Richest billionaires in California

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Stacker compiled the richest billionaires in California using data from Forbes. Net worth is as of Jan. 22, 2025.

The first billionaire is generally considered to be John D. Rockefeller in 1916, though some argue it was Henry Ford in 1925. Fast-forward over 100 years and there are now around 3,000 billionaires around the world. Read on to see which billionaires live in your area and the richest across the country.

Richest billionaires in California

#20. Charles Schwab
– Net worth: $14.0 billion
– Source: Discount brokerage
– Industry: Finance & Investments
– Lives in: Woodside, California

#19. George Roberts
– Net worth: $15.6 billion
– Source: Private equity
– Industry: Finance & Investments
– Lives in: Atherton, California

#18. Jan Koum
– Net worth: $17.1 billion
– Source: WhatsApp
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Atherton, California

#17. Eric Smidt
– Net worth: $17.9 billion
– Source: Hardware stores
– Industry: Fashion & Retail
– Lives in: Beverly Hills, California

#16. Donald Bren
– Net worth: $19.2 billion
– Source: Real estate
– Industry: Real Estate
– Lives in: Newport Beach, California

#15. Adam Foroughi
– Net worth: $18.9 billion
– Source: advertising technology
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Truckee, California

#14. David Sun
– Net worth: $20.1 billion
– Source: Computer hardware
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Irvine, California

#13. John Tu
– Net worth: $20.1 billion
– Source: Computer hardware
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Rolling Hills, California

#12. John Doerr
– Net worth: $21.1 billion
– Source: Venture capital
– Industry: Finance & Investments
– Lives in: Woodside, California

#11. Henry Nicholas III
– Net worth: $21.0 billion
– Source: Semiconductors
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Newport Coast, California

#10. David Cheriton
– Net worth: $22.6 billion
– Source: Google
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Palo Alto, California

#9. Robert Pera
– Net worth: $27.3 billion
– Source: Wireless networking
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: San Jose, California

#8. Andreas von Bechtolsheim & family
– Net worth: $29.1 billion
– Source: Google
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Palo Alto, California

#7. Peter Thiel
– Net worth: $28.2 billion
– Source: Facebook, investments
– Industry: Finance & Investments
– Lives in: Los Angeles, California

#6. Henry Samueli
– Net worth: $31.6 billion
– Source: Semiconductors
– Industry: Technology
– Lives in: Ne

UFC 324 con Paddy Pimblett vs. Justin Gaethje: cartelera, previa, hora y cómo ver por TV e internet

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Por César López, CNN en Español

Poco más de 20 peleadores entrarán al octágono del T-Mobile Arena este sábado 24 de enero para la primera cartelera grande de las artes marciales mixtas de este 2026.

El UFC 324 tendrá una noche intensa en Las Vegas y la atención, como no, está centrada en el evento principal entre Justin Gaethje y Paddy Pimblett.

Ambos peleadores pautaron y cumplieron este viernes con el pesaje para disputar el título del peso ligero o 154 libras.

Pimblett aparece como el gran favorito en las apuestas y su foja invicta en el UFC lo respalda. La última vez que Pimblett perdió un combate fue en el Cage Warriors por decisión unánime, ante Soren Bak en 2018.

Fue la última de las tres derrotas que ha tenido el británico en su carrera como peleador de artes marciales mixtas. Desde entonces ha peleado en 9 ocasiones con igual número de victorias consecutivas, siete de ellas en el UFC desde que entró en 2021, para un total de 23 triunfos en su carrera.

Gaethje, de 36 años, ha tenido una carrera más extensa y aunque no es el gran favorito de muchos en esta ocasión, sus 26 victorias como profesional lo avalan. El estadounidense ha perdido cinco peleas en total y en mayo de 2020 ganó el título del UFC interino del peso ligero ante Tony Ferguson.

El oriundo de Arizona es una máquina de nocauts y 20 de sus 26 triunfos han llegado por la vía rápida, cinco victorias han sido declaradas por decisión y una sola por sumisión. Además, es todo un espectáculo cuando entra al octágono y en múltiples ocasiones ha ganado el bono protagonizando la “pelea de la noche”, un estímulo económico adicional que entrega el UFC para impulsar la intensidad de los combates.

Será la primera cartelera numerada de la UFC desde que el 1 de enero se oficializó su acuerdo de transmisión por siete años y US$ 7.700 millones con Paramount. Además, el combate tendrá en juego el título interino del peso ligero, luego de que el campeón Ilia Topuria anunciara una licencia indefinida del deporte por asuntos personales. El ganador quedará en posición directa para disputar el cinturón indiscutible cuando Topuria regrese.

