A North Texas man faces execution as his cousin claims he was the shooter in fatal robbery

HOUSTON (AP) — A North Texas man who claims he was not the shooter in a fatal robbery that killed two people nearly 18 years ago and who says prosecutorsmisused rap lyricshe wrote to secure hisdeath sentencefaced execution Thursday evening.

Associated Press FILE - The main entrance of the building housing the execution chamber at the Huntsville Unit of the Texas State Penitentiary is seen, Oct. 17, 2024, in Huntsville, Texas. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke, File) This undated photo provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice on Wednesday, April 29, 2026, shows Texas death row inmate James Broadnax. (Texas Department of Criminal Justice via AP)

US Texas Execution

James Broadnax was sentenced to death for the 2008 shooting deaths of two men outside a suburban Dallas music studio. Prosecutors say Broadnax and his cousin, Demarius Cummings, fatally shot and robbed Stephen Swan and Matthew Butler in the parking lot of Butler’s recording studio in Garland. Cummings was sentenced to life without parole.

Prosecutors say Broadnax, 37, confessed to the shooting, telling reporters during jailhouse interviews that “I pulled the trigger” and that he had no remorse.

Broadnax was scheduled to receive a lethal injection after 6 p.m. CDT at the state penitentiary in Huntsville, about 70 miles (110 kilometers) north of Houston.

His attorneys have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to stay his execution, filing multiple final appeals after lower courts declined to stop the lethal injection.

His lawyers have focused his final appeals on two issues: Cummings has recently confessed to being the shooter; and Broadnax’s constitutional rights were violated because prosecutors eliminated potential jurors during his trial on the basis of race.

“I’m really gonna tell it like it’s supposed to be told, that it was me, that I was the killer. I shot Matthew Bullard, Steve Swann,” Cummings said recently from prison in a video created as part of the efforts to stop Broadnax’s execution.

Broadnax’s attorneys say in filings with the high court that Cummings’ confession is “corroborated by the fact that his DNA, and not Mr. Broadnax’s, was found on the murder weapon and in the pocket of one of the victims.”

In the video, Broadnax said his confession was false as at the time he didn’t care about his life. Broadnax’s lawyers say he was under the influence of drugs during the television interviews.

He also apologized to the families of Butler and Swan for taking part in the robbery.

“I wish I could show them my soul, so they could see just how sorry I am. I am very much remorseful for everything that happened,” Broadnax said.

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His attorneys also allege prosecutors dismissed all seven potential Black jurors on the basis of their race, “utilizing a spreadsheet during jury selection that bolded only the names of every Black juror,” according to court documents. One Black juror was later reinstated to the jury. Broadnax is Black.

In a 1986 ruling known asBatson v. Kentucky, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that excluding jurors because of their race violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.

Broadnax’s attorneys had argued in an earlier appeal that prosecutors had violated his constitutional rights by using some of the rap lyrics he wrote to portray him as a violent and dangerous person in order to secure a death sentence. A number of A-list rappers, includingTravis Scott,T.I.andKiller Mike, had filed briefs at the Supreme Court in support of Broadnax’s appeal.

But the high court rejected that appeal as well as another that focused on how forensic evidence was presented at his trial.

The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Tuesday denied Broadnax’s request for a 180-day reprieve or to commute his death sentence.

The Texas Attorney General’s Office has described Cummings’ confession as the shooter as “questionable new evidence.” It also said in court documents that Broadnax’s claims that potential Black jurors were targeted for removal are “entirely meritless” as these jurors were stricken not because of race but because of their answers during questioning, including that some opposed the death penalty.

Theresa Butler, Matthew Butler’s mother, has asked that the execution proceed.

“This so called confession from cummings is just a stall tactic by broadnax’s desperate defense team. Its all a lie,” Butler wrote in a post on social media.

If the execution is carried out, Broadnax would be the third person put to death this year in Texas, which has historically held more executions than any other state.

