Santa Barbara County News and Events

Faulty drug tests, forgotten archives, longest freshwater migration: Catch up on the day’s stories

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By Jordan D. Brown, Toni Odejimi, CNN

👋 Welcome to 5 Things PM! They tried everything in modern medicine, and nothing worked. Now, these women are turning to medical marijuana for help.

Here’s what else you might have missed during your busy day.

5 things

1⃣ False positives

Speaking of drugs, one state is pushing back against commonly used field tests that experts say lead to tens of thousands of wrongful arrests each year. From a toddler’s ashes misidentified as methamphetamine or ecstasy to a great‑grandmother’s medication testing positive for cocaine, the errors are startling.

2⃣ A splintering movement

As people in some corners of the internet cheered the recent attack on the home of OpenAI’s CEO, the incident may have exposed a dark underbelly of the anti-AI movement.

3⃣ Forgotten archive

More than 80 years after World War II, an incredible trove of documents from a prestigious art school reveals photographs, letters and artwork from applicants hoping to escape Nazism.

4⃣ Continent-spanning voyage

The dorado catfish has the world’s longest freshwater migration. It’s also one of the most endangered. Amazon nations are uniting to save it.

5⃣ Decades of tourism

“The Godfather” descended on a tiny Sicilian village in 1971, and it’s never been the same. Savoca — where fewer than 100 people live — remains closely tied to the film.

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🪂 Caught up: Three parachutists aimed to glide into Virginia Tech’s Lane Stadium at the start of Saturday’s football game. Only one managed to stick the landing.

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📷 ‘Grab your camera’: Prince, one of the world’s most enigmatic musicians, was famously private. One photographer was granted rare access — capturing moments no one else could. Take a look.

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High-level US delegation visits Cuba as Trump ups pressure

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By Jennifer Hansler, CNN

(CNN) — A senior US delegation met with Cuban government officials in Cuba as the Trump administration ramps up its efforts to pressure Havana into a deal as it continues to exert its economic chokehold on the island.

It was the one of the highest-level visits of US officials in roughly a decade and comes as President Donald Trump continues to raise the specter of potential military action. It also comes as Cuba’s economic crisis continues to deepen amid sharp restrictions, including on fuel, from the US administration. Cuba’s president, meanwhile, has made increasingly defiant calls to resist US military aggression in recent days.

The senior State Department delegation, which visited the island in recent weeks, stressed that time was running out for Havana “to make key US backed reforms before circumstances irreversibly worsen,” a US State Department official told CNN.

It was the first time a US government aircraft touched down in Cuba – other than at the US base in Guantanamo Bay – since 2016, when former President Barack Obama visited amid an effort to expand relations with Havana.

According to the State Department official, the US delegation stressed “Cuba’s need to make significant economic and governance reforms to enhance competitiveness, attract foreign investment, and allow private sector-led growth.”

They discussed a proposal to bring Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite internet to Cuba, as well as proposals to compensate US people and corporations “for confiscated assets and properties” – something that would likely be welcomed by the Cuban diaspora in the United States.

The delegation put forward demands that the Cuban government release political prisoners and increase “political freedoms” for the population, the State Department official said. They also expressed concerns “about foreign intelligence, military, and terror groups operating with Cuban governmental permission less than 100 miles from the American homeland,” the official said.

The official declined to provide details on the members of the delegation. They noted that one senior State Department official met separately with Raul Castro’s grandson during the visit.

On Monday, a top Cuban official confirmed that a meeting between Cuban and US delegations “was recently held” on the island.

Speaking to state media, Alejandro García del Toro described the meeting as “respectful and professional,” and said that “eliminating the energy blockade against the country was a top priority for our delegation.”

In later March, the Trump administration allowed a Russian-flagged oil tanker into Cuban waters, breaking the fuel blockade, saying: “They have to survive.” The White House afterward said this was “not a policy change.” Still, the overall blockade has significantly hamstrung the island.

Meanwhile, Trump has repeatedly suggested that the US could pursue military action against Havana, following what he has described as a significant military success against Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela.

“In January, our warriors flew straight into the heart of the Venezuelan capital, captured the outlaw dictator Nicolás Maduro and brought him to face American justice,” Trump said at an event Friday. “And pretty soon, this great strength will bring about a day 70 years and waiting. It’s called a new dawn for Cuba.”

Embattled Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, while commemorating the 65th anniversary of the victory by Cuban soldiers at the Bay of Pigs over CIA trained exile forces, Díaz-Canel vowed to “open fire” on any new US attempts to invade the island.

On Sunday, Díaz-Canel was shown on Cuban TV with othe

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