Image: Arizona helicopter crash (Pinal County Sheriff's Office)

Four people died in an Arizona helicopter crash Friday after the aircraft appeared to strike a more than half-mile long "recreational slackline" strung across a mountain rage, the Pinal County Sheriff's Office said.

The sheriff's office said that around 11 a.m. it received reports of a helicopter that crashed in the mountains near Telegraph Canyon, south of the town of Superior.

Four family members were killed in the crash, including the 59-year-old pilot, a 22-year-old woman and two 21-year-old women, the sheriff's office said.

"Preliminary evidence indicates a recreational slackline more than one kilometer long had been strung across the mountain range," the sheriff's officesaid in an updateFriday afternoon.

"An eyewitness who called 911 reported seeing the helicopter strike a portion of the line before falling to the bottom of the canyon," the office said.

Recreational slacklining can refer to balancing atop or doing tricks on a narrow webbing that is strung between two points, such as trees, according to theInternational Slackline Association.

The sheriff's office did not provide additional information in its post about the purpose of the line and it was not immediately clear whether it had been set up with authorization.

A spokesperson for the Pinal County Sheriff's Office did not immediately respond to an emailed request for more details late Friday.

The helicopter had taken off from Pegasus Airpark in Queen Creek, around 30 miles west of Superior, the sheriff's office said.

The Federal Aviation Administration said the helicopter was an MD 369FF. The National Transportation Safety Board said it will investigate the crash.

Superior is a town of around 2,400 located in a mountainous area a little more than 55 miles east of Phoenix.

4 dead after helicopter appears to strike recreational slackline in Arizona

Four people died in an Arizona helicopter crash Friday after the aircraft appeared to strike a more than half-mile long "recreational ...
At least 7 explosions and low-flying aircraft are heard in Venezuela's Caracas

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — At least seven explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard around 2 a.m. local time Saturday in Venezuela's capital, Caracas.

It was not immediately clear what was behind the explosions. Venezuela's government, the Pentagon and White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

People in various neighborhoods rushed to the streets. Some could be seen in the distance from various areas of Caracas.

"The whole ground shook. This is horrible. We heard explosions and planes in the distance," said Carmen Hidalgo, a 21-year-old office worker, her voice trembling. She was walking briskly with two relatives, returning from a birthday party. "We felt like the air was hitting us."

Venezuelan state television did not interrupt its programming and aired a report on Venezuelan music and art.

The blasts come as the U.S. military has been targeting, in recent days, alleged drug-smuggling boats. On Friday, Venezuela said it was open to negotiating an agreement with the United States tocombat drug trafficking.

The South American country's President Nicolás Maduro also saidin a pretaped interviewaired Thursday that the U.S. wants to force a government change in Venezuela and gain access to its vast oil reserves through the monthslong pressure campaign that began witha massive military deployment to the Caribbean Seain August.

Maduro has been charged with narco-terrorism in the U.S. The CIA was behinda drone strike last weekat a docking area believed to have been used by Venezuelan drug cartels in what was the first known direct operation on Venezuelan soil since the U.S. began strikes on boats in September.

U.S. President Donald Trump for months had threatened that he could soon order strikes on targets on Venezuelan land. The U.S. has alsoseized sanctioned oil tankersoff the coast of Venezuela, and Trumpordered a blockadeof others in a move that seemed designed to put a tighter chokehold on the South American country's economy.

The U.S. military has been attacking boats in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean since early September. As of Friday, the number of known boat strikes is 35 and the number of people killed is at least 115, according to numbers announced by the Trump administration.

They followed a majorbuildup of American forcesin the waters off South America, including the arrival in November ofthe nation's most advanced aircraft carrier, which added thousands more troops to what was already the largest military presence in the region in generations.

Trump hasjustified the boat strikesas a necessary escalation to stem the flow of drugs into the U.S. and asserted that the U.S. is engaged in an"armed conflict" with drug cartels.

Meanwhile, Iranian state television reported on the explosions in Caracas on Saturday, showing images of the Venezuelan capital. Iran has been close to Venezuela for years, in part due to their shared enmity of the U.S.

At least 7 explosions and low-flying aircraft are heard in Venezuela's Caracas

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — At least seven explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard around 2 a.m. local time Saturday ...
Two people killed in magnitude 6.5 earthquake in Mexico

At least two people have died after a powerful earthquake hit southern and central Mexico on Friday.

