Today in News History

On July 13, several notable moments in the history of News stand out. In 1402, Nanjing surrenders to Zhu Di without a fight, ending the Jingnan campaign. The Jianwen Emperor disappears and his family is incarcerated. In 1821, Nathan Bedford Forrest, American general and first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan (died 1877) was born. In 1863, American Civil War: The New York City draft riots begin three days of rioting which will later be regarded as the worst in United States history. In 1919, William F. Quinn, American lawyer (died 2006) was born. In 1939, Lambert Jackson Woodburne, South African admiral (died 2013) was born. In 1973, Watergate scandal: Alexander Butterfield reveals the existence of a secret Oval Office taping system to investigators for the Senate Watergate Committee. In 1977, New York City: Amidst a period of financial and social turmoil experiences an electrical blackout lasting nearly 24 hours that leads to widespread fires and looting. In 2011, Mumbai is rocked by three bomb blasts during the evening rush hour, killing 26 and injuring 130. In 2024, President of the United States Donald Trump is injured in an assassination attempt while speaking at an election campaign rally near Butler, Pennsylvania. In 2024, Thomas Matthew Crooks, American student, known for attempting to assassinate former US President Donald Trump (born 2003) passed away. Together, these milestones provide historical context for today's news news and ongoing narratives.

“The inmates are safe”: NSS dismisses claims Blue House fire affected detention facility

Eye Radio

Eye Radio

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July 8, 2026

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The National Security Service (NSS) has dismissed reports alleging that a detention facility was affected by the fire that broke out at its Internal Security Bureau headquarters, popularly known as the Blue House, early Wednesday. Speaking to journalists at the scene, the spokesperson of the National Security Service’s Internal Security Bureau, David John Kumuri, said [] The post “The inmates are safe”: NSS dismisses claims Blue House fire affected detention facility appeared first on Eye Radio.

Narrative Intelligence Brief

This article was published by Eye Radio, a source frequently categorized with a center bias based in South Sudan. Our narrative intelligence engine continuously monitors coverage from this outlet to track framing, bias, and rhetorical patterns. Our initial algorithmic scan of this specific piece did not flag high-confidence rhetorical techniques, suggesting a generally straightforward reporting style or neutral framing. By understanding the editorial perspective of Eye Radio, readers can better contextualize the information presented and compare it across our broader media matrix to find the real narrative.

Analysis Methodology
This narrative analysis was generated using the CoDataLab Global Intelligence Engine. Our proprietary AI scans thousands of cross-border sources to identify sentiment patterns, framing techniques, and potential media bias. While AI provides the data-driven foundation, our objective is to empower readers with additional context beyond the standard headline.The content displayed above is a structured summary designed for rapid information processing. For the full original report, please visit the source outlet.

How other outlets are covering this story

Compare narratives across 35 related reports from 35 sources. Real Narrative News aggregates the coverage spectrum so you can see who emphasises what — bias tags reflect the outlet, not the story.

Coverage bias distribution

35 sources

Left 46%

Center 11%

Right 31%


The Paris News (search feed)

Unknown

· Jul 12, 2026

Jacqueline Short working to make a difference at Lamar County Sheriff’s Office

The Lamar County Sheriff’s Office is making returning to jail less common with the addition of Jackie Short, the department’s social worker.

The Daily Beast

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· Jun 23, 2026

Justice Flames SCOTUS Giving Trump a ‘Blank Check’ on Green Cards

Tom Williams-Pool/Getty ImagesJustice Ketanji Brown Jackson flamed her conservative colleagues’ “misguided” decision to make it easier for border agents to detain green card holders returning to the country.Justice Jackson wrote a scathing dissent after the court ruled 6-3 in favor of permitting agents to treat returning permanent residents as “applicants for admission,” making them susceptible to detainment based on unproven criminal allegations.“I worry that the Court has now handed the Government a massive blank check,” she wrote.Read more at The Daily Beast.

