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Flash flood warning extended for Hawaii's Oahu Island over threat to Wahiawa Dam

A flash flood warning for Hawaii's Oahu island has been extended Saturday as the threat for the imminent failure of the Wahiawa Dam continues to loom following heavy rainstorms.

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State officials reported "catastrophic" damage as major rains pummeled the area for the second significant rain event in a week.

Dangerous flooding is continuing to impact Hawaii's Oahu island, prompting more than 230 rescues.

Honolulu Fire Department via AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: This handout photo released by the Honolulu Fire Department via Facebook on March 20, 2026, shows floodwater surrounding houses in Waialua on northern Oahu.

At a press briefing Friday evening, Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi said emergency crews have already rescued more than 230 people from life-threatening conditions.

3 life-saving tactics to use if in a car during a flash flood

Hawaii Gov. Josh Green said there were no confirmed fatalities or missing persons as emergency responders -- including firefighters, the National Guard and military personnel -- have been deployed across affected areas.

The island's emergency management office reported flooding and closed roads on the windward side of the island due to earlier flooding.

ABC News - PHOTO: Hawaii flood map

The heaviest rain is expected to continue through Saturday for most islands, with the Big Island getting the heaviest rain on Sunday and thunderstorms possible at times, which may include damaging winds.

The very saturated soil and the possibility of wind gusts up to 45 mph could more easily take down trees and power lines.

Additional rainfall accumulations between 2 and 7 inches are likely through the event this weekend.

Earlier Friday, an evacuation order was issued for Haleiwa and Waialua, including areas near the Wahiawa Dam, according to Oahu Emergency Management, which warned that the dam "may collapse or breach at any time."

The dam "has not failed but is at imminent risk of failure," Oahu Emergency Management said mid-morning local time Friday.

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Video Survival tips if you get trapped in a flash flood

Later, the agency said dam levels were trending down but with more rain expected, some evacuation orders remained in place.

At the press briefing Friday evening, officials said they are closely monitoring water levels at the Wahiawa Dam and others. The governor stressed that there are no reports of structural damage. Concerns centered on rising water levels and the risk of overflow, which could affect stability.

City and County of Honolulu Department of Emergency Management - PHOTO: The National Weather Service in Honolulu has issued a flash flood warning after dam failure on the Kaukonahua Stream below Wahiawa Dam on Oahu, Hawaii, March 20, 2026.

Authorities said widespread damage has already been reported to homes, roads, schools, airports and at least one hospital on Maui, where patients had to be relocated. The full financial impact is still being assessed, but early estimates suggest losses could surpass $1 billion.

At a press briefing earlier Friday, the Honolulu mayor said "dozens, if not maybe hundreds of homes" had been affected by the flooding.

"There's no question that the damage done thus far has been catastrophic," he said.

Search and rescue operations were ongoing on Oahu's north shore, according to Honolulu spokesperson Ian Scheuring, who did not have an official number of people rescued so far.

Dangerous, unprecedented heat wave hits the West

On Oahu, all state departments have closed and employees not involved in disaster response and preparedness were sent home Friday due to the weather conditions.

The latest flood threat comes a week after a damaging flood event that washed away roads and damaged homes.

Honolulu Fire Department via AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: This handout photo released by the Honolulu Fire Department via Facebook on March 20, 2026, shows a person standing on a roof surrounded by floodwater as evacuation efforts take place on the island of Oahu.

A flash flood emergency was issued for northern Oahu earlier Friday for "catastrophic" flooding. Local emergency personnel had reported "life-threatening flash flooding" early Friday across northern Oahu, according to the National Weather Service in Honolulu.

NOAA - PHOTO: Hawaii is seen via satellite, March 20, 2026.

"Floodwaters have cut off road access in and out of Haleiwa, and widespread flooding of roadways and low-lying areas is ongoing," the NWS said, warning that "significant runoff continues to produce high water levels and dangerous flooding impacts."

ABC News' Kyle Reiman contributed to this report.