About an hour before Broadnax's scheduled execution on Thursday, Florida is set to put to death James Ernest Hitchcock, 70, for beating and choking his 13-year-old step-niece to death.

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A North Texas man faces execution as his cousin claims he was the shooter in fatal robbery

HOUSTON (AP) — A North Texas man who claims he was not the shooter in a fatal robbery that killed two people nearly 18 years ago and wh...
Video of NYC police killing machete-wielding man at Grand Central station released

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City police have released body-worn camera footage of officers shooting and killing a machete-wielding man whostabbed three peopleat a Grand Central subway stop last month.

Associated Press Police investigate the scene after a reported stabbing and shooting at the Grand Central subway station in New York on Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy) A weapon used to attack three people is shown at the Grand Central subway station in New York on Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy) Police investigate the scene after a reported stabbing and shooting at the Grand Central subway station in New York on Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy)

New York Subway Violence

Thevideo clipposted on the department's YouTube page Friday shows officers confronting Anthony Griffin after he had randomly slashed three people at the 42nd Street-Grand Central subway station, which connects to Grand Central Terminal.

The uniformed officers, identified in the video as detectives Ryan Giuffre and Anthony Manetta, are seen encountering the 44-year-old as he walks up a stairwell holding a large knife at around 9:40 a.m. on April 11.

They order Griffin to drop the weapon multiple times, but Giuffre draws his gun as Griffin continues to hold the knife high near his head.

Griffin then retreats back down the stairs but starts moving toward the officers with the knife still overhead when they start to pursue him.

“Nobody wants to hurt you,” Giuffre says in the video. “We can talk about it. Get down. Get down. Dude, I’m not going to ask you again. Please. Please. Please. Get down!”

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But Griffin continues shouting and moving erratically toward the officers with the large blade raised up.

“I don’t want to be here. Shoot me,” he says at one point. “I am Lucifer," he says at another.

Giuffre then fires two shots at Griffin, who immediately drops to the ground. He was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said at the time of the incident that the officers ordered Griffin to drop the knife at least 20 times but he refused to comply.

“Our officers were confronted with an armed individual who had already injured multiple people and was continuing to pose a threat,” she said. “They gave clear commands. They attempted to de-escalate. And when that threat did not stop, they took decisive action to stop it and to protect New Yorkers on one of the busiest train platforms in the city.”

The three stabbing victims — an 84 year-old male, 65-year-old male and 70-year-old female — sustained injuries including “significant lacerations to the head and face” and a skull fracture, though the wounds were not considered life-threatening, Tisch said.

Video of NYC police killing machete-wielding man at Grand Central station released

NEW YORK (AP) — New York City police have released body-worn camera footage of officers shooting and killing a machete-wielding man who...

Spirit Airlines shuts down after failing to secure government bailout 03:06

CBS News

Air traffic control audio records showed the exchanges between controllers and the pilots of some ofSpirit Airlines' final flightsovernight Saturday, shortly after the airline announced it was ceasing operations after agovernment bailoutfailed to materialize.

Around midnight, an American Airlines employee at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport can be heard offering well wishes to Spirit employees on the airline's second-to-last flight at that airport.

"Sorry to hear what happened," the American Airlines employee says in the audio, which was obtained by LiveATC.com.

About 10 minutes later, the pilot of Spirit's final flight at the airport asked an air traffic controller if any more Spirit flights are set to land.

"I don't see anything," the controller replies. "You might be the last one."

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"This is it tonight," the pilot says.

A recording from Chicago O'Hare International Airport catches air traffic control staff sending well wishes to Spirit employees.

"It's hard to believe this is it," the Spirit Airlines pilot says in the audio, shared by ATC.com.

"Yeah, no kidding," tower staff reply. "It's been a pleasure to talk with you guys on the radios. Hope you guys can make it out OK."