Jamaica Observer

Unknown

· Jul 3, 2026

Arizona toddler found alive in morgue hours after being declared dead

An 18-month-old Arizona boy who was pronounced dead after a near-drowning was later found alive in a hospital morgue, nearly six hours after doctors declared his death.According to NBC News, the incident occurred on February 8 at Mercy Gilbert Medical Center, where Vincent Lorenzo Fiordilino was taken after being found face down in his family's swimming pool. He was pronounced dead at 6:20 pm but was discovered breathing when medical examiners arrived to collect his body at 11:52 pm. He was then airlifted to Phoenix Children's Hospital.Gilbert Police said the child survived and has since been released from hospital.Authorities have recommended that his parents face child abuse charges, alleging they may not have realised the toddler had wandered to the pool because they were impaired by marijuana or other mind-altering substances. The police report states both parents admitted to smoking marijuana earlier that day.NBC News reported that the case is under investigation by the Maricopa County Attorney's Office. Mercy Gilbert Medical Center has also conducted an internal investigation but has not released its findings.A police report obtained by NBC affiliate KPNX alleged that the emergency room doctor declared the child dead despite concerns from officers and family members who said the boy was still gasping for air. Hospital staff reportedly attributed the movements to agonal breathing.More than four hours after the child was placed in the morgue, medical examiners found him breathing, prompting his immediate transfer to Phoenix Children's Hospital.According to NBC News, a crowdfunding page created by the family says the child avoided serious brain damage but continues to require medical monitoring and extensive therapy.

Washington Examiner

lean right

· Jun 22, 2026

Supreme Court to review if inmate can sue over lack of medical help after prison riot

The Supreme Court will weigh whether an inmate can sue prison officials for allegedly not giving adequate medical treatment following a prison riot, a possibly key case for determining the scope of prisoners’ Eighth Amendment protections against cruel and unusual punishments. The high court announced that it will hear the case Nielsen v. Watanabe in []

Mississippi Free Press

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· Jun 25, 2026

Hundreds of Calls for Help: What 911 Logs Reveal About the Jackson Local Jail

From assaults to suicide attempts, emergency calls can be a sign of problems that jails can’t handle on their own. The post Hundreds of Calls for Help: What 911 Logs Reveal About the Jackson Local Jail appeared first on Mississippi Free Press.

DNyuz

lean right

· Jun 27, 2026

Con Air: Crooks using drones to smuggle drugs, phones, weapons into prisons

New York prison officials are sounding the alarm after drones dropped packages stuffed with cell phones, drugs and weapons into two upsstate correctional facilities in less than two months — a security threat that Gov. Kathy Hochul moved recently to address with new legislation. The latest incidents occurred at Wallkill and Sing Sing prisons, where []

KTLA 5

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· Jul 7, 2026

Hazmat crews respond to Irvine home of teen whose science lab sparked FBI probe

Orange County authorities and the FBI responded Tuesday to a hazmat situation in the same Irvine neighborhood searched by federal agents in March after a teenager’s science experiment triggered a dayslong investigation. Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/ktla?sub_confirmation=1

Democracy Now!

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· Jul 1, 2026

Reparations Efforts "Sweeping the Country" Despite DOJ Attack on Evanston, IL Groundbreaking Program

The Department of Justice is attempting to sabotage a reparations initiative that compensates victims of historic housing discrimination in Evanston, Illinois. For decades, Black residents of Evanston were subjected to redlining and other forms of housing discrimination, which prevented them from obtaining bank loans to purchase property. “Throughout the 20th century and into the 21st century, housing has been the primary way that families have built wealth, and we are in a country where there is 10 times as much wealth in the white community as there is in the Black community. [T]hat gap is a result, primarily, of this type of dispossession on the grounds of housing,” explains Howard University law professor Justin Hansford. Evanston’s reparations program, funded through donations and a local tax on recreational marijuana sales, grants Black residents and their descendants up to 25,000 for property down payments, mortgages, home repairs and other related fees. It is the first of its kind in any U.S. city and seen as a model for similar initiatives across the country and the world. “The effort to bring a lawsuit to stop this particular program is meant to send a message to programs in cities and states around the country that this is something that is dangerous or illegal,” says Hansford, who is helping Evanston city officials defend their reparations program from the DOJ’s claims that its race-based criteria are unconstitutional. “We want to make sure that everyone knows that it is constitutional to pursue reparations in the United States.”

Los Angeles Times

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· Jul 8, 2026

Immigrant detainees in California win key workplace safety settlement

A settlement announced this week now affirms that private immigrant detention facilities are subject to California's workplace safety and health requirements.