Flash flood warning extended for Hawaii's Oahu Island over threat to Wahiawa Dam

A flash flood warning for Hawaii's Oahu island has been extended Saturday as the threat for the imminent failure of t...
Czechs rally in country's largest anti-government protest since 2019

By Eva Korinkova

Reuters Demonstrators take part in an anti-government protest rally in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Eva Korinkova Demonstrators take part in an anti-government protest rally in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Eva Korinkova Demonstrators take part in an anti-government protest rally in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Eva Korinkova

Anti-government protest rally in Prague

PRAGUE, March 21 (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of Czechs rallied on Saturday in the country's biggest anti-government demonstration since 2019, ‌protesting against defense spending cuts under Prime Minister Andrej Babis ‌and over fears his administration will target public media.

Protesters started arriving hours before the rally began ​at Letna plain overlooking the historic center, where many waved Czech and European Union flags. Organizers estimated the turnout at around 250,000 people.

"I'm here because I care about my country's future," said 22-year-old Tomas Chaloupka. "It upsets me that the ‌current government is trying ⁠to manipulate the free and independent media, and freedom and democracy are paramount."

Babis and his populist ANO party returned to ⁠power in December after four years in opposition, leading a government with right-wing and far-right parties.

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Protest organisers Milion Chvilek (Million Moments for Democracy) have warned the country could ​head ​the way of Slovakia or Hungary, central ​European neighbours that have clashed ‌with the European Union executive over rule-of-law issues.

"We don't want to be Hungary," teacher Hana Malanikova said. "We don't want to follow the Slovak Republic's path. So it's time to wake up."

Critics have also raised concerns over the new government's shifts in policy, and a similar protest in February in support ‌of President Petr Pavel, who has clashed ​with Babis' government over ministerial nominations and defence ​spending, drew up to 90,000 ​people.

Opponents of Babis' government have also highlighted a cut in ‌defence spending in the budget, along ​with plans to ​change financing for public television, which they warn would hurt its independence, and tightening disclosure rules for non-governmental organisations.

Babis, who built a business ​empire in the food, ‌chemical and agricultural sectors, was prime minister in 2017-2021. Milion Chvilek ​organised similar protests in 2019 that drew over 200,000 people.

(Writing by ​Michael Kahn, Editing by Rod Nickel)

Czechs rally in country's largest anti-government protest since 2019

By Eva Korinkova Anti-government protest rally in Prague PRAGUE, March 21 (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of ...
Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Christa Gail Pikewas just 18 years old when she committed a crime that dominated headlines for years: She tortured and murdered her romantic rival in Tennessee and later showed off a piece of the 19-year-old woman's skull to schoolmates.

USA TODAY

The killing in the woods of Knoxville demonstrated a brutality and callousness rarely seen in a woman, let alone one so young. Now 30 years later, Pike is back to making headlines as the state of Tennessee prepares to execute her.

Pike, who just turned 50 on March 10, is set to be executed by lethal injection about six months from now on Sept. 30 for the murder of 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer. On Jan. 12, 1995, Pike and two others lured Slemmer into the woods and carried out a ritualistic murder that lasted about an hour.

If the execution moves forward, Pike will be the first woman put to death in Tennesseein more than 200 yearsand only the19th woman executedin modern U.S. history.

She's now fighting back and suing the state to stop her execution.

Christa Gail Pike looks around as someone enters the courtroom where a hearing for a new trial for her was being held on Jan. 12, 2001.

Pike's attorneysfiled a lawsuitin a Tennessee court in January challenging the state's lethal execution method, arguing that it violates her religious beliefs and constitutional rights, and could cause her excessive pain. In response to Pike's arguments, the state says in a court filing on Thursday, March 19, that she hasn't presented any evidence that the lethal injection presents an unconstitutional risk to her and that death row inmates have never been guaranteed a pain-free execution.

During Pike's time behind bars, she has taken responsibility for the murder and has "changed drastically," she wrote in a 2023letter she wrote to The Tennessean− part of the USA TODAY Network.

"It sickens me now to think that someone as loving and compassionate as myself had the ability to commit such a crime," she wrote.

USA TODAY is looking at Pike's arguments for a reprieve from execution, what the state has to say about them and how the victim's mother feels.

What was Christa Gail Pike convicted of?

Christa Gail Pike and Colleen Slemmer were both students at the Knoxville Job Corps, a career-training program, when Pike began dating a 17-year-old boy in the program. She later came to fear that Slemmer was trying to steal him, prosecutors told jurors at trial.