Spirit Airlines planes are parked on the tarmac at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on May 2, 2026, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.  / Credit: Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Spirit Airlines was based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and employed about 15,000 people. About 6,000 of those employees were based in Florida.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a Saturday news conference that other airlines are offering preferential interviews to Spirit staff who have lost their jobs.

The Air Line Pilots Association said Spirit's closure is "a devastating blow to more than 2,000 ALPA pilots and thousands of other hardworking employees who dedicated their careers to this airline," and said that staff "deserved better than this outcome."

"This is it tonight": Spirit Airlines pilots sign off on final flights

Spirit Airlines shuts down after failing to secure government bailout 03:06 Air traffic control audio records showed the exchange...
Lara Trump addresses wild conspiracy theory about Barron: ‘I broke a lot of people’s hearts today’

DonaldTrump’s daughter-in-law Lara has debunked a wildconspiracy theoryrelating to the president’s youngest sonBarron, comparable to the Moon landing being faked or that 9/11 was an inside job.

The Independent US

Onthe latest episode ofThe Right View with Lara Trump, the presenter said she had been immersed in viral videos about her brother-in-law and felt compelled to address one of the outlandish claims on his behalf.

The youngest of the president’s children, Barron has shown apparent reluctance to enter the national spotlight, in stark contrast to his father or elder brothers Don Jr and Eric.

Barron Trump’s reluctance to spend time in the public eye has caused him to become a figure of intrigue (AP)

This has inadvertently caused the 20 year-old to acquire an air of mystery amongst some fans, with one of the more absurd claims being that he is a “time traveller”.

Lara Trump discussed the viral theory on her show Thursday, marvelling at the “amount of views that some of these videos get where they really dissect how this really worked out,” only to deliver a sharp dose of reality.

“I’m not trying to ruin anybody or rain on any parades here,” she said. “Barron Trump is not a time traveler. Sorry to say it. I’m sorry, I broke a lot of people’s hearts today.”

Saying the conspiracy was illustrative of “how much really crazy stuff exists” online, she challenged her viewers: “Name me one time traveler. Name me anybody who actually can say that that’s a real thing?

“It doesn’t exist but people have gotten so far off the rails on this ‘Barron being a time traveler’ thing. I don’t know what to tell you. I think it’s crazy. I’ve known Barron for 18 years, OK, he’s not a time traveler.”

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Lara Trump discusses a truly wild conspiracy theory about her brother-in-law on her show The Right View (Lara Trump/The Right View)

She continued: “I’ve seen him grow up, it’s crazy stuff, but I think people love to grab on to conspiracies or things that are very far-fetched like that.”

The basis for the improbable theory – which has beendiscussed by Joe Rogan, among others – is that the American lawyer and author Ingersoll Lockwood (1841-1918) wrote two children’s books in the late 19th century in which the title character is a wealthy boy adventurer named Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Von Troomp, or Baron Trump.

The character features in two novels,The Travels and Adventures of Little Baron Trump and his Wonderful Dog Bulger(1889) andBaron Trump’s Marvellous Underground Journey(1893), which are said to have been inspired by the taste for fantastical literature brought about by the popularity of Lewis Carroll’s work.

In the books, Baron Trump is a precocious boy with “a very active brain” who lives at Castle Trump, from which he sets out on globe-trotting adventures that regularly find him causing offence to the characters he encounters.

The parallels between Lockwood’s work and the MAGA era werefirst pointed out during President Trump’s first termbut the idea that the novels are based on the real Barron Trump’s travels back to the 1890s has blossomed alongside growing interest in the man himself.

A frontispiece illustration from Ingersoll Lockwood’s 1893 novel Baron Trump’s Marvellous Underground Journey (Wikimedia Commons)

Another later Lockwood novel,1900, or The Last Presidentis arguably even more prescient in that it concerns a populist outsider candidate winning a U.S. presidential election and bringing about the downfall of the republic.

On another recent episode of her show, Lara Trumpsaid of the real-life Barron: “I don’t know if he knows that the internet is obsessed with him. I think he knows that there is a lot of interest.

