Headline News from The Associated Press
AP Headline News - Mar 06 2024 21:00 (EST)
AP News, I'm Hyah Panjwani. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller responded to a large explosion that reverberated around the Ukrainian port of Odessa. As President Voldemort Szilenski and Greece's Prime Minister ended a tour of the war-ravaged southern city. I think the strike is yet another reminder of how Russia continues to strike Ukraine every single day. And it's a reminder of Ukraine's need for air defense interceptors. And it's a reminder that the United States Congress needs to take action as we have called on them to do to support Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression. As Haitian politicians start pursuing new alliances for a coalition that could lead the country out of gang violence that has prevented embattled Prime Minister Ariel Enri from returning home, State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller also says the U.S. supports a pathway for free and fair elections. We are not calling on him or pushing for him to resign, but we are urging him to expedite the transition to an empowered and inclusive governance structure that will move with urgency to help the country prepare for a multinational security support mission to address the security situation and pave the way for free and fair elections. Speaking to the Senate Commerce Committee, National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Hamandese says for two months Boeing has refused to identify employees who work on door panels on 737s. Boeing has not provided us with the documents and information that we have requested numerous times over the past few months, specifically with respect to opening, closing and removal of the door and the team that does that work at the Renton facility. Representative Jim McGovern, a Democrat from Massachusetts, argued that the House should stop kicking the hand down the road when it comes to the budget. It has been our votes that have kept the lights on since September. We believe in governing. We believe that shutting the government down is a bad, terrible, awful idea. This is AP News. Prosecutors in New York have abruptly dropped their case against three men charged with trying to obscure the ownership of handwritten lyrics to songs by the Eagles. AP Entertainment correspondent Margies Araletta has the latest. Judge Curtis Farber dismissed the case against three collectibles experts, saying witnesses and their lawyers used attorney-client privilege to hide information that could be damaging. The communications emerged after Eagles singer Don Henley apparently decided last week to waive attorney-client privilege after he and other prosecution witnesses had testified. Prosecutors say the communications contained information that the defense should have been allowed to access before their cross-examination. The collectibles experts were facing criminal charges for possessing and trying to sell handwritten lyrics that Henley said he led a biographer use for research. The biographer sold the lyrics to one of the experts but was not on trial. And a guy who finished law school and aimed high to build a world-class firm for the people where everyone regardless of background gets top-notch treatment. Dan Caplis Law lives that mission scoring record verdicts for folks from all walks of life and they don't care about your wallet. Righteous cases are taken on a percentage fee basis. Need help? Visit Dan Caplis Law dot com. That's Dan Caplis Law dot com. Southwest is full of mile-high heart. That's why we're giving Denver more flights than ever before. That means more heart for all because no one pays change or cancel fees and everyone gets two free bags. So when you're ready to get away, we're ready to give Denver all of our mile-high heart. But today at Southwest dot com. Based on USDOT OND scheduled daily flights from Denver starting in July 2023, so pass all prior days as a 512-2023 fair difference may apply failure to cancel a reservation at least 10 minutes prior to schedule departure may result in four-minute travel funds, first and second check bags, wait in size limit supply. Fargo, the new virtual assistant from Wells Fargo, makes banking faster and easier. Like this. Fargo, what's my checking account routing number? And this. Fargo, turn off my debit card. And this. Fargo, what did I spend on groceries last month? And that's just the beginning. Do you, Fargo? You can. And that's just the beginning. Do you, Fargo? You can.