Pike, her friend and the boyfriend, lured Slemmer away from the Job Corps center and into the woods before the attack, largely carried out by Pike over an hour-long period on Jan. 12, 1995, according to court records.

Pike later bragged about killing Slemmer, telling another student at the center that she had cut the teenager's throat six times with a box cutter, cut her back with a meat cleaver, carved a pentagram into her chest, and continued the violence even though Slemmer "begged" her to stop, according to court records.

Pike said she had "thrown a large piece of asphalt at the victim's head," believed to be a fatal blow, and kept a skull fragment, later showing it off to fellow students, court records say.

Pike was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. Pike's boyfriend, Tadaryl Shipp, was convicted of first-degree murder, sentenced to life in prison and recently was denied parole. Pike's friend, Shadolla Peterson − who prosecutors say kept watch during the attack − testified against Pike and was sentenced to probation.

Colleen Slemmer is pictured

Who is Christa Gail Pike?

Christa Gail Pike, 50, is the only woman on Tennessee's death row and has been living there for 30 years following her sentencing in April 1996. Pike and her mother, Carissa Hansen, sobbed uncontrollably in the courtroom during the sentencing, according to archived news reports.

Pike's trial attorneys had tried to mitigate her crimes by describing Pike as a cast-off child from a dysfunctional family who bounced between her divorced parents' houses depending on who was sick of her at the time, according to an archived news report in the Knoxville News-Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Hansen told jurors that she was a bad mother who smoked pot with her daughter and even allowed Pike to have a live-in boyfriend at the age of 14. "I should be the one in her seat. I should be punished for her crime," Hansen said, according to the News-Sentinel.

Christa Gail Pike is pictured at a hearing on July 30, 2007, at the age of 31. Her attorneys were working to get her off of death row at the time.

A University of Tennessee police officer countered the sympathetic testimony, telling jurors that Pike returned to the scene of the crime after Slemmer's body had been found and "seemed amused."

"She was giggling," he testified, the newspaper said.

Pike's current attorneys arguethat had she been tried today, Pike never should have been sentenced to death because of her young age and mental illness at the time of the murder, and her disturbing history of being sexually abused as a child, starting before she could even talk. They believe she deserves life in prison without the possibility of parole.

On Pike's website, created by supporters who are arguing for her clemency, Pike says that she doesn't want to use her childhood trauma as an excuse for Slemmer's murder.

"There is no excuse for what I did ... I take full responsibility for my actions, and regret everything that happened that night," she says. "I only want my situation to be looked at now through the eyes of logic instead of anger and answered the question of if I deserve to die for a crime committed by three people."

Christa Gail Pike sues Tennessee officials over execution

In a lawsuit filed against the state in January, Pike's attorneys argue that Tennessee's lethal injection method is likely to cause her unnecessary pain and added terror and suffering, a violation of the U.S. Constitution's protections against cruel and unusual punishment.

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One of Pike's medical conditions,thrombocytosis, can lead to unusual bleeding and "death by drowning in one's own blood," they argue, citing a report by an anesthesiology expert. Additionally, Pike cannot request to be executed by the state's only other approved method − electrocution − because doing so would violate her Buddhist beliefs, which prevent her from "participating in any process leading to her own death," her attorneys argue.

They also say that the state could botch Pike's lethal injection, citing concerns over the state's new execution protocol.

Tennessee began using the new protocol in 2025, three years after the statehalted all executionsover a "technical oversight" in the lethal injection ofdeath row inmate Oscar Franklin Smith. The new lethal injection protocol usesthe single drug pentobarbital, as opposed to three drugs under the previous method.

Christa Gail Pike is pictured.

Pike's attorneys cite a number of "botched" executions using only pentobarbital,including that of Byron Blackin Tennessee for the murder of his ex-girlfriend and her two daughters in 1988.

Reporters who witnessed the execution,including one from the Tennessean, reported that Black appeared to be in pain and distress during the lethal injection, which is required to be free from cruel and unusual punishment under the U.S. Constitution.

"It's hurting so bad," Black told his spiritual adviser at one point during the execution, the Tennessean reported.