BNO News

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· Jun 21, 2026

How Bail Bond Services Help Navigate the Pretrial Release Process

The pretrial release process affects thousands of individuals each year, and the need for effective release options is particularly important in Franklin County, Ohio. Local justice initiatives have highlighted the growing focus on reducing unnecessary jail stays and connecting eligible individuals with community-based resources. Franklin County was also recognized as one of only seven counties [] The post How Bail Bond Services Help Navigate the Pretrial Release Process appeared first on BNO News.

Cincinnati CityBeat

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· Jun 25, 2026

More than 130 medical calls made from Butler County, Ohio jail since ICE deal, records show

More than 130 medical calls have been made from the Butler County, Ohio jail since their Immigration and Customs Enforcement contract resumed last year, records obtained by the Ohio Capital Journal show, a 25 increase from the year before. Located in Hamilton, Ohio, the Butler County jail is separated into three facilities: the Corrections Center [] The post More than 130 medical calls made from Butler County, Ohio jail since ICE deal, records show appeared first on Cincinnati CityBeat.

Nepal News

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· Jul 9, 2026

नक्कली प्रहरी बनेर सर्वसाधारणलाई धम्की दिने आलेमगर पक्राउ

काठमाडौँ । नक्कली प्रहरीको परिचय दिँदै सर्वसाधारणलाई धम्की तथा दुःख दिएको आरोपमा प्रहरीले एक जनालाई पक्राउ गरेको छ । पक्राउपर्नेमा नुवाकोटको बेलकोटगढी नगरपालिका–१२ घर भई हाल काठमाडौँ महानगरपालिका–६ हात्तीगौँडा बस्दै आएका ३८ वर्षीय राजकुमार आलेमगर रहेका छन् । जिल्ला प्रहरी परिसर काठमाडौँका प्रवक्ता एवं प्रहरी उपरीक्षक पवनकुमार भट्टराईका अनुसार आलेमगरले आफू ‘अपराध महाशाखाबाट एसपी दिलीप []

Mother Jones

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· Jul 7, 2026

DHS Is Spending $1.5 Billion to Block ICE Oversight

The Department of Homeland Security has purchased two privately-run detention facilities from the for-profit prison company CoreCivic, the company announced Monday, in a move that may serve to shield the facilities from state oversight. DHS bought the two Southern California prisons, Otay Mesa Detention Center and California City Detention Center, for about 1.5 billion on []

Off The Press

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· Jul 8, 2026

Feds buy two immigration detention centers for $1.5 billion

Private prison operator CoreCivic has sold two Southern California immigration detention centers to the federal government for 1.5 billion. Under the deal, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security takes ownership of the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego County for 739.2 million and the California City Detention Facility in Kern County for 732.6 million. []...Click to read more

Korea Times News

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· Jul 8, 2026

Restore voting rights for former prisoners

Restore voting rights for former prisoners

Raw Story

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· Jun 29, 2026

Chaos as jail overtaken by inmates who 'overpowered' guards

A group of inmates overpowered the three guards overseeing the Bertie-Martin Regional Detention Center in Windsor, North Carolina, authorities reported on Monday.According to The Associated Press, the inmates took two guards captive and the third guard escaped, after which more than 20 law enforcement agencies arrived and negotiated the release of the two guards along with 80 inmates, leaving only eight inmates inside. Per Bertie County Sheriff Tyrone Ruffin, state officials entered the jail and are securing the remaining inmates, and there is no threat to the general public.The two guards who were held captive are undergoing medical treatment but [Ruffin] had no details about their injuries, according to the report.“Right now we have a lot going on that we’re trying to get under control,” said Ruffin, who did not answer what triggered the uprising or why the facility only had three guards on duty at the time of the incident.He added that regarding the cause of the incident, “I will release that information to the public as soon as I can.”

NPR News

lean left

· Jun 23, 2026

This man is a bus driver and grandfather. A Supreme Court ruling could reimprison him

Anthony Bailey's case is one of about a dozen that could be directly affected by a Supreme Court ruling limiting how prisoners can use the compassionate release program to get out early.