“But that’s why he likes to lay low. That’s why he likes to play it cool. That’s why you don’t see him all the time.”

Lara Trump addresses wild conspiracy theory about Barron: ‘I broke a lot of people’s hearts today’

DonaldTrump’s daughter-in-law Lara has debunked a wildconspiracy theoryrelating to the president’s youngest sonBarron, comparable to th...
Trump says Iran war 'terminated,' as war powers deadline arrives

By Patricia Zengerle and Steve Holland

Reuters

WASHINGTON, May 1 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump declared that a ceasefire had "terminated" hostilities against Iran, as he sought to bolster his argument that he does not need lawmakers' permission to continue the conflict.

In a letter to congressional ‌leaders on Friday, the deadline to come to Congress about the war, Trump said there has been no exchange of fire with ‌Iran since the ceasefire. "The hostilities that began on February 28, 2026, have terminated," he said.

Under the 1973 War Powers Resolution, a U.S. president can wage military action for only 60 days before ​ending it, asking Congress for authorization or seeking a 30-day extension due to "unavoidable military necessity regarding the safety of United States Armed Forces" while withdrawing forces.

On Friday, Iranian state news agency IRNA said Tehran had sent its latest proposal for negotiations with the U.S. to Pakistani mediators. Trump swiftly rejected it.

The president formally notified Congress of the conflict 48 hours after the first airstrikes two months ago, starting the 60-day clock that ends May 1.

As the date approached, congressional aides and ‌analysts said they expected the Republican president to sidestep ⁠the deadline. A senior Trump administration official had said on Thursday the administration's view was that the war powers law deadline did not apply.

Trump said he considered the war powers law unconstitutional. Both Republican and Democratic presidents have contended the ⁠measure violated the Constitution because it sets limits on the president's powers as commander-in-chief. Legal experts say the matter has not been decided by the courts.

"We had a ceasefire, so that gives you additional time," Trump said before leaving Washington for Florida.

NO WAY OUT: DEMOCRATIC SENATOR

Congressional Democrats, who have tried repeatedly to pass war powers legislation ​that ​would force Trump to end the war or come to Congress for authorization, dismissed ​that characterization, saying there was nothing in the 1973 law ‌allowing for a ceasefire.

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They also said that the continuing deployment of U.S. ships blockading Iranian oil exports was evidence of continuing hostility, not a ceasefire.

“After sixty days of conflict, President Trump still does not have a strategy or way out for this poorly planned war," Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement calling the deadline "a clear legal threshold" for Trump to act.

In his letter to Congress, Trump acknowledged that the conflict may not be resolved. He said Iran still poses a "significant" threat to the United States and its armed forces.

PARTY LOYALTY AS ‌ELECTIONS LOOM

Trump's fellow Republicans, who hold slim majorities in the Senate and House of ​Representatives and rarely break from Trump, have voted almost unanimously to block every resolution seeking ​to end the conflict.

The Iran war has killed thousands, caused billions ​of dollars in damage and roiled world markets, disrupting energy shipments and boosting a wide range of consumer prices.

Polls show ‌the war is unpopular among Americans, six months before November elections ​that will determine who controls Congress ​next year.

The U.S. Constitution says only Congress, not the president, can declare war, but that restriction does not apply to short-term operations or to counter an immediate threat.

On Thursday, Trump received a briefing on plans for fresh military strikes to compel Iran to negotiate an end to ​the conflict.

If fighting resumes, Trump can tell lawmakers he ‌has started a new 60-day clock. Presidents from both parties have repeatedly done so when waging intermittent hostilities since Congress passed the war ​powers law in response to the Vietnam War.

That conflict, widely unpopular with Americans, was also not authorized by Congress.

