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5 things to know for May 28: Trump accuser, Fresh strikes, Presidential health, Redistricting, Laos cave rescue

Kraig Pakulski 0 8 Article rating: No rating

By Alexandra Banner, CNN

A legal technicality treats online prediction markets differently than traditional sportsbooks or other forms of gambling, which are 21+ in most states. Addiction experts and state regulators say this has opened the door to an emerging public health crisis.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Trump accuser

The Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into E. Jean Carroll, the former magazine columnist who accused President Trump of sexual assault. The investigation focuses on whether Carroll committed perjury in testimony related to her two civil lawsuits against the president. Juries previously awarded Carroll millions of dollars in damages, which Trump is appealing. Read more.

WATCH: What we know about the investigation

2⃣ Fresh strikes

A fragile ceasefire is under threat after Iran and the US traded new strikes earlier today. They were carried out just hours after President Trump vowed to seal a favorable deal to end the war amid fluid negotiations. Read more.

3⃣ Presidential health

President Donald Trump declared everything checked out “PERFECTLY” after his annual physical exam this week, as allies portray the 79-year-old as unusually energetic and sharp despite persistent scrutiny over his health. But even glowing assessments from his doctors have done little to quiet questions about Trump’s medical transparency and fitness. Read more.

MEANWHILE: Jill Biden says she worried Joe Biden was having a stroke during 2024 debate

4⃣ Redistricting

Republicans are heading into the midterms with a significant advantage after aggressively reshaping House maps across the country. The GOP could finish this year’s redistricting battle 10 seats ahead, making it far harder for Democrats to retake the chamber even as President Trump’s popularity hits new lows. Read more.

5⃣ Laos cave rescue

Specialist cave divers racing to rescue a group of villagers trapped in a flooded cave in a remote part of Laos say they are cautiously optimistic that the stranded men could soon be brought to safety. Five of the seven missing villagers were found alive on Wednesday in a deep underground chamber, but a high-stakes extraction lies ahead. Read more.

Breakfast browse

What it’s like to be brainwashed by a cult leader

Three siblings grew up in a cult run by Tony Alamo, a notorious false prophet. Then an FBI raid thrust them into the real world, where rebuilding their lives from scratch proved to be enormously difficult.

King Arthur manuscript goes on sale

A rare medieval manuscript fea

Rain & thunderstorms Thursday, drying & warm weekend

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Cool temperatures and rain are in the forecast Thursday. Many areas have rain chances up to 70% with some of the heaviest rain occurring in San Luis Obispo County. This may impact your early morning commute and some major highways. Use caution and travel slowly. We start to see rain pushing south by lunch time. We will see less than a quart inch of rain in Santa Maria and around a tenth of an inch or Less in Santa Barbara. Thunderstorms are possible in high terrain. Winds will be breezy at times but not up to advisory level. This is a late season and unusually cold system bringing temperatures to the 60s and frigid overnights expected.

We dry out Friday afternoon. Skies return to mostly sunny and temperatures rebound. A few pop up light rain showers are expected but impacts will be dismal. Cool morning temperatures may prompt you to bring an extra layer to work or school. Winds and waves die down and it'll be a great way to start your weekend.

A weekend warm up is ahead as many areas jump back to 70s and 80s with mostly sunny skies. high pressure will keep this summer-like pattern in place through the end of the month of May and well into the month of June. Enjoy!

The post Rain & thunderstorms Thursday, drying & warm weekend appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

‘I made my own coffee’: BP chair hints cost-cutting push led to his ouster as he hits back at ‘lies’

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Albert Manifold is pictured during a Bloomberg TV interview in London

By Hanna Ziady, CNN

London (CNN) — Albert Manifold, the ousted chairman of BP, is refusing to leave quietly, creating a headache for the British oil giant as it seeks to move on from the latest bout of leadership upheaval.

In a blistering response to his removal from the company Thursday, Manifold hit out at allegations about his conduct, calling them “lies.” His nearly 800-word statement suggests that his focus on cost-cutting – including eschewing a chauffeur in favor of public transport – may have made him unpopular at the firm.