Pike's attorneys slammed the state's new lethal injection protocol as being "plagued with the same issues that have marked botched executions for decades: secrecy, intentional omission, inattention to detail, and untrained and unlicensed prison personnel attempting to fill medical role."

What does the state say about Pike's lawsuit

Regarding Pike's arguments about cruel and unusual punishment, established case law says that "the Eighth Amendment does not guarantee a prisoner a painless death" and that "some risk of pain is inherent in any method of execution − no matter how humane," according to the state's response to Pike's lawsuit filed on Thursday, March, 19.

The state also defended its lethal injection protocol, citing "the overwhelming history affirming the use of lethal injection generally and pentobarbital specifically."

Besides, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said that Pike "carried around a piece of Colleen Slemmer's shattered skull in her pocket and showed it to her friends as a trophy after luring Colleen into the woods to torture and murder her."

"Pike has offered nothing but speculation that the well-established, constitutional lethal injection method poses any unique risk in her case," he said in a statement to USA TODAY. "We wish Pike's commitment to the sanctity of life had arrived in time to save Colleen Slemmer."

UT forensic anthropologist Dr. Murray Marks testifies about the wounds to Colleen A. Slemmer's skull during Christa Gail Pike's murder trial in Knox County Criminal Court on March 25, 1996.

Slemmer's mother, May Martinez, has been vehement in her support of the death penalty for Pike. She has fought for decades to obtain the last remaining piece of her daughter's skull so that it can be buried with the rest of the teen's remains; investigators have been holding it as evidence in the case.

"My heart breaks every single day because I keep reliving it and reliving it, and I can't no more, and I want this to happen before I die,"Martinez told WBIR-TVin 2021.

"There's not a day goes by that I don't think about Colleen or how she died and how rough it was," Martinez continued. "I just want Christa down so I can end it, relieve my daughter, so she finally can be resting."

May Martinez, Colleen Slemmer's mother, is pictured.

How many women have been executed in the U.S.?

Just 18 women have been executed in the United States since 1976, compared to 1,623 men, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. That means women represent just 1% of all modern U.S. executions.

Pike is not only the only woman on Tennessee's death row, but she's among just 48 female death row inmates in the nation. That's compared to a male population just under 2,100 − roughly 2%.

The last execution of a woman in the United States was that ofAmber McClaughlin in 2023. McClaughlin, who was the first transgender person executed in the nation, was convicted as a man of raping and fatally stabbing 45-year-old Beverly Guenther on Nov. 20, 2003. Guenther was McLaughlin's ex-girlfriend.

How many women has Tennessee executed?

Citing the Death Penalty Information Center, Pike's attorneys say thatonly three womenhave ever been executed in Tennessee.

They list the hangings of three Black women in 1807, 1808 and 1819, though they didn't identify their crimes. Only one of the women's names is known: that of Molly Holcomb in 1807. Two of them are listed as slavesby deathpenaltyusa.org, which names the crimes as murder, though many slaves were unjustly killed themselves over false accusations or for no reason at all.

Pike is both the last person in Tennessee sent to death row for a crime they committed when they were 18 and is the last woman sentenced to death in the state,reported the Tennessean.

Contributing: Evan Mealins and Kelly Puente, The Tennessean

Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter who covers breaking news, cold cases and executions for USA TODAY. Follow her on X at @amandaleeusat.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

Christa Gail Pikewas just 18 years old when she committed a crime that dominated headlines for years: She tortured and mu...
Judge orders Voice of America be put back together again. What are the chances that will happen?

NEW YORK (AP) — In a strongly wordeddecision this week, a federal judge ordered that the Voice of America — its mission to provide news for countries around the world largely shut down for the past year by the Trump administration — come roaring back to life.

Associated Press

Whether or not that actually happens is anybody's guess.

The government filed notice Thursday to appeal U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth's order two days earlier to put hundreds of VOA employees who have been on paid leave the past year back to work. Lamberth had ruled on March 7 that Kari Lake, who was President Donald Trump's choice to oversee the bureaucratic parent U.S. Agency for Global Media,didn't have the authorityto reduce VOA to a skeleton.

The Voice of America was established as a news source in World War II, beaming reports to many countries that had no tradition of a free press. Before Trump took office again last year, Voice of Americawas operatingin 49 different languages, heard by an estimated 362 million people.