The epicentre of the 6.5 magnitude earthquake was near the popular tourist town of Acapulco, near San Marcos in the south-western state of Guerrero, which suffered moderate damage.

A 50-year-old woman died in Guerrero, the state's governor Evelyn Salgado said, while Clara Brugada, Mexico City's mayor, confirmed the death of a 60-year-old man and said 12 others had been injured in the capital.

Mexico is situated in one of the world's most seismically active areas, sitting at the meeting point of four tectonic plates.

Late on Friday night, Brugada said power has been restored to "98% of the failures reported" in Mexico City.

Two structures were being evaluated for risk of collapse, she said, while 34 buildings and five homes were being inspected as a preventative measure.

Damage assessments are under way in Mexico City after roads and hospitals were impacted, according to news agency Reuters, while authorities noted various landslides on highways around the Guerrero state.

Mexico's seismological service had registered 420 aftershocks by midday local time (18:00 GMT).

President Claudia Sheinbaum was holding her first press conference of the year when the earthquake struck.

In a videocapturing the moment, Sheinbaum can be heard saying "it's shaking" as an earthquake alert system rings in the background. She then tells the media to "all get out calmly".

Additional footage shows buildings shaking in Mexico City and cars trembling in Acapulco.

An image showing damage inside a pink house after a 6.5 magnitude earthquake in the community of San Marcos, Guerrero state, Mexico. The floor is covered in a pile broken concrete, rubble, and dirt, while a ladder is positioned on the left near shelves and a chair.

After hearing the Mexican Seismic Alert System early on Friday, residents and tourists rushed into the streets of Mexico City and Acapulco.

The seismic system was put into place following the deadly 1985 earthquake that claimed more than 10,000 lives.

In 2017,a 7.1 magnitude quakekilled more than 200 people and toppled dozens of buildings in Mexico City.

Two people killed in magnitude 6.5 earthquake in Mexico

At least two people have died after a powerful earthquake hit southern and central Mexico on Friday. The...
Why ordering takeout or calling the dog walker might lead to a happier relationship

It turns out, love may benefit from a little less labor.

Couples who spend money on time-saving services — like getting takeout, hiring a housecleaner or calling a dog walker — report greaterrelationship satisfaction, especially during stressful periods, says Ashley Whillans, a behavioral scientist and professor at Harvard Business School.

Whillans studies the "tradeoffs people make between time and money."

"When you spend money to save time — hiring an accountant, a babysitter, a cleaner — you feel more control over your life," she said. "That sense of autonomy boosts well-being."

Not everyone can afford to outsource bigger household chores. But Whillans says even a little bit can help. She advises couples to take a "time audit" — examining how they spend their hours and whatsmall changescould reclaim even a few moments.

"People underestimate how much these choices matter," she said. "It's not about luxury — it's about freeing up time to connect."

Whillans' team tracked busy, dual-income couples — partners working full-time who often report feeling time-starved — and found consistent patterns. In one six-week diary study, couples who made "time-saving purchases" on a given day were happier and more satisfied with their relationships.

Use that saved time for connecting

Simply outsourcing chores isn't a magic fix, however.

"It's about being intentional with the time you get back — using it to spend quality time together, to reconnect," Whillans said.

"Think of that half hour not as an opportunity to send more emails, but as a chance to spend time with your partner."

Targol Hasankhani, a Chicago-based marriage and family therapist, stressed that while outsourcing domestic labor can ease daily stress, it doesn't replace communication. Juggling careers and kids takes a toll on families, and housework is often freighted with resentments overwho is doing it.

"If conflict around chores is rooted in something deeper — like inequity or not feeling heard — hiring a cleaner won't solve that," she said.

Couples must dig deeper to address problems with many layers.

"It opens up time and space, but couples still have to know how to show up for each other in that space," Hasankhani said.

Casey Mulligan Walsh, 71, a former speech pathologist and author in upstate New York, said the best part about hiring a housecleaner once a week was that it freed up time for her and her husband to spend together.

"My favorite day of the week was coming home to a clean house," she said. "We'd go get coffee together instead of arguing about who should vacuum."

A Valentine's Day gift that stuck

Getting started on delegating household tasks isn't easy for some couples, Whillans said. Besides the cost, "it takes time to find someone and coordinate — but the long-term payoff is real."

And making such decisions together can deepen trust anda sense of teamwork.

