. Mr. Sosa-Celis, who was shot in the leg, had injuries that were not life-threatening. Mr. Aljorna was not wounded. They were both arrested, officials have said, after agents used tear gas to force them out of a building.Brian D. Clark, a lawyer for Mr. Sosa-Celis and Mr. Aljorna, said in a statement that his clients were \u201coverjoyed\u201d by Mr. Rosen\u2019s request. \u201cThey are so happy justice is being served by the government\u2019s request to dismiss all charges with prejudice,\u201d he said, adding that the identity \u201cof the ICE agent should be made public and he should be charged for his crime.\u201dA third man was arrested after the shooting and was accused by the Department of Homeland Security of attacking the agent. Charges were never filed against that man, Gabriel Hernandez Ledezma, and court records gave no indication that he was involved in any attack. Still, Mr. Hernandez Ledezma, who is Venezuelan, was detained by immigration officials and sent to Texas.In a petition seeking release from detention, Mr. Hernandez Ledezma\u2019s lawyer wrote that his client believed he was being held out of state because he was \u201ca key witness that undermines the federal government\u2019s narrative of what occurred.\u201dThe filing on Thursday from Mr. Rosen, whose office has been decimated by resignations since the immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota began, was the latest instance of the Department of Homeland Security providing an account of a shooting that later proved questionable or outright wrong.In Chicago, where a Border Patrol agent shot and wounded a woman last year, prosecutors dropped the charges against her after concerns about preservation of evidence were raised. The woman, Marimar Martinez, has since sought to clear her name and has pushed back against the Trump administration\u2019s description of her as a domestic terrorist.And after two fatal shootings by immigration agents in Minneapolis this year, Mr. Trump and his allies rushed to cast the people who were killed, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both U.S. citizens, as domestic terrorists. Administration officials persisted in those claims even after some of their accounts were contradicted by videos.Federal officials announced earlier Thursday that they were ending their enforcement surge in Minnesota after more than two months. More than 4,000 undocumented immigrants were arrested during the campaign, officials said.Homeland security officials did not respond to a request for comment on the motion to dismiss the charges. Show moreMore Administration NewsFeb. 13, 2026, 11:17 a.m. ET38 minutes agoRebecca F. ElliottEnergy reporterThe U.S. Treasury Department issued two new licenses on Friday that appeared to give U.S. and European energy companies broad leeway to operate in Venezuela and negotiate with the government. The companies named in one of the new licenses already either operate in Venezuela or have interests in oil and gas fields there. They are: Chevron, the second-largest U.S. oil company; Eni and Repsol of Italy and Spain, which produce natural gas in Venezuela and have stakes in oil fields; and Shell and BP of London, which have interests in offshore gas fields.Feb. 13, 2026, 8:22 a.m. ET4 hours agoAlan RappeportEconomic policy reporterTreasury Secretary Scott Bessent weighed in on trade policy, acknowledging in an interview on CNBC that the Trump administration could announce soon what he described as \u201cclarifications\u201d regarding steel and aluminum tariffs, which have been hurting many importers and angering European countries. \u201cWe\u2019ll see if there\u2019s kind of a narrowing,\u201d Bessent said, adding that it was likely to apply to \u201cincidental\u201d objects.ImageCredit...Eric Lee for The New York TimesFeb. 13, 2026, 8:15 a.m. ET4 hours agoAlan RappeportEconomic policy reporterBessent also said on CNBC that he spoke to Senate Republicans this week about opening their own investigation into Jerome H. Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, and the cost of renovating the central bank\u2019s headquarters. He said that the fate of the Justice Department\u2019s investigation into Powell was not up to the White House. \u201cThere were subpoenas issued, but that doesn\u2019t have to mean that there are charges,\u201d Bessent said. He added that he expects that the Senate will still hold hearings on Kevin Warsh, President Trump\u2019s pick to replace Powell. Senator Thom Tillis, Republican of North Carolina, has promised to block a vote on Warsh until the Justice Department probe is resolved.ImageCredit...Tierney L. Cross\/The New York TimesFeb. 12, 2026, 11:19 p.m. ETFeb. 