The Independent

lean left

· Jun 26, 2026

DHS head admits Noem-led agency rushed to buy $1B worth of warehouses without ‘due diligence’

The secretary of Homeland Security admitted that some warehouses, purchased by his predecessor, would likely never be turned into detention centers because of their locations or other issues

Egyptian Streets

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· Jul 5, 2026

Court Sentences Physician Omnia Sweidan to Suspended Six-Month Prison Term Over Shatby Hospital Posts

The economic misdemeanor court in Alexandria has sentenced physician Omnia Sweidan today on 4 July to six months in prison with hard labor, suspended for three years, after convicting her of publishing false news related to Alexandria University’s Shatby Hospital. The court also imposed a fine of EGP 20,000 (USD 405) and ordered Sweidan to pay legal expenses. She was acquitted of a second charge of using an electronic account to commit the alleged offense, while the related civil case was referred to the competent civil court. The case arose after social media posts and subsequent media coverage alleged ethical and professional violations at Shatby Hospital, a teaching hospital affiliated with Alexandria University. According to the Public Prosecution, the investigation was launched after authorities reviewed the circulated claims and received a complaint from the Director of Legal Affairs at Alexandria University Hospitals, who stated that the hospital had received no complaints from patients regarding the alleged incidents. Prosecutors said a technical examination identified Sweidan as the owner of the social media account that published the posts. During the investigation, Sweidan acknowledged publishing the post under scrutiny. She told prosecutors thatContinue reading Court Sentences Physician Omnia Sweidan to Suspended Six-Month Prison Term Over Shatby Hospital Posts The post Court Sentences Physician Omnia Sweidan to Suspended Six-Month Prison Term Over Shatby Hospital Posts first appeared on Egyptian Streets.

Illinois Policy Institute

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· Jul 8, 2026

Paul Vallas: Making the SAFE-T Act safe

The well-intentioned law must be adjusted to deny pretrial release to repeat violent offenders and those suspected of violent crimes. The post Paul Vallas: Making the SAFE-T Act safe appeared first on Illinois Policy.

BoingBoing

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· Jul 7, 2026

ICE buys the cages, private prison company keeps the keys

CoreCivic just sold two of California's largest immigrant detention centers to the federal government for 1.5 billion, then apparently got hired to keep running the place. CalMatters reports that CoreCivic sold the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego County and the California City Detention Facility in Kern County to the Department of Homeland Security on July 2. — Read the rest The post ICE buys the cages, private prison company keeps the keys appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Real Deal

Unknown

· Jul 4, 2026

Alexander brothers swept into contraband probe at Brooklyn detention center

An inmate at the Brooklyn jail where the Alexander brothers are detained has been accused of allowing other prisoners, including Oren Alexander, to use his contraband cellphone. Federal prosecutors charged David Motovich, a convicted fraudster and former owner of a lumberyard in Midwood, with possessing an illegal phone in a complaint unveiled earlier this week. The document includes a selfie of Motovich with another man, who the New York Times identified as Oren, though his face is redacted. The Times report also revealed that all three brothers were found to have been using contraband cellphones, though none of them has []This article originally appeared on The Real Deal. Click here to read the full story.

The Malta Independent

lean right

· Jun 26, 2026

Arraignment halted after accused found to have tuberculosis

An arraignment was temporarily suspended on Friday after it emerged that a man due to face charges in connection with a home robbery was undergoing treatment for tuberculosis.The 63-year-old accused appeared in Hall 14 wearing a face mask, prompting questions about his health.The prosecuting inspector told the court he had only just been informed of the man's contagious medical condition.It was then revealed that the accused had tuberculosis and was taking around 20 pills a day as part of his treatment.This is the second time prison authorities have failed to inform us about these issues, the presiding magistrate remarked.A previous incident involved an accused person with scabies, whose condition had not been disclosed to the court or the prosecution.Arraigned for a home robbery The man was being charged in connection with an alleged burglary in which 400 in cash and a mobile phone were stolen from a residence.The man allegedly left his mobile phone at the house he robbed.The arraignment was briefly suspended while the court sought guidance from the Superintendence of Public Health.After learning of the diagnosis, the court ordered that the accused be held in isolation in the court's underlying holding cells until medical advice was received.Magistrate Ann Marie Thake sought clarification through Court Services Agency CEO Vanessa Grech, who contacted the Superintendence of Public Health for advice on how to proceed.When the other arraignments resumed, the magistrate informed the court that public health officials had advised there was no cause for concern.