El evento coestelar enfrentará a Sean O’Malley y Song Yadong en peso gallo, en una pelea que podría definir al próximo retador del campeón Petr Yan. El esperado duelo entre Kayla Harrison y Amanda Nunes fue cancelado la semana pasada tras la retirada de Harrison por lesión.

Preliminares:

  • Peso Ligero: Michael Johnson vs. Alexander Hernández.
  • Peso Pesado: Josh Hokit vs. Denzel Freeman.
  • Peso Wélter: Ty Miller vs. Adam Fugitt.
  • Peso Gallo: Umar Nurmagomedov vs. Deiveson Figueiredo.
  • Peso Semipesado: Nikita Krylov vs. Modestas Bukauskas.
  • Peso Medio: Ateba Gautier vs. Andrey Pulyaev.
  • Peso Mosca: Alex Perez vs. Charles Johnson.

Cartelera principal:

  • Título Interino de Peso Ligero: Justin Gaethje vs. Paddy Pimblett.
  • Peso Gallo: Sean O’Malley vs. Song Yadong.
  • Peso Pesado: Waldo Cortés-Acosta vs. Derrick Lewis.
  • Peso Mosca Femenino: Natalia Silva vs. Rose Namajunas.
  • Peso Pluma: Jean Silva vs. Arnold Allen.

La cartelera completa en Estados Unidos, México y Latinoamérica se podrá ver a través de la plataforma de streaming Paramount+.

El evento principal comienza a partir de las 9:00 p.m. hora de Miami, 8:00 p.m. hora de CDMX, 10:00 p.m. hora de Buenos Aires y las preliminares cuatro horas antes.

HBO Max tendrá el servicio para España.

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Toddler taken into ICE custody with father and flown from Minnesota to Texas before returned to mother next day, lawyer says

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By Emma Tucker, CNN

(CNN) — A 2-year-old girl was taken into ICE custody with her father on Thursday in Minneapolis and flown to Texas before she was returned to her mother Friday afternoon, a family lawyer said.

The child’s transfer to Texas took place despite a court order requiring her immediate release, according to the affidavit filed by the family attorney. The toddler’s father, identified as Elvis Tipan-Echeverria, remains in custody, the family’s attorney Kira Kelley told CNN Friday evening.

The father and daughter were on the same flight returning to Minnesota on Friday afternoon, Kelley said. “The child is out of detention as of this afternoon, and recovering from this horrific ordeal,” Kelley said.

The toddler and her father were initially being held at a federal facility in Minneapolis on Thursday after agents pursued their vehicle in a “targeted enforcement operation,” a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told CNN Friday. Lawyers for the family identified that facility as the Whipple Federal Building. The building has served as the backdrop of tense standoffs between agents and protesters following the death of Minneapolis resident Renee Good earlier this month.

The father and the toddler, identified only as C.R.T.V. in court documents, are citizens of Ecuador, and the child has lived in Minneapolis “since her arrival in the United States as a newborn” and has a pending asylum application.

The incident comes as outrage continues to grow over federal agents taking 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos in the driveway of his home in Minneapolis this week during the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in the state. The boy was later put on a plane with his father to a family detention facility in Texas, where they remain.

During the encounter with Tipan-Echeverria and his daughter, DHS said the father was “driving erratically with a child in the vehicle.” The father would then park the vehicle when federal agents attempted to take him into custody; however, “he refused multiple lawful commands to open his door or lower his window,” the agency said.

The toddler and her father had just returned home from the store and were inside their vehicle when ICE agents entered the backyard and driveway area of the home “without a warrant,” the affidavit says. One agent “broke the glass on the window” of Tipan-Echeverria’s vehicle while the toddler was also inside before the father and daughter exited the car, the affidavit says.

CNN has reached out to DHS to inquire about the removal of the father and toddler to Texas, and the claim that agents had taken both without a warrant.

Protesters at scene as ICE detained father with child

Video from the incident, which took place just after 1 p.m., shows people surrounding armed and masked federal agents and what appeared to be a federal vehicle. One man was heard yelling, “They were carrying a child in that!” seemingly referring to the federal vehicle.

Some of the people at the scene started backing away as federal agents deployed what seemed to be a chemical agent. As the federal agents drove away, protesters continued to yell at them. “Help him!” one person yelled out.

Roughly 120 people “surrounded the agents blocking them in and preventing exit” during the arrest, DHS said. “Agitators in the crowd then began to throw rocks and garbage cans toward the agents and child,” prompting agents to deploy crowd control measures to “safely clear the area,” the statement continued.

DHS noted that obstructing and assaulting law enforcement is a felony and federal crime.

Federal agents attempted to give the child to the mother, “who was in the area, but

How a fiery Scott Bessent calmed market nerves over Greenland

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By Jeremy Herb, Phil Mattingly, Matt Egan, Kristen Holmes, CNN

(CNN) — Scott Bessent was everywhere in Davos.