12, 2026Adam SellaReporting from WashingtonThe pardons included the former N.F.L. stars Joe Klecko, left, and Jamal Lewis.Dave Richard\/Associated Press; Doug Pensinger\/Getty ImagesPresident Trump on Thursday pardoned five former professional football players, including Super Bowl champions, a Hall of Famer and a Heisman Trophy winner, for crimes ranging from perjury to drug trafficking.The players, Joe Klecko, Nate Newton, Jamal Lewis, Billy Cannon and Travis Henry, had all been released from prison more than a decade ago.The pardons were announced by Alice Marie Johnson, Mr. Trump\u2019s \u201cpardon czar,\u201d in a social media post Thursday night. \u201cAs football reminds us, excellence is built on grit, grace, and the courage to rise again,\u201d Ms. Johnson wrote. \u201cGrateful to @POTUS for his continued commitment to second chances,\u201d she added.It is the latest in a slew of presidential pardons that has ranged from hundreds of Jan. 6 Capitol rioters to crypto moguls and lawmakers in the United States and abroad. Here\u2019s who Mr. Trump pardoned :Joe KleckoMr. Klecko, 72, a defensive lineman for the New York Jets in the late 1970s and 1980s, was sentenced to three months in prison for lying to a grand jury investigating false car insurance claims in 1993. In his playing years, he and Mark Gastineau were part of the defensive line nicknamed the \u201cNew York Sack Exchange.\u201d Mr. Klecko was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2023.Jamal LewisMr. Lewis, 46, a running back who won a Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens in 2001, was charged in 2004 for trying to set up a drug deal for at least five kilograms of cocaine mere months before his first N.F.L. game. He reached a plea deal and was sentenced to four months in prison between seasons. After serving a two-game N.F.L. suspension, he resumed his football career. He is one of only two players to rush for at least 295 yards in a game, and in the 2003 season he rushed for 2,066 yards, the third most of any running back in one season.Nate NewtonMr. Newton, 64, an offensive lineman and three-time Super Bowl champion for the Dallas Cowboys in the 1980s and 1990s, pleaded guilty to drug trafficking in 2002, and was sentenced to 30 months in prison. At the time, he had been caught twice by police for drug deals each involving more than 100 pounds of marijuana.Billy CannonMr. Cannon, a Heisman Trophy-winning halfback in 1959 who went on to play 11 years professionally, was sentenced to five years in prison in 1983 for masterminding a multimillion dollar counterfeiting scheme. He was released after serving more than two and a half years in prison. He died in 2018 at age 80.Travis HenryMr. Henry, 47, a running back who made the Pro Bowl with the Buffalo Bills, was sentenced to three years in prison in 2009 for financing a cocaine trafficking ring. In an interview with The New York Times a few months before his sentencing, Mr. Henry discussed being broke after fathering nine children with nine different women.Show moreFeb. 12, 2026, 9:43 p.m. ETFeb. 12, 2026John Ismay and Eric SchmittReporting from WashingtonImageAircraft carrier U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford in the Caribbean Sea last month.Credit...US Navy\/Seaman Apprentice Nathan SearsThe aircraft carrier U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford and its escort ships deployed to the Caribbean will be sent to the Middle East and are not expected to return to their home ports until late April or early May.The ship\u2019s crew was informed of the decision on Thursday, according to four U.S. officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the decision.The Ford strike group\u2019s new orders will have it joining the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group in the Persian Gulf as part of President Trump\u2019s resurgent pressure campaign against Iran\u2019s leaders. Mr. Trump had indicated earlier this week that he wanted to send a second carrier to the region, but neither he nor the Navy had identified the vessel.The ship\u2019s extraordinary deployment, which began June 24 when the Ford left port in Norfolk, Va., was originally meant to be a European cruise but was redirected to the Caribbean as part of Mr. Trump\u2019s pressure campaign on Venezuela.The Ford\u2019s warplanes participated in the Jan. 3 attack on Caracas that captured President Nicol\u00e1s Maduro. The strike group\u2019s current deployment has already been extended once, and its sailors were expecting to come home in early March.The new delay will further jeopardize the Ford\u2019s scheduled dry dock period in Virginia, where major upgrades and repairs have been planned.Show more", "ai_headline": "Live Updates: Trump News", "ai_simplified_title": "Trump Administration Sues Harvard Over Admissions", "ai_excerpt": "The Trump administration sued Harvard University, alleging discrimination in admissions. The lawsuit follows Trump's reversal on a deal with Harvard and an increase in a proposed fine. 