OpsLens

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· Jul 8, 2026

‘Send the fraudsters to prison’: Watch JD Vance crack down on hucksters in Milwaukee * WorldNetDaily * by WND Staff

Source link ‘Send the fraudsters to prison’: Watch JD Vance crack down on hucksters in Milwaukee * WorldNetDaily * by WND Staff Skip to content Est. 1997 Est. 1997

Vanguard News

lean left

· Jun 24, 2026

Court sent Sowore to prison, not us — DSS

From the foregoing, it is clear that the issues which led to the revocation of his bail and his subsequent remand arose entirely from court processes, as the Service neither arrested him nor opposed his bail application, the statement said. The post Court sent Sowore to prison, not us — DSS appeared first on Vanguard News.

Defector

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· Jun 23, 2026

Life As An Undocumented Trans Sex Worker In The Age Of ICE

In March, Vivian, an undocumented transgender sex worker from the state of Chiapas, Mexico, was driving from San Diego to her house in Santa Ana when her biggest fear came true: She was stopped by Immigration and Customs Enforcement at a traffic checkpoint. Thank God they let me go, she says. But she fears one day they might not. Last year her friend Sadis was working at a hotel in Saddleback, N.J, when police attempted to detain her. She jumped into an Uber to try to get away, Vivian says. Police caught up. Sadis was arrested, handed over to DHS, and sent back to Honduras. A week after arriving she was tortured, possibly by gang members; they were never caught. They threw her off a bridge like an animal, Vivian says. Sadis didn't survive. Though Vivian has an asylum case pending in New York, that is no guarantee that in the meantime she won't be sent to a detention center or deported, as so many have as they await their hearings. The legal asylum process can take years as court dates are delayed because judges have been fired and immigration courts are closing, says Isa Noyola of the Transgender Law Center, where she directs their Border Butterflies Project, an LGBTQ+ immigration services program that has offices in Oakland and Tijuana. There is a backlog of 3,288,166 cases in immigration courts nationwide, according to Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse.

India Today

lean right

· Jun 21, 2026

Inside CISF's tech-driven security overhaul of J&K's high-risk jails

Inside CISF's tech-driven security overhaul of JK's high-risk jails

Jezebel

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· Jul 9, 2026

Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, Hard-Working Father of Three, Killed by Federal Agents on His Way to Work

“No one is safe when ICE is present,” Carly Pérez Fernández of Detention Watch Network told Jezebel in a statement. “Whether on the streets or in one of the agency’s more than 200 abuse-ridden detention facilities.”

Bisnow News

Unknown

· Jul 6, 2026

ICE Pays CoreCivic $1.5B For 2 Detention Facilities

The Department of Homeland Security has purchased two California detention centers for 1.5B. The 2,560-bed California City Detention Facility and 1,994-bed Otay Mesa Detention Center cost the federal government 732.6M and 739.2M, respectively. That's...

RAPPLER

lean left

· Jun 22, 2026

Call for safer schools, thorough probe: Reactions after deadly Tacloban school shooting

Groups say making schools safer does not only mean beefing up security measures alone

The New Zealand Herald

lean right

· Jul 8, 2026

Reopened police files include cases where children may have been left at risk

Reopened police files include cases where children may have been left at risk

RedState

right

· Jun 23, 2026

Rioters Stormed This Federal Building - Now a Judge Wants the Security Fence Gone.

Rioters Stormed This Federal Building - Now a Judge Wants the Security Fence Gone.

The Daily Wire

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· Jul 8, 2026

Judge Who Helped Illegal Evade ICE Gets No Prison Time

She helped an illegal immigrant sneak out of a courthouse where Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents were waiting to carry out an arrest. Despite being convicted, the former Wisconsin judge was just spared from serving time in prison. At a sentencing hearing Wednesday, former Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan received no prison ...

ArcaMax

lean right

· Jun 29, 2026

Changes to immigration program for domestic violence victims impede safety, advocates say

In March, Michigan attorney Ruby Robinson received a denial notice for legal status for his client — an immigrant woman suffering physical abuse from her husband. Her husband had choked her, Robinson said. Shoved her. Forced unwanted touch. ...