Trump's team contended that government-run news sources, which also include Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, were an example of bloated government and that they wanted news reporting more favorable to the current administration. With a greatly reduced staff, it currently operates in Iran, Afghanistan, China, North Korea and in countries with a large population of Kurds.

Lamberth, in his decision, said Lake had "repeatedly thumbed her nose" at laws mandating VOA's operation.

Time to turn the page at VOA?

VOA director Michael Abramowitz said legislators in both parties understand the need for a strong operation and have set aside enough funding for the job to be done. "It is time for all parties to come together and work to rebuild and strengthen the agency," he said.

Don't expect that to happen soon. "President Trump was elected to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse across the administration, including the Voice of America — and efforts to improve efficiency at USAGM have been a tremendous success," said White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly. "This will not be the final say on the matter."

Patsy Widakuswara, VOA's White House bureau chief and a plaintiff in the lawsuit to bring it back, said that "restoring the physical infrastructure is going to take a lot of money and some time but it can be done. What is more difficult is recovering from the trauma that our newsroom has gone through."

It's an open question whether the administration wants a real news organization or a mouthpiece, said David Ensor, a former Voice of America director between 2010 and 2014. "We don't know — maybe no one does at the moment — what the future holds," he said.

The administration's efforts over the past year tobolster friendly outletsandfight coveragethat displeases them offer a clue, even though Congress has required that Voice of America be an objective and unbiased news source. This week it was announced that Christopher Wallace, an executive at the conservative network Newsmax who had previously spent 15 years at Fox News Channel, will be the new deputy director at VOA. Abramowitz didn't know he was getting a new deputy until it was announced.

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Widakuswara wouldn't comment on what Wallace's appointment might mean. "I'm not going to pass judgment before seeing his work," she said.

While Lamberth ordered more than a thousand employees on leave to go back to work, it's not clear how many of them moved on to other jobs or retired in the past year. The judge also said he did not have the authority to bring back hundreds of independent contractors who were terminated.

One employee who left is Steve Herman, a former White House bureau chief and national correspondent at VOA and now executive director of the Jordan Center for Journalism Advocacy and Innovation at the University of Mississippi. Despite the court decisions, he questions whether the Trump administration would oversee a return to what the organization used to be.

"I'm a bit of a pessimist," Herman said. "I think it's going to be very difficult."

An administration loath to admit defeat

Besides fighting to shut it down, Trump is loath to admit defeat. Last week, the White House nominated Sarah Rogers, the undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, to run the U.S. Agency for Global Media, putting it more firmly within the administration's control. Her nomination requires Senate approval.

"Is Marco Rubio's State Department going to allow objective journalism in 49 languages?" Herman asked. "I don't think so. I would want that to happen, but that's a fairy tale."

In the budget bill passed in February, Congress set aside $200 million for Voice of America's operation. While that represents about a 25% cut in the agency's previous appropriation, it sent a bipartisan message of support, said Kate Neeper, VOA's director of strategy and performance evaluation. Besides being a plaintiff with Widakuswara in the lawsuit to restore the agency, she has helped some of her colleagues deal with some of their own problems over the past year, including immigration issues.

"There is a lot of enthusiasm for going back to work," she said. "People are eager to show up on Monday."

The hunger for information from Voice of America in Iran when he was director was a clear example of what the organization meant, Ensor said. Surveys showed that between a quarter and a third of Iran's households tuned in to VOA once a week, primarily on satellite television. Occasionally the government would crack down and confiscate satellite dishes, but Iranians could usually quickly find replacements, he said.

"I believe in Voice of America as a news organization and as a voice of America," Ensor said. "It was important, and it can be again."

David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him athttp://x.com/dbauderandhttps://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social.

Judge orders Voice of America be put back together again. What are the chances that will happen?

NEW YORK (AP) — In a strongly wordeddecision this week, a federal judge ordered that the Voice of America — its mission t...
DOJ seeks to drop charges against two officers in Breonna Taylor case

The U.S. Department of Justice filed a motion on March 20 asking a federal judge to drop charges against two former Louisville Metro Police officers involved in drafting the warrant used in the botched raid that killed Breonna Taylor in 2020.

