In today’s bulletin: the Supreme Court tells the Trump administration to “facilitate” the liberation of a mistaken man misleading to El Salvador. Six people died when a helicopter crashed into the Hudson River in New York City. And a descendant of Harriet Tubman speaks after reviews were made to a federal website on the underground railway. This is what you should know today.
The Supreme Court says that Trump Admin should ‘facilitate’ the liberation of erroneously deported man
The Supreme Court said that the Trump administration must “facilitate” the release of Kilmar Abrego García, Maryland’s man who was erroneously deported to a prison in El Salvador, days after the judges said the Trump administration did not need to meet a deadline for Monday night to return it to the United States.
Yesterday’s decision grants in part and partly rejects the emergency request of the Department of Justice that content with the order of a judge of the District Court that Abrego García recovers from a prison where he was sent with other men who were allegedly members of the Venezuela Train of Aragua gang. That means that the Trump administration does not have to try to return Abrego García because a deadline imposed by the judge had already expired. But the administration “must be prepared to share what it can with respect to the steps it has taken and the perspective of more steps.”
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The decision could give Venezuelans who were deported without due process before the courts intervened.
Immigration officials claim that Abrego García, who illegally entered the United States, is a member of the MS-13 gang, but have admitted that he should not have been sent to El Salvador, qualifying him as an “administrative error.” In 2019, an immigration judge ruled that Abrego García could not be deported to El Salvador because there was “a clear probability of future persecution.”
Read the full story here.
More immigration coverage:
- A memorandum of Secretary of State Marco Rubio He cites the beliefs of Mahmoud Khalil By justifying the deportation of the pro-palestinian activist. An immigration judge is expected to decide at a hearing today if Khalil can be eliminated from the United States
- The Department of Justice presented a motion to eliminate all charges Against a Salvadoran man that Attorney General Pam Bondi described two weeks ago as a MS-13 gang leader.
- A requirement that all in the US must be illegally registered with the government Enter in effect today After a federal judge allowed the Trump administration to advance with the new rule.
More politics news:
- Triumph dodged a journalist’s question On a fall in the stock market, but acknowledged that their tariffs will raise “transition problems.”
- China has raised its tariffs on US assets at 125%, declaring that The imports from the United States are no longer “commercially viable” In the last commercial war escalation between the two largest economies in the world.
- Congress Democrats question whether Trump and his allies may have participated in domestic trade.
- The representative Elise Stefanik was promised that he could claim his place in the Chamber’s Intelligence Committee when Trump withdrew his nomination as an ambassador of the United States to the United Nations. Two weeks later, Tensions are bubbling While the president of the House of Representatives, Mike Johnson, fights to discover how to fulfill that promise.
- The Office of the Inspector General of the Department of Education will review the recent mass dismissals While Trump seeks to dismantle the department.
- Trump’s actions this week against Chris Krebs, the former director of the cybersecurity and infrastructure security agency, has left some employees feeling that they are under attack.
- The former head of the British Intelligence Agency MI6 You have some tips for Trump: If you want the Nobel Peace Prize, you should wait by negotiating a high fire between Ukraine and Russia.
Spanish couple appointed as victims in a fatal clash of New York helicopters
New York authorities appointed two of the six victims who died when a tourist helicopter crashed into Hudson on Thursday afternoon when Agustín Escobar and Merce Camprubi Montal, a married couple from Spain.
A City Hall spokesman said overnight that the couple was among the three adults and three children who died in the accident. The names of the other victims have not yet been formally launched.
It was believed that the three children were the children of the couple and the third adult victim was the pilot.
Escobar was a senior executive of the German technology firm Siemens and was CEO of the railway infrastructure in its Siemens mobility division. It was previously CEO and president of Siemens Spain, according to an announcement of the company.
The calls to the 911 operators rushed at 3:17 pm on Thursday when the tourist helicopter lost control shortly after he turned to the George Washington bridge to move along the coast of New Jersey.
The video showed the body of the helicopter immersing himself in the water, apparently after losing his propeller. The witnesses said they heard a strong sound, that a person described as a possible engine failure, before seeing that the helicopter went down. This is what we know most.
Dancer imprisoned by Russia returns to the United States
Ksenia Karelina, a former dancer who had been living in Los Angeles before being arrested in Russia for a charity donation of $ 51.80, returned to the United States on Thursday night after an exchange of prisoners. Karelina was arrested in February 2024 and sentenced 12 years in a criminal colony for “high treason” for accusations that financially supported the military of Ukraine. The Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, said he had been unfairly arrested.
Karelina was seen smiling when she left the plane, which landed last night at the Andrews joint base near Washington, DC, and was hugged by people who were waiting for her outside the plane. Read more on the exchange of prisoners that allowed their return.
Maine High School in Trump’s War Center against Students Trans athletes
When a state politician in Maine in February turned to social networks to complain about a transgender girl who won a pole jumping event at a high school meeting, President Donald Trump and his administration realized.
Now, Grelyly High School is in the center of a conflict over Title IX, the Civil Rights Law that prohibits discrimination based on sex in education. The Trump administration has threatened to obtain more than $ 200 million in annual funds for Maine if the State does not meet today an executive order that effectively prohibited transgender students to participate in sports of girls and women.
The strangers see the confrontation as an important evidence of to what extent the administration will go to the states to follow the executive orders. Meanwhile, Grelyy’s students and families, located in Portland’s suburbs, anxiously expect their destiny.
“We are obtaining what it feels like the hatred of high -ranking people in the government, and is going down to children who really do not have much power or say,” said a second year student in the athletics team that supports the right of transgender students to compete. Read the full story here.
read all about it
- An airplane that transports at least six members of the house He was cut by another plane on the ground at Reagan National Airport.
- A federal accusation accuses Sean “Diddy” Peines to hang someone on a balcony In an accusation that is surprisingly similar to a meeting alleged in separate demands that two women presented.
- The founder of Barstool Sports, Dave Portnoy, said he is sad for the popular website Paper in the spread of a false viral rumor That an Ole Miss student said he ruined his life.
- The bassist’s wife in Weezer, who was shot by the police. accused of shooting the officers While looking in their neighborhood in Los Angeles in search of suspects of abuse.
Staff selection: Harriet Tubman’s descendant speaks after the website reviews

Rita Daniels has dedicated himself to preserving the legacy of the famous director of the underground railroad: his great -great grandmother, Harriet Tubman. So it was devastated to know in February that the National Parks Service drastically altered a web page in Tocman and the underground railway, diluting language around slavery and racism in the United States. “I destroyed me” Daniels said exclusively to reporter Curtis Bunn.
The NPS has restored the original wording after public indignation, but the website was only one of the thousands on federal websites that have been eliminated or changed to cut anything that can be considered from the DEI. “My question is: why do you want to erase our black history?” Daniels asked. “Why are we a threat to certain Americans?” – Michelle GarcíaNBC BLK editorial director
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