For one Colorado couple, outsourcing started as an act of love.

"When I started dating, my now-husband noticed how hard I was working — at my job, at home and as a single mom," said Melissa Jones, a 45-year-old teacher in Pueblo.

His Valentine's Day gift? A deep housecleaning.

"It was truly amazing," Jones said. "After that, I kept it up on my own for years. When my husband and I moved in together, we decided to continue."

"We're able to make memories with each other, our kids and our families instead of spending weekends scrubbing floors," she said.

Dinnertime can be a stress point

In Miami, Elizabeth Willard, 59, runs The Pickled Beet, a culinary service preparing customized meals.

"Most of the people I cook for are trying to invest in their health but don't have the time," she said, noting that families often juggle mixed dietary needs. "Sometimes the husband's a carnivore and the wife's vegetarian, one child's celiac. They're exhausted trying to make everyone happy."

Her clients, often families with children and two working parents, are "not fighting over what's for dinner. It's one less daily decision."

Whether ordering a pizza, paying a teenager to mow the lawn, or calling a car service to save 20 minutes, the outcome can be the same: Buying back time can buy peace.

Why ordering takeout or calling the dog walker might lead to a happier relationship

It turns out, love may benefit from a little less labor. Couples who spend money on time-saving services — like ...
Six people injured in the fatal fire at a Swiss bar remain unidentified. It's an unbearable wait

CRANS-MONTANA, Switzerland (AP) — Sixteen-year-old Arthur Brodard went to theLe Constellation barwith friends to celebrate the New Year. Nearly 48 hours after a devastating fire, his mother still held out hope he might be one of the six injured people who remained unidentified after one of Switzerland's worst tragedies.

Those half-dozen people gave a glimmer of hope for families whose loved ones were missing in the aftermath of the fire at the Alpine ski resort of Crans-Montana that killed 40 people and injured 119 others, 113 of whom have been formally identified.

"I'm looking everywhere. The body of my son is somewhere," Laetitia Brodard, from Lausanne, Switzerland, told reporters. "I want to know, where is my child, and be by his side. Wherever that may be, be it in the intensive care unit or the morgue."

The severity of the burns has made it difficult to identify both the injured and deceased, requiring families to supply authorities with DNA samples. In some cases, wallets and any identification documents inside turned to ash in the flames. An Instagram account has filled up with photos of people who were unaccounted for, and friends and relatives begged for tips about their whereabouts.

Officials in the Valais regional government acknowledged the prolonged heartache.

"You will understand that the priority today is truly placed on identification, in order to allow the families to begin their mourning," Beatrice Pilloud, the Valais region's attorney general, told reporters Friday during a news conference.

Mathias Reynard, head of the regional government, added: "We are aware of the particularly difficult hours, of the unbearable side of every minute that passes without answers."

'You can't imagine the pain I saw'

Investigators said Friday that they believe sparkling candles atop Champagne bottles ignited thefatal firewhen they came too close to the ceiling of the bar crowded with New Year's Eve revelers, two hours after midnight Thursday.

"We were bringing people out, people were collapsing. We were doing everything we could to save them, we helped as many as we could, we saw people screaming, running," Marc-Antoine Chavanon, 14, told The Associated Press in Crans-Montana on Friday, recounting how he rushed to the bar to help the injured. "There was one of our friends: She was struggling to get out, she was all burned. You can't imagine the pain I saw."

Many of the injured were in their teens to mid-20s, police said. Authorities planned to look into whether sound-dampening material on the ceiling conformed with regulations and whether the candles were permitted for use in the bar.

Officials said they would also look at other safety measures on the premises, including fire extinguishers and escape routes. The region's top prosecutor warned of possible prosecutions if any criminal liability is found.

Injured hailed from across Europe

The injured included 71 Swiss nationals, 14 French and 11 Italians, along with citizens of Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Luxembourg, Belgium, Portugal and Poland, according to Frédéric Gisler, police commander of the Valais region. The nationalities of 14 people were still unclear.

Emanuele Galeppini, a promising teenage Italian golfer who competed internationally, was officially listed as one of Italy's missing nationals. His uncle, Sebastiano Galeppini, told Italian news agency ANSA that their family is awaiting the DNA checks, though the Italian Golf Federation on its website announced that he had died.

Dazio reported from Berlin. Associated Press journalists Geir Moulson in Berlin, Graham Dunbar in Geneva, and Nicole Winfield and Giada Zampano in Rome contributed to this report.