USA TODAY

The Department of Justice charged Kyle Meany and Joshua Jaynes in 2022, with then-U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland saying "Breonna Taylor should be alive today" as he announced charges against them and two other LMPD officers.

However, sinceDonald Trumpreturned to the White House and shook up the Justice Department, federal prosecutors have visibly changed their posture regarding the charges related to Taylor's death, starting with theDOJ requesting a one-day sentencefor former detective Brett Hankison after ajury found him guiltyof violating the 26-year-old ER technician's civil rights.

In the March 20 motion, which was filed on behalf of Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon and Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Robert Keenan, the DOJ mentioned how the court had previouslydowngraded the most serious charges against Meany and Jaynes.

Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon arrives for a news conference at the Justice Department on September 29, 2025 in Washington, DC.

"In light of the foregoing proceedings, the Government undertook a further review of the matter. Based on that review, and the exercise of its discretion, the Government has determined that this case should be dismissed in the interest of justice pursuant to Rule 48(a)," the DOJ wrote, referencing a criminal procedure rule whereby the government can dismiss an indictment or complaint against a defendant.

More:To combat crime, LMPD is making more traffic stops. This map shows where

The DOJ is asking the case be dismissed "with prejudice" — meaning if the motion is granted, it cannot be prosecuted again.

Thomas Clay,the high-powered Louisville attorney representing Jaynes, appeared to be holding back tears of joy when The Courier Journal called. He requested to give a statement to the paper later, but said Jaynes "did absolutely nothing wrong."

Meany's attorney, Michael Denbow, said his client is "incredibly grateful for today's filing" and was "looking forward to putting this matter behind him and moving on with his life."

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LMPD fired Jaynes in 2021 for violatingLMPD's truthfulness and search warrant preparation policiesbylying on the search warrant for Taylor's apartment.

The department terminated Meany in August 2022after he was federally indicted. Thefederal indictment allegedMeany knew false, misleading and out-of-date information was used to get a warrant for Taylor's apartment.

In an opinion downgrading charges against the pair last August, District Judge Charles Simpson III wrote that Taylor's boyfriend firing his gun when the door to Taylor's apartment burst open "directly led to Taylor's fatal wounding by drawing return fire."

Separately, Hankison was sentenced to 33 months in prison in prison in July 2025 for shots he fired during the raid, but in December, afederal judge ordered him to be released pending his appeal process.TheDOJ had asked the court to release Hankisonfrom prison during his appeal process.

A fourth former LMPD officer, Kelly Goodlett,pleaded guilty to helping falsify an affidavit for the warrantas part of a 2022 plea deal. However, she has not been sentenced.

The DOJ's March 20 motion to dismiss came exactly six years and one week after Taylor was shot dead in her apartment.

In a statement, the NAACP Louisville Branch condemned the motion, saying it was "not only callous, but disrespectful to the memory of Breonna Taylor and to her family, who have waited six long years for justice."

The organization added the move "sends a troubling message and risks undermining public trust in our justice system."

Reach Josh Wood at jwood@courier-journal.com

This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal:Breonna Taylor case DOJ seeks to drop charges against Meany, Jaynes

DOJ seeks to drop charges against two officers in Breonna Taylor case

The U.S. Department of Justice filed a motion on March 20 asking a federal judge to drop charges against two former Louis...
Senate votes to end security line perks for members of Congress

The U.S. Senate this week passed a bill that would prohibit members of Congress from bypassing standard airport security screenings at commercial airports.

Scripps News

The vote comes nearly a month into a partial government shutdown that has left Transportation Security Administration employees without pay. The shutdown has contributed to longer security lines due to higher rates of employee call-offs.

The End Special Treatment for Congress at Airports Act passed by unanimous consent and now heads to the House for consideration.

RELATED STORY |Don't let the government shutdown slow you down: How to deal with long TSA lines

The bill would also ban members of Congress from using federal funds to pay for expedited security screenings. While lawmakers can have travel between Washington and their home districts paid for by the government, they would be responsible for covering any costs for faster screenings.

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The bill also specifies that a lawmaker's participation in the Trusted Traveler Program would not be based on their congressional status.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, sponsored the measure.