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<html lang="en" data-nyt-compute-assignment="fallback" xmlns:og="http://opengraphprotocol.org/schema/" class="nytapp-vi-liveblog" data-rh="lang"><head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <title>Trump Administration Live Updates: DHS Shutdown, Harvard Lawsuit and More News - The New York Times</title> <meta data-rh="true" name="robots" content="noarchive, max-image-preview:large"><meta data-rh="true" name="description" content=""><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:url" content="https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/02/13/us/trump-news"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:title" content="Trump Administration Live Updates: DHS Shutdown, Harvard Lawsuit and More News"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:description" content=""><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:image" content="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2026/02/13/multimedia/13trump-news-promo11a-mkfl/13trump-news-promo11a-mkfl-videoSixteenByNine3000.jpg"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:image:alt" content=""... - Parsed Content
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Harvard LawsuitFeb. 13, 2026, 11:23 a.m. ET32 minutes agoMichael C. Bender and Alan BlinderReporting from WashingtonImageThe lawsuit is the second government action targeting Harvard in the two weeks since President Trumpβs sudden reversal of his position on a potential deal to end the administrationβs pressure campaign on the university.Credit...Sophie Park for The New York TimesThe Trump administration sued Harvard University on Friday, accusing the Ivy League school of failing to produce documents sought as part of a Justice Department investigation into whether its admissions process discriminates against white applicants.The lawsuit is the second government action against Harvard in the two weeks since President Trump abruptly reversed his position on a potential deal to end the administrationβs pressure campaign on the university.After a report in The New York Times on Feb. 2 that Mr. Trump had agreed to give up his demand for Harvard to pay a $200 million fine in order to help f...
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Completed Started: Feb 15, 2026 3:51 PM Completed: Feb 15, 2026 3:55 PM
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Pending
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Claims from this Source (97)
All claims extracted from this source document.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf8-634e-4290-97b7-3e30efaafdc6Simplified: About 94 percent of Secret Service workforce of more than 8000 would stay on job during shutdown
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Congress is at odds over how to fund the Department of Homeland Security before a Friday deadline.1.000π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Politics , Finance π a1162e38-9428-4226-a779-94aaeef928c1Simplified: Congress is at odds over how to fund the Department of Homeland Security before a Friday deadline
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Immigration π a1163679-ad07-4cd9-a915-5ec30c8d8be7Simplified: During last year's 43-day government closure ICE and Border Patrol agents continued work without pay
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Finance , Government π a1163cf6-838d-4335-8713-76ad127bfda6Simplified: Last summer Congress drastically expanded operating budget as part of sweeping domestic policy bill with extra $75 billion resources it can use to rid...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment π a116492f-e524-48f2-a6b7-cdd452ddcbaaSimplified: About 95 percent of Transportation Security Administrationβs employees are required to report to work through a shutdown without being paid
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Finance , Government π a1163cf6-e4c2-437f-bd02-e602014b8194Simplified: FEMA's disaster relief fund has enough money to carry out current and anticipated emergency response activities
-
π€ Gregg Phillips π News Article π·οΈ Finance , Disaster Relief π a1164930-2bdf-4314-8bde-0f3b02d6130fSimplified: A catastrophic disaster during a Homeland Security Department shutdown would seriously strain the fund according to Gregg Phillips.
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π€ Mr. Phillips π News Article π·οΈ Government , Disaster Relief π a1164930-4893-42dc-863d-68aba463984cSimplified: FEMA would find it difficult to reimburse states for disaster relief operations quickly Mr Phillips said.