Six people injured in the fatal fire at a Swiss bar remain unidentified. It's an unbearable wait

CRANS-MONTANA, Switzerland (AP) — Sixteen-year-old Arthur Brodard went to theLe Constellation barwith friends to celebrat...
Images captured on March 18, 2025, show Bella 1 vessel after US official confirmed the US Coast Guard was in pursuit of an oil tanker in international waters near Venezuela. - Hakon Rimmereid/Reuters/File

Russia filed a formal diplomatic request that the United States stop pursuing anoil tankeroriginally bound for Venezuela that has evaded US custody for almost two weeks, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

The demarche sent to the State Department on New Year's Eve comes as the vessel, called the Bella 1, appeared on Russia's official register of ships under a new name.

It is unclear if the diplomatic request, first reported byThe New York Times, will halt the US efforts to interdict the oil tanker, which was initially headed for Venezuela before turning around to avoid seizure by the US Coast Guard.

Russia's request comes as the Trump administration continues intense efforts to end Moscow's war in Ukraine. Trump has spoken twice with Russian PresidentVladimir Putinin the past week.

The tanker is currently in the North Atlantic, according topublicly available datawhich was also first reported by The Times.

The White House, State Department and Russian Embassy in Washington, DC, did not respond to requests for comment.

The Coast Guard's pursuit of the aging, rusted oil tanker is part of a series of increasingly escalatory actions taken by the United States against Venezuela and its leader, Nicolás Maduro, including a military buildup in the Caribbean and dozens of strikes against boats that the US has accused of trafficking drugs

Those strikes have killed scores of people and raised questions about the legality of the attacks. The boat strikes have also garnered criticism as they have come despite President Donald Trump's campaign pledge to extract the US from foreign entanglements.

The US has also begun to strike within Venezuela,CNN previously reported, with the CIA carrying out a drone strike last month on a port facility on the country's coast.

The pursuit of the Bella 1 comes after Trump last monthdeclared a complete blockadeof sanctioned oil tankers transiting to or from Venezuela. The US seized two other oil tankers earlier in December.

The Coast Guard has been chasing this vessel for nearly two weeks, which first resisted seizure on December 21 when it made a U-turn in the Caribbean after the Coast Guard attempted to interdict the ship as it was on its way to Venezuela to pick up oil.

While Trump has repeatedly said his hardline actions against Venezuela are part of an effort to stymie the flow of drugs into the United States, some of his closest advisers have undercut that claim.

White House chief of staff Susie Wiles suggested in a series of interviews to Vanity Fair published last month that regime change, not drug enforcement, was the administration's goal.

She said Trump wants to "keep on blowing boats up until Maduro cries uncle."

This story has been updated with additional details.

CNN's Avery Schmitz contributed to this report.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Russia files diplomatic request asking US to stop pursuing oil tanker originally bound for Venezuela

Russia filed a formal diplomatic request that the United States stop pursuing anoil tankeroriginally bound for Venezuela that has evaded US...
Big Tech's fast-expanding plans for data centers are running into stiff community opposition

SPRING CITY, Pa. (AP) — Tech companies and developers looking to plunge billions of dollars into ever-bigger data centers to powerartificial intelligenceand cloud computing are increasingly losing fights in communities where people don't want to live next to them, or even near them.

Communities across the United States are reading about — and learning from — each other's battles against data center proposals that are fast multiplying in number and size to meet steep demand as developers branch out in search of faster connections to power sources.

In many cases, municipal boards are trying to figure out whether energy- and water-hungry data centers fit into their zoning framework. Some have entertained waivers or tried to write new ordinances. Some don't have zoning.

But as more people hear about a data center coming to their community, once-sleepy municipal board meetings in farming towns and growing suburbs now feature crowded rooms of angry residents pressuring local officials to reject the requests.

"Would you want this built in your backyard?" Larry Shank asked supervisors last month in Pennsylvania's East Vincent Township. "Because that's where it's literally going, is in my backyard."

Opposition spreads as data centers fan out

A growing number of proposals are going down in defeat, sounding alarms across the data center constellation of Big Tech firms, real estate developers, electric utilities, labor unions and more.

Andy Cvengros, who helps lead the data center practice at commercial real estate giant JLL, counted seven or eight deals he'd worked on in recent months that saw opponents going door-to-door, handing out shirts or putting signs in people's yards.

