↩ Accueil

Vue lecture

FedEx Sues for Refund of Trump Tariffs Rejected by Supreme Court

The company, which did not specify how much it was seeking, is expected to be one of many demanding compensation for levies ruled unlawful.

© Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

Some analysts say the tariffs ruled illegal by the Supreme Court last week had raised as much as $175 billion.
  •  

Even in a Blizzard, Food Delivery in New York City Continues

On Monday, Mayor Zohran Mamdani banned nearly all traffic from the streets. Among the exceptions were emergency vehicles and electric delivery bikes.

© David Dee Delgado for The New York Times

One of New York City’s 80,000 food delivery workers, or deliveristas, braves the blizzard.
  •  

Texas Rep. Tony Gonzales Pressured to Resign Over Sexual Messages to Staff Member

Democrats and Republicans urged Tony Gonzales to step down after allegations that he had sent inappropriate texts to a staff member and had a sexual relationship with her.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

Representative Tony Gonzales of Texas, who is facing a tough re-election fight, has denied engaging in a sexual relationship with a staff member.
  •  

Snowstorm Is ‘as Bad as I’ve Seen It,’ Massachusetts Governor Says

Gov. Maura Healey said there were nearly 300,000 power outages throughout the state and about 350 cars stuck on roadways, some with drivers still in them.

© Lucy Lu for The New York Times

Wind gusts topping 60 miles per hour and snowfall exceeding two feet in some counties hindered the effort to restore power in the state on Monday.
  •  

Mexican Forces Say They Tracked El Mencho to Cabin by Following His Lover

Top security officials revealed details of the operation that led to the death of Mexico’s most wanted drug cartel leader.

© Yuri Cortez/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Gen. Ricardo Trevilla Trejo, Mexico’s defense minister, described this weekend’s operation against a top cartel leader at a news conference in Mexico City on Monday with President Claudia Sheinbaum.
  •  

Canada to Probe What OpenAI Knew About Tumbler Ridge Shooter

The company suspended the killer’s ChatGPT account over a policy violation in June, eight months before the attacks in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia.

© Alana Paterson for The New York Times

A memorial for the victims of a the mass shooting this month at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia.
  •  

C.I.A. Intelligence Helped Lead Mexican Authorities to ‘El Mencho’

Mexican officials said they had found the elusive cartel kingpin by tracking a romantic partner. The C.I.A. provided some intelligence critical to the operation.

© Alfredo Estrella/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mexican special forces in Mexico City on Sunday. C.I.A. intelligence helped lead the special forces to the cartel leader.
  •  

Anthropic Accuses 3 Chinese Companies of Harvesting Its Data

The San Francisco start-up claimed that DeepSeek, Moonshot and MiniMax used approximately 24,000 fraudulent accounts to train their own chatbots.

© Cfoto/Future Publishing, via Getty Images

DeepSeek is among the three Chinese start-ups accused of using data from Anthropic’s A.I. system to train their own, a process called distillation.
  •  

After Saks Bankruptcy, Richard Baker Says He Saved Luxury Department Stores

Richard Baker wanted to create a retail empire when he combined Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus. About a year later, it filed for bankruptcy.

© Dina Litovsky

Richard Baker at the Saks Fifth Avenue flagship store in New York City in 2023. The chain’s parent company entered bankruptcy last month.
  •  

What Travelers Need to Know as Cartel Violence Rattles Mexico

The killing of a drug lord and the unrest that followed have prompted flight cancellations, roadblocks, cruise disruptions and “shelter in place” alerts.

© Ulises Ruiz/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mayhem after the killing of Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, who led a powerful criminal group, disrupted flights at Guadalajara International Airport on Sunday.
  •  

Settlers in the Israeli-Occupied West Bank Drive a Palestinian Family Off Its Land

For two years, settlers attacked Rezeq Abu Naim’s land in the Israeli-occupied West Bank at all hours and in all manners. After another violent incursion over the weekend, his family abandoned their home.

© Daniel Berehulak/The New York Times

Rezeq Abu Naim, left, with some members of his family inside a cave the family used, in July, near the West Bank village of Al Mughayir.
  •  

‘Angel Families’ Return to Washington to Back Up Trump Ahead of State of the Union

The families of people killed by undocumented immigrants have forged a bond with the president, who has invited some of them to his address on Tuesday.

© Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

President Trump gathered several families at the White House on Monday to sign a proclamation honoring people who had been killed by undocumented immigrants on Monday.
  •  

Trump-Appointed Judge Bars Release of Jack Smith’s Report in Documents Case

Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump-appointed federal judge in Florida, slammed the former special counsel, Jack Smith, for drafting the report even after she had dismissed the case.

© Joe Raedle/Getty Images

The ruling by the judge, Aileen M. Cannon, was her latest effort in the past several months to keep the public from seeing Jack Smith’s sprawling report.
  •  
❌