↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

FCC Approves Skydance’s Merger With Paramount

The deal, which came under intense scrutiny by the Trump administration, was hailed by the F.C.C. chief, who welcomed “significant changes” at CBS, a unit of Paramount.

© Tierney L. Cross for The New York Times

Brendan Carr, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission.
  •  

Alina Habba Is Named Acting U.S. Attorney in New Jersey

Ms. Habba’s tenure as interim U.S. attorney was slated to end this week, but the Trump administration’s appointment will allow her to remain the top law enforcement official in the state.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Alina Habba, seen being sworn in as the top federal prosecutor in New Jersey earlier this year, was appointed as acting U.S. attorney for the state on Thursday.
  •  

Texas Legislature Special Session: Democrats Attack Silent Republicans

President Trump wants Texas Republicans to redraw the state’s House maps to nab as many as five seats now held by Democrats. But no new maps have been publicly proposed yet.

© Eric Gay/Associated Press

Demonstrators gathered in the rotunda of the Texas Capitol as the special session began on Monday.
  •  

Supreme Court, for Now, Pauses Lower Court Decision Limiting Voting Rights Act

The justices paused a lower court order pending a decision on whether the Supreme Court will take up the case, a major challenge to the Voting Rights Act.

© Mike Mccleary/The Bismarck Tribune, via Associated Press

Voters filling in their ballots at voting booths in Bismarck, N.D., in 2022. If the justices agree to hear the North Dakota matter, it will be the second major voting rights case in the upcoming term, which begins in October.
  •  

Lake Tahoe Boaters Died Without Life Jackets, Review Finds

The eight people who died in a June accident were found without flotation devices, according to a new report. The two survivors relied on the devices to stay afloat.

© Brooke Hess-Homeier/Associated Press

The Washoe County Sheriff’s Office conducted a search near D.L. Bliss State Park after a boat capsized and eight people died in June.
  •  

Ken Paxton Claimed Three Houses as His Primary Residence, Records Show

The attorney general of Texas, who is challenging Senator John Cornyn, could have secured favorable mortgage rates, and may have violated the law if he knowingly falsified loan documents.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Ken Paxton, the Texas attorney general, at the White House earlier this year.
  •  

Justice Kagan Urges Supreme Court to Explain Itself in Emergency Decisions

In remarks before judges and lawyers in California, the justice said she believed the court had a responsibility to share its reasoning.

© Nic Coury for The New York Times

In an appearance on Thursday, Justice Elena Kagan discussed the Supreme Court’s handling of emergency docket rulings and said the court could be doing more to explain its reasoning on such cases.
  •  

Roy Black, Defense Lawyer for William Kennedy Smith and Epstein, Dies at 80

With a national profile, he represented the notorious and the celebrated, helping to secure an acquittal in the Smith rape case and a lenient plea deal for Jeffrey Epstein.

© Lynne Sladky/Associated Press

Roy Black spoke to the news media outside the Palm Beach County Courthouse in West Palm Beach in 1991 after his client William Kennedy Smith was acquitted of sexual assault charges.
  •  

Hulk Hogan: A Life in Pictures

The wrestler, who died on Thursday at 71, was the face of the sport as its popularity grew, propelling him into the wider entertainment world.

© WWE/WWE, via Getty Images

Hulk Hogan’s signature move occurred before his matches started when he ripped his shirts to shreds like in this 1991 wrestling event.
  •