At one press conference during the annual World Economic Forum in the Swiss Alps, the Treasury Secretary dismissed Denmark as “irrelevant” amid President Donald Trump’s demands that the country sell Greenland. He mocked California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who was also in Davos and had called Bessent smug by saying he’s, “Patrick Bateman meets Sparkle Beach Ken.”

Bessent defended Trump’s desires to acquire Greenland, in an appearance on CNBC, claiming it was important to national security that it be controlled by the US. He accused Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell of “trying to put his thumb on the scale” by attending a Supreme Court argument over Trump’s attempt to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook, though Bessent himself had attended the high court’s tariff arguments last fall.

And during a panel discussion with Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo, he told European officials — and perhaps more importantly investors — not to overreact to Trump’s threats to use tariffs to coerce a sale of Greenland.

“I’d tell everyone to sit back, take a deep breath — do not retaliate,” Bessent said, repeating the last line for emphasis.

Bessent’s ubiquitous presence at Davos underscored his unique and critical dual roles in the Trump administration: Publicly, he’s a stout defender of the president and his impulsive policy demands. Privately, he’s the translator of his boss to Wall Street, charged with keeping the markets from overreacting to Trump-induced whiplash.

“He views the markets and their stability as a huge part of his job,” said a source with knowledge of Bessent’s thinking. “He doesn’t want the administration to do anything that could disrupt the markets and make his job more difficult.”

On Wall Street, Bessent is still seen as a crucial voice to help soothe investor fears — even if the latest volatility over Trump’s Greenland tariff threats may have left a lasting impression.

“We used to say Trump can’t be stopped. The best you can hope for is to contain him. And that’s Bessent’s job,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial and a critic of Trump’s policies. “He still says things that, to me, are cringeworthy supporting the position du jour of the administration. We are lucky to have him, but I still get uneasy about some of the things that come out of his mouth.”

At Davos, Bessent didn’t just defend the administration’s economic policies — he weaponized them, framing the proposed “Greenland acquisition” not as a real estate whim but as a strategic “national emergency” avoidance maneuver. By telling European allies to “sit back and relax” amidst tariff threats, Bessent effectively moved the Treasury from its role as a stabilizer to a tip-of-the-spear enforcer for the “Trump Model.”

Bessent has been the administration’s most important economic official in Trump’s second term. The South Carolinian hedge fund manager who previously donated to Democrats has adopted a persona that is part investment strategist and part MAGA firebrand.

He’s likely the first Treasury Secretary to treat a Davos presser more like a segment on Steve Bannon’s “War Room,” signaling that the administration’s economic success is predicated not on global consensus, but on ignoring “media hysteria” and forcing the world to “take the President at his wor

5 big changes to Medicare coming in 2026

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Two seniors walking a trail at a park during spring time.

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Medicare enrollees can expect new rules and benefits in 2026. Even if you have original Medicare, which tends to have stability in hospital and medical coverage, you should be aware of changes to premiums, deductibles, and other out-of-pocket costs. If you have Medicare Advantage, which is a private alternative to original Medicare, you should expect even more updates to your coverage. It’s also important to track changes to your prescription medication benefits known as Part D.

The Medicare & You 2026 handbook can give you a broad overview of the program.

GoodRx shares more about big changes for the 2026 coverage year.

Key takeaways:

  • Medicare Part D changes in 2026 include a higher out-of-pocket maximum, lower prices for the 10 medications subject to Medicare Drug Price Negotiation, and auto-renewal for people who were enrolled in the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan in 2025.
  • Original Medicare enrollees in six states will be subject to prior authorization for certain Part B items and services during a six-year pilot program that begins in 2026.
  • You will have a special option to change Medicare Advantage plans if you used the Medicare Plan Finder to choose coverage, but note by early 2026 that the directory information in the online tool contained errors — and you find that your preferred doctors and hospitals aren’t covered by your plan.

What’s changing with Medicare in 2026?

If you have Medicare, here are five updates in 2026 that will likely affect you.

1. Medicare Part D out-of-pocket limit increases to $2,100

Part D is Medicare coverage for prescriptions, devices, and some vaccines. As recently as 2024, the out-of-pocket maximum was $8,000. A new plan design removed the “donut hole” — a pause in prescription coverage — and limited an enrollee’s annual out-of-pocket expenses to $2,000 in 2025. That cap increases to $2,100 in 2026. After you spend that much, your Part D plan pays 100% for covered medications for the rest of the year.

2. Part B prior authorization pilot starts in 6 states

Prior authorization is common for prescription plans. But this advance approval process was rarely used for medical services covered by original Medicare. Advance approvals are far more common for people who have Medicare Advantage plans.

But beginning in January 2026,

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