BP dismissed Manifold on Tuesday after less than a year in the role, citing “serious concerns” about “governance standards, oversight and conduct,” which it described as “unacceptable.”

BP declined to provide further details, but media reports alleged that there were whistleblower complaints about bullying. A spokesperson for Manifold did not address these allegations specifically when asked by CNN, but referred us to Manifold’s statement in which he said he did not accept that “lies can be told about me.”

The surprise ouster marks the latest round of turmoil at BP, which has suffered flip-flops on strategy and leadership instability in recent years. The company is on its third CEO since 2019.

In his statement, Manifold said that he had sought to defend shareholders’ interests while at BP and call out “unnecessary or excessive expenditure,” including by playing his own part in keeping costs down.

“I had no interest in having a dedicated chauffeur-driven limousine at my beck and call on the occasions that I was in London. I, like most people, walked, took taxis, trains, etc.,” he noted.

“I had no interest in taking private aviation nor in availing myself of corporate tickets for sport events. I made my own coffee, bought my lunch in the local café. I sat in a small office, eschewing the grand corner-office privilege of previous chairmen,” he added.

Manifold said he did these things to set an example during a time in which the company was laying off thousands of employees.

Manifold acknowledged that his priorities, which included streamlining the board to make it more efficient, were “not always shared by everyone,” nor was his approach always welcome.

“Is it possible that in my determination to drive change on costs, performance, the balance sheet and shareholder communications, I pushed hard and challenged people directly? Yes, it is,” he wrote.

“But there is a considerable distance between driving an organisation with urgency and the characterisation of my conduct that is now being put about… I dispute entirely this characterisation of my conduct.”

Manifold said that no one had raised any issues with him about his conduct while he was chairman of BP. The company did not comment on whether it had given him a chance to respond to allegations made against him before removing him, when asked by CNN.

“We note the comments of our former chair. We stand by the statement we have made. We have a duty of care to all our employees, particularly those impacted by his behavior,” BP said in a statement.

The company’s shares have fallen by around 6.5% this week.

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America’s pile of emergency oil is shrinking fast

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By Matt Egan, CNN

New York (CNN) — When he launched his presidential campaign in late 2022, then-candidate Donald Trump blasted his successor for aggressively releasing oil from America’s emergency stockpile ahead of the midterm elections.

“The strategic national reserves, which I filled up, have been virtually drained in order to keep gasoline prices lower, just prior to the election,” Trump said during his 2024 campaign launch at Mar-a-Lago, referring to President Joe Biden’s record-setting releases from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

But now, as voter frustration over high gas prices mounts, President Trump is draining the nation’s pile of emergency oil at an even faster pace than Joe Biden ahead of this year’s midterms.

Not only has the magnitude of SPR releases under Trump surpassed records, but the amount of crude left in the reserve is approaching the lowest levels since the early 1980s. Back then, the United States had a far smaller economy that consumed less energy.

The emergency steps taken this spring underscore the scale of the oil crisis set off by the war with Iran and the scramble around the world to replace crude trapped in the Persian Gulf.

The shrinking pile of emergency oil also serves as a reminder of how US officials will need to refill the SPR afterwards, an endeavor that will keep both demand and prices high.

“This isn’t like a cookie jar. Those barrels have got to be put back at some point and that will lead to higher prices,” said Matt Smith, lead oil analyst at energy intelligence firm Kpler.

SPR is 10% smaller than pre-war

Of course, moments like this are exactly what the SPR is designed for.

Located in a series of underground salt caverns in Texas and Louisiana, the SPR is the world’s largest stockpile of emergency crude. It’s been used by Republican and Democratic presidents alike during wars, hurricanes and other supply disruptions.

For example, Biden aggressively tapped the SPR after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, spiking gasoline prices above $5 a gallon for the first time ever. The amount of oil in the SPR plunged from about 638 million barrels in January 2021 to a 40-year low of 347 million barrels by July 2023, according to federal data.

The effective shutdown in late February of the Strait of Hormuz, the most critical chokepoint for energy in the world, has derailed more than 1.2 billion barrels of crude, according to S&P Global Energy.