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Simplified: Delays could slow recovery efforts he added.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Finance π a1163cf6-ff31-4792-a472-067ba2699d38Simplified: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is largely funded by fees it charges applicants most operations would typically continue during shutdown
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment π a1163cf6-1f1f-4d7e-aeb5-79666924d2f3Simplified: During last fall's federal shutdown more than 90 percent of department's employees were required to work
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment , Immigration π a1164930-ee44-47c4-9fd6-341494333b26Simplified: Some programs including E-Verify receive appropriated funds which allows employers to check employees eligibility to work in the country.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment π a1163cf7-2eca-415a-8eb9-887ac597536bSimplified: During last shutdown program was temporarily suspended
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π€ Matthew Tragesser π News Article π·οΈ Government , Employment , Immigration π a1164931-6c35-4de7-84ab-b5e4daa88676Simplified: The administration would take decisive action to keep E-Verify open during a shutdown according to Matthew Tragesser.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Military π a1163cf7-4c6f-4b84-a751-2f20679638f2Simplified: Coast Guard is part of Homeland Security Department
-
π€ Vice Admiral Thomas Allan π News Article π·οΈ Government , Military π a1163cf7-a4da-4b66-b864-03bf464a5f78Simplified: Vice Admiral Thomas Allan warned prolonged shutdown would erode mission readiness and hurt morale
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf7-f962-47b6-9316-907ca7817fe5Simplified: Most employees at Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency would be furloughed during shutdown
-
π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Operations π a1163cf8-344f-4b5a-9fdf-c6a688df5c23Simplified: Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency would delay strategic planning and development of cybersecurity guidance
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π€ Matthew C. Quinn π News Article π·οΈ Government , Security π a1163cf8-7efb-415b-b39a-aa4a3ff9d808Simplified: Agents would continue to protect president and vice president along with families
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π€ Matthew C. Quinn π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf8-a82a-440b-bd45-18f082ceda7fSimplified: Mr Quinn warned about fading morale as bills come due
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Critical agency priorities would be delayed, such as efforts to hire or train agents and officers.1.000π€ Matthew C. Quinn π News Article π·οΈ Government , Personnel π a1163cf8-c32a-4321-ac13-119521a0e58fSimplified: Critical agency priorities would be delayed such as efforts to hire or train agents and officers
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164933-c3d5-411e-96c9-23889cb3d729Simplified: A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to give detainees at an immigration facility near Minneapolis adequate access to lawyers.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164934-15a9-4aec-9bc7-3b23faf32aa9Simplified: Lawyers for the federal government argued they could not arrange in person meetings because they did not have space to accommodate detainees in the Wh...
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π€ Judge Nancy E. Brasel π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164934-644c-4d8b-9365-7641cf56b2e4Simplified: Judge Nancy E Brasel said the government failed to plan for the constitutional rights of its civil detainees.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164934-9cf6-44ac-932b-11b3e906043cSimplified: The government suggests doing so would result in chaos.
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π€ The judge π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164935-3937-4ccb-8de8-25790d14726aSimplified: The constitution does not permit the government to arrest thousands of individuals and then disregard their constitutional rights because it would be...
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π€ Michele Garnett McKenzie π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164935-6620-4a22-86b2-47a96ff0027fSimplified: The ruling recognizes the fundamental importance of access to counsel in ensuring basic due process according to Michele Garnett McKenzie.
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π€ Michele Garnett McKenzie π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164935-9117-41e0-aa30-3bdd1cd6eedbSimplified: The government cannot avoid its constitutional responsibilities when it deprives people of liberty because it finds them inconvenient she said in a st...
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π€ Michele Garnett McKenzie π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164935-b2db-4b0d-a402-401cb1df155cSimplified: It is appalling that a court ruling was required to defend this fundamental right.
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π€ Department of Homeland Security π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164935-d5cd-4490-9106-4ff82736c18eSimplified: The Department of Homeland Security countered in a statement that all detainees receive due process.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164935-f628-48d2-85b4-a7848a8c7e48Simplified: The Department of Homeland Security did not say whether it would appeal.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Government , Immigration π a1164936-13b1-4ab3-8c83-105fd5f5534fSimplified: The Trump administration said it would end its aggressive immigration crackdown in Minnesota which has resulted in tense clashes between protesters an...
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π€ Lawyers for the government π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164936-73d7-4092-93a6-7a097ca406c5Simplified: Government lawyers countered detained immigrants were verbally informed they can make calls including to attorneys family friends or consulate
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164937-217b-446c-af5a-3f0b84df043fSimplified: Top federal prosecutor in Minnesota acknowledged officials provided incorrect information about a shooting by an immigration agent last month
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Simplified: The judge dismissed the charges and said the agent fired his weapon for reasons completely unclear
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π€ Mr. Rosen π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164937-5832-4abc-9db8-ee1275d41b1fSimplified: Rosen wrote newly discovered evidence is materially inconsistent with allegations federal officials made in a charging document and courtroom testimon...