(Reporting by Patricia ​Zengerle; additional reporting by Bo Erickson; Editing by Don Durfee and Rod Nickel)

Trump says Iran war 'terminated,' as war powers deadline arrives

By Patricia Zengerle and Steve Holland WASHINGTON, May 1 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump declared that a ceasefire had ...
Trump task force report alleges anti-Christian discrimination under Biden administration

A Trump administration task force has alleged wide-ranging discrimination against Christians during the tenure of former President Joe Biden, claiming in a new report they were targeted in areas such as education, tax law and prosecution of anti-abortion protesters.

Associated Press FILE - President Donald Trump speaks during the National Prayer Breakfast, at the Capitol in Washington, Feb. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) FILE- President Joe Biden, with from left, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., and House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., pray and listen during the National Prayer Breakfast, Feb. 1, 2024, at the Capitol in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File) FILE - President Donald Trump sits at a desk as he and religious leaders listen to a musical performance before Trump signs an executive order during a National Day of Prayer event in the Rose Garden of the White House, May 1, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

Anti Christian Bias Task Force

Progressive groups criticized the report, saying it fails to document a pattern of discrimination, focuses on causes favored by conservative Christians and amounts to “advocacy dressed up as investigation.”

The Task Force to Eradicate Anti-Christian Bias, created within the Justice Department by President Donald Trump last year, issued its conclusions Thursday in a 200-page report.

“When Christian beliefs about morality and human nature conflicted with the Biden Administration’s views, religious rights often suffered," the report said.

Report alleges an unfair hard line against conservatives

The task force — which included numerous Cabinet secretaries — didn't accuse the Biden administration of any large pattern of suppressing churches themselves or the right to worship. But the report did accuse it of taking a hard line against those who advocated for conservative policies on the basis of their faith in such areas as abortion, gender, school curriculum and vaccine exemptions.

“The Biden Administration generally tolerated religious beliefs that were privately held but zealously pursued actions to limit Christians’ ability to act in accordance with their faith," it said.

Critics said the report essentially equates one stand of conservative Christianity to be representative of Christians overall, then construes policy disagreements to be persecution.

The report is “advocacy dressed up as investigation,” said Jim Simpson, executive director of the Center on Faith and Justice at Georgetown University.

He said report falsely deems policy disagreements to be “evidence of anti-Christian bias rather than the normal functioning of a pluralistic democracy." He also said it falsely positionsChristians— nearlytwo-thirds of Americans— as “a persecuted minority despite being the country’s largest and most politically influential religious group.”

The task force report contends that the Biden-era Justice Department sought severe penalties for anti-abortion activists who illegally blockaded clinics and took such protests more seriously than threats to pregnancy resource centers — often Christian-run facilities that seek to persuade women not to obtain abortions.

It cited a group of people convicted in federal court and sentenced to prison after invading and blockading a Washington abortion clinic. Trumppardonedthem in 2025.

The report contended that the Biden administration “sidelined Christians in favor of their preferred constituencies.”

Alleged abuses related to Easter and LGBTQ+ rights

One section of the report accuses Biden of “replacing Easter" with Transgender Day of Visibility, which takes place every March 31. That event coincided with Easter on 2024. In fact, Biden issued proclamations honoring both occasions. The report accused Biden of “profound lack of consideration for the Christian faith.”

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Christian groups have mixed views on LGBTQ+ issues, with some progressive churches flying Pride flags. Conservative denominations generally oppose same-sex marriage and transgender rights. The report chided the Biden administration for flying Pride flags at U.S. Embassies, including at the Vatican.

Melissa Rogers, who served as executive director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships under Biden, contrastedTrump's Easter messagingthis year with his predecessor's.

“President Biden spent Easter and Orthodox Easter wishing Christians worldwide joyful Resurrection Sundays, not by pretending to be Jesus, by tweeting profanities, and by attacking the pope,” she said.

She also noted that Biden is a devout Catholic, and that his administration's officials routinely met with Christian and other faith leaders to cooperate on a wide range of concerns, from the security of sanctuaries to immigration to supporting COVID-19 clinics.