"It's becoming a huge problem," Cvengros said.

Data Center Watch, a project of 10a Labs, an AI security consultancy, said it is seeing a sharp escalation in community, political and regulatory disruptions to data center development.

Between April and June alone, its latest reporting period, it counted 20 proposals valued at $98 billion in 11 states that were blocked or delayed amid local opposition and state-level pushback. That amounts to two-thirds of the projects it was tracking.

Some environmental and consumer advocacy groups say they're fielding calls every day, and are working to educate communities on how to protect themselves.

"I've been doing this work for 16 years, worked on hundreds of campaigns I'd guess, and this by far is the biggest kind of local pushback I've ever seen here in Indiana," said Bryce Gustafson of the Indianapolis-based Citizens Action Coalition.

In Indiana alone, Gustafson counted more than a dozen projects that lost rezoning petitions.

Similar concerns across different communities

For some people angry oversteep increases in electric bills, their patience is thin for data centers that could bring still-higher increases.

Losing open space, farmland, forest or rural character is a big concern. So is the damage to quality of life, property values or health by on-site diesel generators kicking on or the constant hum of servers. Others worry that wells and aquifers could run dry.

Lawsuits are flying — both ways — over whether local governments violated their own rules.

Big Tech firmsMicrosoft, Google, Amazon and Facebook — which are collectively spending hundreds of billions of dollars on data centers across the globe — didn't answer Associated Press questions about the effect of community pushback.

Microsoft, however, has acknowledged the difficulties. In an October securities filing, it listed its operational risks as including "community opposition, local moratoriums, and hyper-local dissent that may impede or delay infrastructure development."

Even with high-level support from state and federal governments, the pushback is having an impact.

Maxx Kossof, vice president of investment at Chicago-based developer The Missner Group, said developers worried about losing a zoning fight are considering selling properties once they secure a power source — a highly sought-after commodity that makes a proposal far more viable and valuable.

"You might as well take chips off the table," Kossof said. "The thing is you could have power to a site and it's futile because you might not get the zoning. You might not get the community support."

Some in the industry are frustrated, saying opponents are spreading falsehoods about data centers — such as polluting water and air — and are difficult to overcome.

Still, data center allies say they are urging developers to engage with the public earlier in the process, emphasize economic benefits, sow good will by supporting community initiatives and talk up efforts to conserve water and power and protect ratepayers.

"It's definitely a discussion that the industry is having internally about, 'Hey, how do we do a better job of community engagement?'" said Dan Diorio of the Data Center Coalition, a trade association that includes Big Tech firms and developers.

Data center opposition dominates local politics

Winning over local officials, however, hasn't translated to winning over residents.

Developers pulled a project off an October agenda in the Charlotte suburb of Matthews, North Carolina, after Mayor John Higdon said he informed them it faced unanimous defeat.

The project would have funded half the city's budget and developers promised environmentally friendly features. But town meetings overflowed, and emails, texts and phone calls were overwhelmingly opposed, "999 to one against," Higdon said.

Had council approved it, "every person that voted for it would no longer be in office," the mayor said. "That's for sure."

In Hermantown, a suburb of Duluth, Minnesota, a proposed data center campus several times larger than the Mall of America is on hold amid challenges over whether the city's environmental review was adequate.

Residents found each other through social media and, from there, learned to organize, protest, door-knock and get their message out.

They say they felt betrayed and lied to when they discovered that state, county, city and utility officials knew about the proposal for an entire year before the city — responding to a public records request filed by the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy — released internal emails that confirmed it.

"It's the secrecy. The secrecy just drives people crazy," said Jonathan Thornton, a realtor who lives across a road from the site.

Documents revealing the extent of the project emerged days before a city rezoning vote in October. Mortenson, which is developing it for a Fortune 50 company that it hasn't named, says it is considering changes based on public feedback and that "more engagement with the community is appropriate."

Rebecca Gramdorf found out about it from a Duluth newspaper article, and immediately worried that it would spell the end of her six-acre vegetable farm.

She found other opponents online, ordered 100 yard signs and prepared for a struggle.

"I don't think this fight is over at all," Gramdorf said.

Follow Marc Levy on X athttps://x.com/timelywriter.

Big Tech's fast-expanding plans for data centers are running into stiff community opposition

SPRING CITY, Pa. (AP) — Tech companies and developers looking to plunge billions of dollars into ever-bigger data centers...

 

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