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π€ Mr. Rosen π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164937-75e2-41a5-9d57-03850643bba9Simplified: Dismissal with prejudice will serve the interests of justice Rosen wrote who was nominated by President Trump to be US attorney in Minnesota
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164937-9c72-4e9e-9f90-5bf2cbd38128Simplified: Judge Paul A Magnuson dismissed charges on Friday with prejudice meaning case cannot be refiled
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164937-bf44-437b-a418-0f93efd1dc5dSimplified: Shooting on January 14 of Julio C Sosa-Celis by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent touched off hours of tense protests in Minneapolis where...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164937-dd51-4112-96cf-40cd06222cdfSimplified: Federal officials initially described Sosa-Celis and Aljorna as violent agitators who attacked an agent with a shovel and broom
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π€ The government π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164937-fbe6-40d4-92e6-9e642f5f6cd7Simplified: Government said both men are from Venezuela and are in the United States illegally
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π€ Kristi Noem π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164938-2b8d-4167-9fa8-f5ace0a447eeSimplified: Kristi Noem accused them of trying to kill the agent
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164938-6dac-407a-8e69-dc20374e3b97Simplified: Officials changed their account of which of the two men fled from agents in a car before the shooting
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164938-8fdd-44c8-976b-1b6639bd78d5Simplified: Charging documents suggested only two people attacked the agent instead of three as Department of Homeland Security first claimed
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164938-aec0-4ef2-9871-18f290212057Simplified: Sosa-Celis shot in the leg had injuries not life-threatening
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164938-cb20-4dd6-9264-fd64ec005aaeSimplified: Aljorna was not wounded
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π€ Officials π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164938-eb24-4e0b-a673-069d0b67a4fdSimplified: Both were arrested after agents used tear gas to force them out of a building
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π€ Brian D. Clark π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164939-093f-4aea-bd9c-d35756c00cd0Simplified: Brian D Clark said in a statement his clients were overjoyed by Rosenβs request
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π€ Brian D. Clark π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164939-2648-4a22-8c42-e87a1fc5d652Simplified: Justice is being served by the governmentβs request to dismiss all charges with prejudice he said adding identity of ICE agent should be made public a...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164939-5cd5-464b-86f9-abb829764e2bSimplified: Charges were never filed against Gabriel Hernandez Ledezma and court records gave no indication he was involved in any attack
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Immigration π a1164939-848d-4533-b2f4-7df078b88b60Simplified: Hernandez Ledezma who is Venezuelan was detained by immigration officials and sent to Texas
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164939-cc0f-4b1a-8357-4e81eb5d0e54Simplified: In Chicago prosecutors dropped charges against a woman after concerns about preservation of evidence were raised where a Border Patrol agent shot and...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1164939-ec02-4a8f-b828-ed4ba2505b5cSimplified: Marimar Martinez has since sought to clear her name and pushed back against the Trump administrationβs description of her as a domestic terrorist
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Law Enforcement , Legal , Statistical π a1162b14-00b4-4e31-a9cc-cf10085ed189Simplified: Mr Brownβs case is among 16 shootings by on-duty federal immigration agents in US cities and towns over the past year including those that took the li...