GameSpot

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· Jul 1, 2026

Popular Steam Wallpaper Program Removes App Over Malware Concerns

Wallpaper Engine has been a popular wallpaper tool on Steam for the better part of a decade since its release. However, the tool's application wallpaper was apparently hijacked by bad actors months ago who used it to infect users' machines with malware as the desktop wallpaper program ran in the background. Now, Wallpaper Engine's application is going to be permanently removed from the program over those malware concerns. In a statement on Steam, the program's developers stated that users have a limited time to back up any wallpapers used from the application before the app is removed on Monday, July 6. The devs also note that removing the app only affects 0.5 of all wallpapers with actual user numbers being much lower than even that. The reality is that executable files cannot be reliably secured with automated systems, reads the statement. There will always be blind spots and ways for people to bypass them. As many of you know, we recently saw people trying to use this old feature to spread malware. At the end of the day, keeping a feature around that lets anyone easily share random .exe files on the Workshop is a risk we are no longer willing to take. A report on Securlist published earlier this month brought this issue to light and contends that malware had been inserted in the Wallpaper Engine's application as far back as late 2025. The malware could reportedly hijack Steam accounts, cripple hard drives, insert hidden crypto miners, or use ransomware to encrypt important users' data. There have been a handful of games removed from Steam over similar malware issues, including Beyond the Dark last spring. The issue has even drawn the attention of the FBI, which announced an investigation into multiple infected titles on Steam.

Topics:

World · 18
Politics · 10
Unknown · 2
Business · 2
Sports · 1

Related coverage for "“The inmates are safe”: NSS dismisses claims Blue House fire affected detention facility": The Paris News (search feed) — Jacqueline Short working to make a difference at Lamar County Sheriff’s Office. The Daily Beast — Justice Flames SCOTUS Giving Trump a ‘Blank Check’ on Green Cards. Jamaica Observer — Arizona toddler found alive in morgue hours after being declared dead. Washington Examiner — Supreme Court to review if inmate can sue over lack of medical help after prison riot. Mississippi Free Press — Hundreds of Calls for Help: What 911 Logs Reveal About the Jackson Local Jail. DNyuz — Con Air: Crooks using drones to smuggle drugs, phones, weapons into prisons. KTLA 5 — Hazmat crews respond to Irvine home of teen whose science lab sparked FBI probe. Democracy Now! — Reparations Efforts "Sweeping the Country" Despite DOJ Attack on Evanston, IL Groundbreaking Program. Los Angeles Times — Immigrant detainees in California win key workplace safety settlement. BNO News — How Bail Bond Services Help Navigate the Pretrial Release Process. Cincinnati CityBeat — More than 130 medical calls made from Butler County, Ohio jail since ICE deal, records show. Nepal News — नक्कली प्रहरी बनेर सर्वसाधारणलाई धम्की दिने आलेमगर पक्राउ. Mother Jones — DHS Is Spending $1.5 Billion to Block ICE Oversight. Off The Press — Feds buy two immigration detention centers for $1.5 billion. Korea Times News — Restore voting rights for former prisoners. Raw Story — Chaos as jail overtaken by inmates who 'overpowered' guards. NPR News — This man is a bus driver and grandfather. A Supreme Court ruling could reimprison him. The Independent — DHS head admits Noem-led agency rushed to buy $1B worth of warehouses without ‘due diligence’. Egyptian Streets — Court Sentences Physician Omnia Sweidan to Suspended Six-Month Prison Term Over Shatby Hospital Posts. Illinois Policy Institute — Paul Vallas: Making the SAFE-T Act safe. BoingBoing — ICE buys the cages, private prison company keeps the keys. The Real Deal — Alexander brothers swept into contraband probe at Brooklyn detention center. The Malta Independent — Arraignment halted after accused found to have tuberculosis. OpsLens — ‘Send the fraudsters to prison’: Watch JD Vance crack down on hucksters in Milwaukee * WorldNetDaily * by WND Staff. Vanguard News — Court sent Sowore to prison, not us — DSS. Defector — Life As An Undocumented Trans Sex Worker In The Age Of ICE. India Today — Inside CISF's tech-driven security overhaul of J&K's high-risk jails. Jezebel — Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, Hard-Working Father of Three, Killed by Federal Agents on His Way to Work. Bisnow News — ICE Pays CoreCivic $1.5B For 2 Detention Facilities. RAPPLER — Call for safer schools, thorough probe: Reactions after deadly Tacloban school shooting. The New Zealand Herald — Reopened police files include cases where children may have been left at risk. RedState — Rioters Stormed This Federal Building - Now a Judge Wants the Security Fence Gone.. The Daily Wire — Judge Who Helped Illegal Evade ICE Gets No Prison Time. ArcaMax — Changes to immigration program for domestic violence victims impede safety, advocates say. GameSpot — Popular Steam Wallpaper Program Removes App Over Malware Concerns