RELATED STORY |Government funding impasse is making the TSA travel experience even worse

"As many Americans probably don't know — but most of us in Washington do — airports around the country allow members of Congress to bypass the usual TSA security screening process at airports nationwide," Cornyn said. "In other words, they get to skip the line. This should end today.

"Members of Congress are getting an unfair perk. We know trust in Congress is at an all-time low, but today, thank goodness, the Senate has taken an important step toward restoring the trust of the people we are here to represent."

Senate votes to end security line perks for members of Congress

The U.S. Senate this week passed a bill that would prohibit members of Congress from bypassing standard airport security ...
With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, alternative routes pose little help

The effective closure of theStrait of Hormuzduring theIran warhas choked global oil supply. Two key alternatives remain, though any disruption to them could make moving oil out of the Arabian Peninsula "virtually impossible," an analyst said, amid concerns over Iran'stargetingof Gulf countries' energy infrastructure.

ABC News

On a typical day, a significant share of oil exports from the Arabian Peninsula depends on just a handful of critical routes and terminals -- making the system highly vulnerable to disruption, according to Matt Smith, the lead oil analyst at energy consultant group Kpler.

The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway off Iran's southern coast, normally handles about 20% of global oil consumption. In 2024, roughly 20 million barrels per day passed through it, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Since Iran attacked several oil tankers following the start of the war in late February, nearly all shipping traffic through the strait has halted,disrupting global oil markets.

Reuters - PHOTO: Tankers sail in the Gulf, near the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from northern Ras al-Khaimah, near the border with Oman's Musandam governance, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in United Arab Emirates, March 11, 2026.

Two of the most important alternatives to the Strait of Hormuz are Saudi Arabia's East-West pipeline, which terminates at the Red Sea port of Yanbu, and the United Arab Emirates' ADCOP pipeline, which feeds the export terminal at Fujairah, according to Kpler.

At Yanbu, exports have historically averaged around 750,000 barrels per day of crude oil. In recent weeks, however, volumes have surged, according to Kpler.

"It is up to 2.5 million [barrels per day] so far this month, and based on vessels heading there, should climb materially higher than that," Smith said.

Oil and gas prices surge as Iran escalates strikes on Gulf refineries

Meanwhile, the Fujairah terminal typically handles about 1 million barrels per day of crude exports via the ADCOP pipeline. That figure recently spiked to 2.25 million barrels per day before dropping sharply following reported drone strikes in the region, Smith said.

If both Yanbu and Fujairah were compromised, moving oil out of the Arabian Peninsula would become "virtually impossible," according to Smith.

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Map Tiles by Google Earth, GassBuddy, Matt Smith of Kpler - PHOTO: Oil Exports at Risk if Key Arabian Peninsula Routes Are Disrupted

There are only a few limited exceptions: Iran can still export crude through the Strait of Hormuz and from its Jask terminal, located just outside the Strait of Hormuz; and Northern Iraq can move oil via a pipeline from Kirkuk to the Turkish port of Ceyhan, per Kpler.

Oil experts convey a bottom line: beyond those routes, there are no meaningful alternatives — there is no equitable backup plan to the Strait of Hormuz; these alternatives are the limited options left.

Why are your gas prices rising if the US barely imports any oil from the Strait of Hormuz?

Liquefied natural gas presents an even greater vulnerability -- there are effectively "no alternative" export routes outside of the Strait of Hormuz, Smith said.

One of the world's largest liquefied natural gas hubs is in Qatar. The facility, Ras Laffan, was damaged in Iranian strikes this week that reduced Qatar's liquefied natural gas export capacity by 17% and will take up to five years to repair, QatarEnergy's CEO said Thursday.

The Qatari Foreign Ministry condemned the attack, calling it a "dangerous escalation."

Ras Laffan was among severalenergy assetsidentified by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps this week as "legitimate" targets after Israel hit Iran's largest gas field.

The list of IRGC targets includes key oil, refining, and natural gas infrastructure across the region -- including export routes that handle millions of barrels per day.

ABC News' Meredith Deliso contributed to this report.

With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, alternative routes pose little help

The effective closure of theStrait of Hormuzduring theIran warhas choked global oil supply. Two key alternatives remain, ...

 

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