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493a-2996-4b98-ace4-4683a8c61325Simplified: Administration officials persisted in claims even after accounts were contradicted by videos
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π€ Officials π News Article π·οΈ Immigration , Law Enforcement π a1163ca8-cef3-4dbd-9aee-1a6038f92b25Simplified: Officials said agents arrested more than 4000 undocumented immigrants in Minnesota
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493a-7dd8-4dbd-805c-1c15ade1c19aSimplified: U.S. Treasury Department issued two new licenses on Friday giving energy companies broad leeway to operate in Venezuela
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493a-b6a6-4dd5-a568-5c483ddf8cd5Simplified: Chevron Eni Repsol Shell and BP operate in Venezuela or have interests in oil and gas fields
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493a-d501-4eae-820b-2fcfdc535ac2Simplified: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent acknowledged Trump administration could announce clarifications regarding steel and aluminum tariffs
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π€ Bessent π News Article π a116493a-f537-4ce6-b788-fe89d4c75155Simplified: Bessent said there will be a narrowing likely applying to incidental objects
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π€ Bessent π News Article π a116493b-12ad-4d4c-ad0f-02d255607118Simplified: Bessent said he spoke to Senate Republicans about opening investigation into Jerome H Powell and cost of renovating headquarters
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π€ Bessent π News Article π a116493b-3488-474d-8279-4f3756b379a6Simplified: Bessent said fate of Justice Departmentβs investigation into Powell was not up to White House
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π€ Bessent π News Article π a116493b-5567-4b6b-83a6-9655c0841e86Simplified: Bessent said subpoenas were issued but that does not mean there are charges
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493b-8bb8-4ca2-91b0-78f63ec8b91dSimplified: Senator Thom Tillis promised to block vote on Warsh until Justice Department probe is resolved
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493b-ab32-4a04-be73-3aec295c9523Simplified: President Trump on Thursday pardoned five former professional football players for crimes ranging from perjury to drug trafficking
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493c-3841-441d-9b27-73aa3625e221Simplified: Joe Klecko Nate Newton Jamal Lewis Billy Cannon and Travis Henry had all been released from prison more than a decade ago
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493c-81fb-4ebc-9ffb-cbc50e592554Simplified: Alice Marie Johnson announced the pardons in a social media post Thursday night
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493c-f734-4896-8b71-e2518e797da8Simplified: Joe Klecko was sentenced to three months in prison for lying to a grand jury in 1993
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493d-3d2c-42e3-92f0-4943555580fbSimplified: Joe Klecko was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2023
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493d-e2b3-444e-a3eb-13ea74df6462Simplified: Jamal Lewis was charged in 2004 for trying to set up a drug deal
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493e-73e5-4d0d-adee-c0868ece8a59Simplified: Jamal Lewis reached a plea deal and was sentenced to four months in prison
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493e-bc45-4a6e-9ad2-a9a76e79fa4dSimplified: Jamal Lewis resumed his football career after serving a two-game NFL suspension
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493e-e620-4458-9fe2-6e062a35cd09Simplified: Jamal Lewis is one of two players to rush for at least 295 yards in a game and rushed for 2066 yards in 2003
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493f-0971-4180-8146-780a76dbe368Simplified: Nate Newton pleaded guilty to drug trafficking in 2002 and was sentenced to 30 months in prison
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493f-3312-4e91-b585-d80cfa587a72Simplified: Nate Newton had been caught twice by police for drug deals involving more than 100 pounds of marijuana
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493f-5a9b-4304-a857-ac51386e1130Simplified: Billy Cannon was sentenced to five years in prison in 1983 for masterminding a counterfeiting scheme
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493f-7d98-4beb-91f2-0b979f7456a7Simplified: Billy Cannon was released after serving more than two and a half years in prison
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493f-a66b-4fec-b430-5cd9798ad175Simplified: Billy Cannon died in 2018 at age 80
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π€ The author π News Article π a116493f-e991-4cb9-a7c0-0277c43f3678Simplified: Travis Henry was sentenced to three years in prison in 2009 for financing a cocaine trafficking ring
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π€ The author π News Article π a1164940-06df-4a34-b04b-b3e3b47966b9Simplified: Travis Henry discussed being broke after fathering nine children with nine different women
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π€ The author π News Article π a1164940-2a35-4777-86e5-5ce32941e52cSimplified: Aircraft carrier U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford and escort ships will be sent to Middle East and not expected to return until late April
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Simplified: The ship's crew was informed of the decision on Thursday according to four U.S. officials
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Simplified: Mr. Trump indicated earlier this week he wanted to send a second carrier to the region
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Military , Geopolitical π a1164940-a18f-4753-9cb5-2ac26c2fb963Simplified: The ship's deployment began June 24 when the Ford left port in Norfolk Va was originally meant to be a European cruise but was redirected to the Carib...
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Simplified: The strike group's current deployment has already been extended once and its sailors were expecting to come home in early March
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Simplified: The new delay will further jeopardize the Ford's scheduled dry dock period in Virginia