The task force’s report criticized a Biden-era Justice Department memo that discussed possible efforts to prevent violence and threats targeting school boards. The discussions never led to federal action, and then-Attorney General Merrick Garland defended the effort, saying it was to curtail violence, not inhibit debates over policy.

The report did not directly say how it considered this anti-Christian bias, though many school board meetings in that time period did draw conservative Christians and other critics denouncing school policies and lessons on such topics as gender and race.

The report also criticized denials in federal agencies for Christians seeking exemptions from such things as COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

It criticized federal regulators that had told a Catholic hospital in Oklahoma to snuff its chapel candle, deemed a safety hazard because of the risk of combustion to patients with oxygen equipment. The hospital was allowed to keep the candle while putting up a barrier and a warning notice.

The report also cited what it said were disproportionately heavy fines imposed by Biden's Department of Education on two Christian universities — Grand Canyon University for allegedly deceiving thousands of students over program costs, and Liberty University for failures to comply with required disclosures of crime statistics. The Trump administration cleared Grand Canyon University of the charges and rescinded the fine.

Amanda Tyler, executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty, criticized the report for “cherry-picked anecdotes” that don't add up to a pattern of persecution.

“To the extent that the government ever did overreach or violate the law in any of these examples, the courts of law, not a partisan political report, provide the right venue to settle any legal disputes,” she said. “Focusing government resources on this narrow issue while ignoring or discounting the much more widespread instances of anti-religious discrimination against other faith groups in the U.S. further harms religious freedom for all.”

The report comes even as the Religious Liberty Commission, another entity created by Trump, prepares a report on its findings; its hearings featured many of the same grievances cited by the task force.

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’scollaborationwith The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

Trump task force report alleges anti-Christian discrimination under Biden administration

A Trump administration task force has alleged wide-ranging discrimination against Christians during the tenure of former President Joe ...
Sheinbaum says Mexico will investigate US indictment alleging Sinaloa Cartel ties

MEXICO CITY (AP) —Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaumsaid on Thursday that she wouldn't let the U.S. meddle in the country's affairs, and that her attorney general would investigate allegations from a New York court indictmentaccusing 10 Mexican current and former officialsof working with the Sinaloa Cartel to traffic drugs.

Associated Press Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum arrives at the National Palace to give her daily morning press conference in Mexico City, Thursday, April 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano) President Claudia Sheinbaum gives her daily morning press conference at the National Palace in Mexico City, Thursday, April 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano) FILE - Sinaloa state Gov. Ruben Rocha waves as he takes part in an annual earthquake drill in Culiacan, Mexico, Sept. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File)

APTOPIX Mexico Sheinbaum

The indictment named a number of sitting officials in Sinaloa, including members of Sheinbaum's progressive Morena party, fueling a political firestorm at a time when Sheinbaum has sought to offset U.S. pressures while appeasing her own base. Shortly after, Mexico's government said that it had seen extradition request from the U.S. for 10 citizens, without naming them.

The highest profile official implicated was Sinaloa Gov. Rubén Rocha Moya, a top Morena official and close ally of Sheinbaum's mentor and predecessor, formerPresident Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

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Sheinbaum on Thursday said that Mexican prosecutors would investigate the cases and gather their own information to “determine whether there is evidence establishing that the allegations made by U.S. authorities have a legal basis for requesting arrest warrants.”

The president previously said that she had seen no evidence to back up the U.S. allegations.

She added that she was ready to put her foot down if they find “no clear evidence” in their investigation that those charged committed a crime.

“If it is evident that the Justice Department’s charges are politically motivated, let there be absolutely no doubt: under no circumstances will we allow a foreign government to interfere in decisions that are the exclusive prerogative of the Mexican people," Sheinbaum said.

Sheinbaum says Mexico will investigate US indictment alleging Sinaloa Cartel ties

MEXICO CITY (AP) —Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaumsaid on Thursday that she wouldn't let the U.S. meddle in the country's af...

 

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