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Apr 17 2026POLITICS

Chile shows its strict new approach to migration control

Chile just carried out its first deportation flight under a tougher immigration strategy. The government sent 40 people back to Bolivia, Colombia, and Ecuador from the northern city of Iquique. Officials didn’t say how often these flights will happen next, but they called it the start of a long-term

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Apr 17 2026ENVIRONMENT

How Student Ideas Could Shape Colorado’s Green Future

Every year, Colorado Mountain College gives its students a big stage to showcase their work on sustainability. This year, their free online conference on April 24 will run from 9 AM to noon, focusing on how local research can help mountain communities tackle environmental challenges. The event isn’t

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Apr 17 2026ENVIRONMENT

Past Climate Swings Show Nature Handles Big Temperature Shifts Fast

Scientists have found over two dozen times when Earth’s temperature jumped fast during the last ice age. Between 110, 000 and 12, 000 years ago, Greenland’s air could warm by as much as 16. 5 °C in just decades. These weren’t small, local changes; they reshaped global weather patterns. Tropical rain

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Apr 17 2026CRIME

When Family Bonds Break: A Rare Look at Juvenile Female Patricide

A father’s murder by his teenage daughter might sound like a shocking plot from a crime show, but it’s a grim reality that experts study closely. Such cases are rare, yet they grab headlines and spark debates about family violence and mental health. In one documented instance, a 45-year-old man was

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Apr 17 2026BUSINESS

Downtown Baltimore sees growth in visitors while crime rates drop

Baltimore’s downtown area is getting more popular with visitors, while crime is going down. A recent report shows the city had 28. 5 million visitors last year, spending over $4. 3 billion—that’s a 7. 5% increase from the year before. Big events like the CIAA tournaments have brought nearly $110 mil

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Apr 17 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Law & Order spinoff's run ends after five seasons

The popular crime drama "Law & Order: Organized Crime" has wrapped up its story after five seasons. This wasn't just another show leaving the air - it was the first attempt to create a character-focused version in the long-running franchise. The series brought back Detective Elliot Stabler, played b

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Apr 17 2026CRIME

How One Cloud Backup Uncovered a Major Crime Ring in Brazil

In Brazil, a routine investigation into money laundering took an unexpected turn when police accessed an iCloud backup. The data they found revealed a much larger scheme, worth over $300 million, involving musicians and social media stars. The ripple effect led to dozens of arrests and searches acro

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Apr 17 2026CRIME

How digital kidnappers turned a quiet Chicago neighborhood into a crime scene

Early one October morning in 2024, six strangers in black tactical gear rolled into Lincoln Park, a neighborhood known for its tree-lined streets and upscale homes. They weren’t delivering packages or selling services—they were hunting a family. Using social connections to track their target, they f

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Apr 17 2026CRIME

Former Joliet worker admits to stealing from his own workplace

A finance chief in Joliet who handled public money for years got caught using it for personal trips, shows, and even sports games instead of running the park district’s budget. The man worked as the top financial officer from 2013 to 2019, earning over $100, 000 each year before his own office notic

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Apr 16 2026ENVIRONMENT

How Clean is Clean Enough? Bacteria and Our Rivers

Nothing we flush ever really disappears. Most of it ends up in a treatment plant where armies of bacteria quietly get to work, breaking down what we send down the pipes. In cities with advanced systems like the A2O process, wastewater passes through three stages—first without oxygen, then with limit

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