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Apr 13 2026OPINION

How Close-To-Home Violence Shapes Our View of Crime

Fear doesn’t always come from faraway places. For a young kid, it can creep in through familiar faces - the uncles who looked like killers, the scout leaders who didn’t seem dangerous until they were. The first time crime felt intimate was when news reached a 7-year-old about a monster hiding in pla

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Apr 12 2026SCIENCE

Quorum Breakers: New Molecule Helps Antibiotics Fight Tough Bacteria

A common hospital bug, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, often ignores many drugs and sticks together in protective layers called biofilms. Researchers made a new type of chemical that stops the bacteria from talking to each other, a process known as quorum sensing. This “talk‑stopper” is based on N‑acyl homo

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Apr 12 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Show Mixes Kitchen Chaos With Crime Comedy

A fresh series on Netflix blends the frantic kitchen life of a popular food‑service drama with the dark twists of a famed crime saga. The creators have taken two shows that are very different—one about family and food, the other about a teacher turned drug kingpin—and fused their core elements into

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Apr 12 2026CRIME

Unexpected Link Between a Killer and an Actress

A summer morning in July 2023, a routine drive to art school turned into a shock when a friend called with startling news: the man who had been linked to dozens of murders along Long Island’s Atlantic coast had finally been arrested. The killer, known as Rex Heuermann, was identified and taken into

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Apr 12 2026SCIENCE

Peeling Back the Layers of Plastic in Coastal Waters

Scientists collected tiny plastic fragments that float in three coastal areas, each with a different mix of ships and tourists. They focused on polyethylene pieces because it is common in the sea. Using a technique that shines infrared light onto the plastic, they recorded how the molecules vibrate.

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Apr 12 2026POLITICS

A Fresh Path to Keep Alaska’s Workers and Services Strong

Alaska is losing its public workers faster than it can hire new ones. About 3, 000 jobs are empty right now, which is nearly one‑sixth of all state positions. The loss costs the budget a lot of money in temporary help, bonuses and overtime, and it slows down everything from fire fighting to health

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Apr 12 2026CRYPTO

Dark‑Market Crypto: Why Big Players Need Secret Trading Rooms

Large traders in traditional finance keep their moves hidden inside special venues called dark pools, which lets them avoid tipping the market. In 2025 more than half of U. S. stock trades happened off public exchanges, showing how common this practice is. Crypto markets have never had a true dark

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Apr 12 2026POLITICS

Crypto Crackdown Reversed: The SEC’s New Playbook

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) once boasted about tackling crypto fraud with 583 cases and $8. 2 billion in penalties last year, claiming it stayed ahead of new threats. That image has shifted dramatically. In a fresh review for 2025, the agency admits it over‑reacted and pulls back on

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Apr 12 2026CRYPTO

Building More Than Walls: A Crypto Leader’s Simple Rule

CZ, the founder of the biggest crypto exchange, says success starts with a clear purpose. He explains that feeling proud and taking responsibility for what you do is essential. If you keep working on a task without meaning, you risk getting stuck in a routine that adds little value. He compares t

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Apr 12 2026CRYPTO

Push Alerts and Crypto Lows: A Privacy Warning

"Telegram co‑founder Pavel Durov has warned that the tiny messages sent to your phone as push alerts could reveal more than you think. Even if a chat app claims end‑to‑end encryption, the preview of a message that pops up on your lock screen can leave a trail. Durov pointed out an FBI investigation

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