Archive.fm

Headline News from The Associated Press

AP Headline News - Jun 28 2024 15:00 (EDT)

Duration:
2m
Broadcast on:
28 Jun 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

A.P. News. I'm Ed Donahue. It was a shaky performance in Atlanta last night for President Biden, but he is moving on. "I know how to do this job. I know how to get things done. I know like millions of Americans know. When you get knocked down, you get back up." The president was greeted by supporters in Raleigh, North Carolina today. St. Anselm's political science professor Chris Galvieri says the debate performance added to concerns about the 81-year-old president. "He looked frail. He's noticeably older than he was when he was elected." Donald Trump's supporters seemed unconcerned about his relationship with the truth at the debate and his performance and delivery helped him with them. The former chief of police for U Valley Schools was booked on 10 felony counts. The indictment against former U Valley Texas school police chief Pete Arrendondo has been unsealed. He accuses him of failing to identify an active shooter, failing to follow training, and failing to make critical decisions, as a gunman was hunting victims inside the Rob Elementary School. That sound from an officer's body camera on May 24, 2022, as officers waited more than an hour before going in to confront the gunman. Arrendondo and a former school officer Adrian Gonzales are charged with abandoning or endangering children. Two teachers and 19 students were killed. I'm Jackie Quinn. The Supreme Court rejected a bid to delay a prison sentence for a long-time Trump-aleisty Bannon as he appeals his conviction for defying a subpoena in the congressional investigation into the Capitol riot. Attorney General Merrick Garland says he's disappointed the Supreme Court made it harder to charge Capitol riot defendants with obstruction. The charge has also been brought against former President Trump. This is AP News. New research relieves any worries about cow's milk and bird flu. Government officials say a new study that recreated commercial pasteurization in a government lab provides reassurance that heat treatment kills bird flu virus and cow's milk. When the bird flu was first detected in U.S. dairy cows earlier this year, there were no studies on whether heat treatment killed the virus and their milk. But officials were comforted by studies that showed the pasteurization of eggs, which involves heating at a lower temperature, and for a shorter amount of time, worked. The new study was done at a federal research center in Athens, Georgia. I'm Shirley Appler. A Michigan appeals court revived a lawsuit against Detroit area paramedics after a woman who had been declared dead gasps for air with her eyes open when a body bag was unzipped at a funeral home to Misha Bocamp's family accused them of gross negligence. I'm Ed Donahue, AP News.