To help fill the gap, the SPR released a record 9.9 million barrels (or 2.6%) during the week ending May 15 alone, according to federal data. That marked the second-straight week where SPR balances declined by the most on record.

Since the war with Iran started, the amount of oil in the SPR has dropped by 10% to 374 million barrels – the lowest since July 2024, according to the US Energy Information Administration

Notably, that emergency crude isn’t just supply for US refineries. About half of the crude released in April and May have been exported, according to Kpler estimates.

“The US is basically the supplier of last resort. The rest of the world needs that crude,” Smith said.

Countries in Asia and Europe have been hit particularly hard by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, leading them to turn to US crude as a replacement.

It’s a trend that w

Los republicanos van ganando la guerra de redistribución de distritos con 10 escaños de ventaja sobre los demócratas

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Por Fredreka Schouten, CNN

La batalla que se libra de costa a costa para obtener ventaja en las elecciones de noviembre mediante la manipulación partidista de los distritos electorales está llegando a su fin, y los republicanos están a punto de terminar con hasta 10 escaños de ventaja sobre los demócratas solo gracias a la redistribución de distritos.

El Partido Republicano inició la contienda el año pasado en Texas, modificando los límites de los distritos electorales de la Cámara de Representantes con la esperanza de mejorar sus posibilidades de sobrevivir a una posible victoria demócrata este otoño, a lo que los demócratas respondieron.

La trascendental decisión de la Corte Suprema de Estados Unidos el mes pasado, que debilitó uno de los pilares restantes de la Ley de Derechos Electorales de 1965, impulsó aún más los esfuerzos de redistribución de distritos en todo el Sur.

El fallo llevó a varios estados controlados por los republicanos a cambiar las fechas de las elecciones y eliminar distritos con una importante población afroamericana.

Estas medidas podrían ser una gran ventaja para proteger la escasa mayoría del presidente de la Cámara de Representantes, Mike Johnson, de cara a las elecciones de mitad de mandato.

Pero, independientemente del resultado en noviembre, la batalla por la redistribución de distritos electorales a mitad de década probablemente haya alterado la política estadounidense de forma permanente, alimentando un creciente interés por rediseñar los distritos para obtener ventajas partidistas en cada ciclo electoral, en lugar de cada década después del censo, como es tradicional.

“No existe la normalidad”, afirmó Justin Levitt, profesor de la facultad de derecho de Loyola Marymount y director del sitio web “All About Redistricting”.

Señaló que la serie de fallos del Tribunal Supremo relacionados con las elecciones en los últimos años, incluyendo una opinión de 2019 que declaraba que los tribunales federales no podían controlar la manipulación de distritos electorales con fines partidistas, contribuyeron a allanar el camino para las acciones extremas que ahora se están imponiendo.

“El Tribunal Supremo ha anunciado, en efecto, que los adultos se han marchado”, comentó. “Lo que ves es lo que obtienes cuando premias el mal comportamiento, que es mucho más mal comportamiento”.

Con las primarias ya en marcha en todo el país, ambos partidos se han quedado sin terrenos electorales donde librar nuevas batallas por la redistribución de distritos este año. Sin embargo, se están preparando para una manipulación electoral aún más agresiva en el ciclo electoral de 2028.

Aquí les mostramos en qué punto se encuentra la batalla por la redistribución de distritos:

Los republicanos tienen una escasa mayoría en la Cámara de Representantes de EE.UU., 218-212, incluyendo al recién independizado representante de California, Kevin Kiley, quien aún se une al grupo parlamentario republicano a pesar de haber abandonado el partido en medio de una reñida contienda por la reelección tras la redistribución de distritos.

Los conservadores enfrentan un camino difícil para mantener su control de la Cámara después de las elecciones de noviembre, dado que el partido del presidente generalmente pierde poder en las elecciones de mitad de mandato.

Ante este panorama histórico, los republicanos de Texas iniciaron la campaña de redistribución de distritos electorales a mediados de la década el año pasado, a instancias del presidente Donald Trump.

Aproximadamente diez meses después, los republicanos han modificado los límites

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