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  • Christmas Eve winner in Arkansas lands a $1.817 billion Powerball lottery jackpot

    Christmas Eve winner in Arkansas lands a $1.817 billion Powerball lottery jackpot

    A Powerball ticket purchased outside Little Rock, Ark., won a $1.817 billion jackpot in Wednesday’s Christmas Eve drawing, ending the lottery game’s three-month stretch without a top-prize winner.

    The winning numbers were 04, 25, 31, 52, and 59, with the Powerball number being 19. The winning ticket was sold at a Murphy USA store in Cabot, lottery officials in Arkansas said Thursday. No one answered the phone Thursday at the location, which was closed for Christmas. Cabot, a community of roughly 27,000 people, is 26 miles northeast of Little Rock.

    Final ticket sales pushed the jackpot higher than previously expected, making it the second-largest in U.S. history and the largest Powerball prize of 2025, according to www.powerball.com. The jackpot had a lump-sum cash payment option of $834.9 million.

    “Congratulations to the newest Powerball jackpot winner! This is truly an extraordinary, life-changing prize,” Matt Strawn, Powerball Product Group Chair and Iowa Lottery CEO, was quoted as saying by the website. “We also want to thank all the players who joined in this jackpot streak — every ticket purchased helps support public programs and services across the country.”

    Lottery officials said they won’t know who won until at least Monday because winners must contact a claims center, which is closed for the holidays until then, according to Karen Reynolds, a spokesperson for the Arkansas lottery.

    The prize followed 46 consecutive drawings in which no one matched all six numbers.

    The last drawing with a jackpot winner was Sept. 6, when players in Missouri and Texas won $1.787 billion.

    Organizers said it is the second time the Powerball jackpot has been won by a ticket sold in Arkansas. It first happened in 2010.

    The last time someone won a Powerball jackpot on Christmas Eve was in 2011, Powerball said. The company added that the sweepstakes has been won on Christmas Day four times, most recently in 2013.

    Powerball’s odds of 1 in 292.2 million are designed to generate big jackpots, with prizes growing as they roll over when no one wins. Lottery officials note that the odds are far better for the game’s many smaller prizes.

    “With the prize so high, I just bought one kind of impulsively. Why not?” Indianapolis glass artist Chris Winters said Wednesday.

    Tickets cost $2, and the game is offered in 45 states plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

  • A Philly priest’s soon-to-be-famous Christmas song was played on this week in Philly history

    A Philly priest’s soon-to-be-famous Christmas song was played on this week in Philly history

    One of America’s great Christmas songs grew out of procrastination.

    Two friends — a rector and his organist at the Church of the Holy Trinity on Rittenhouse Square — found the inspiration in the run-up to the Christmas celebration in 1868.

    The result of their delayed creativity was “O Little Town of Bethlehem,” composed and heard in a Philadelphia church.

    It was a song that spread across the world, and put the 19th-century church on the map.

    The silent stars

    Three years before, in 1865, the church’s vicar visited the Holy Land.

    So moved by what he saw on that trip, the Rev. Phillips Brooks put pen to paper.

    The result was a poem:

    O little town of Bethlehem,

    How still we see thee lie.

    Above thy deep and dreamless sleep

    The silent stars go by.

    In totality, as a piece of music, the song is not exactly upbeat.

    The lyrics reflect on the darkness found after midnight. Cries of misery reverberating through dark streets under cover of ink-black skies.

    But there’s also everlasting light.

    A Christmas miracle

    Three years later in 1868, Brooks asked the church’s organist, Lewis Redner, a real estate agent who played the organ for four churches, to set music to those lyrics Brooks penned.

    It was to be part of a song that would play during the Christmas holiday in 1868.

    And then Brooks waited.

    To his congregation, Brooks was an inspiring preacher. In the throes of the American Civil War, he would ride on a wagon to the battlefields around Gettysburg to perform last rites on dying soldiers and offer words of comfort to wounded soldiers — Union and Confederate.

    Days turned to weeks, and Brooks was still waiting for the completed song.

    But as the holiday approached, the procrastination had reached a fever pitch.

    Two days before the Christmas service, on a Friday, Brooks nervously asked about the song.

    “Have you ground out the music yet?”

    “No,” Redner said.

    But he assured Brooks: “I’ll have it by Sunday.”

    On Saturday night, Redner wrote in his diary that his brain was in knots over the tune, according to The Inquirer.

    Once asleep, he woke with a start.

    He wrote that he heard an angel whispering in his ear.

    Redner then scribbled down the tune.

    And before the Sunday service, he layered on the harmony.

  • Christmas Eve fire damages several rowhouses, displaces families in Chester

    Christmas Eve fire damages several rowhouses, displaces families in Chester

    No injuries were reported after a Christmas Eve fire at a rowhouse in Chester spread to neighboring homes, displacing five families, officials said.

    Shortly before 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, firefighters responded to the 900 block of West Seventh Street and found heavy fire in a rowhouse. A second alarm was struck about seven minutes later.

    Mayor Stefan Roots said three homes sustained heavy fire and water damage. He did not provide any information on what caused the fire.

    The American Red Cross responded to the scene and assisted a total of 13 people from five families who were displaced, said spokesperson Alana Mauger.

  • Powerful holiday storm lashes Southern California and brings flash floods, mudslides

    Powerful holiday storm lashes Southern California and brings flash floods, mudslides

    LOS ANGELES — A powerful winter storm swept across California on Wednesday, with heavy rains and gusty winds bringing mudslides and debris flows that has led to some water rescues and evacuation orders.

    Forecasters said Southern California could see its wettest Christmas in years and warned about flash flooding and mudslides. Areas scorched by January’s wildfires were under evacuation warnings, and Los Angeles County officials said the previous day that they delivered about 380 evacuation orders to especially vulnerable homes.

    San Bernardino County firefighters said they rescued people trapped in their cars when mud and debris rushed down a road leading into Wrightwood, a mountain resort town in the San Gabriel Mountains about 80 miles northeast of Los Angeles. It was not immediately clear how many were rescued.

    Firefighters also went door to door to check on residents, and the area was under a shelter-in-place order, officials said. Lytle Creek, also in the San Gabriel Mountains, was under evacuation orders in the afternoon as rains continued to pummel the area.

    Debris and mud were seen cascading down a road in Wrightwood in a video posted by county fire officials. Another video showed fast-moving water rushing through the front porch of several homes.

    The storm stranded Dillan Brown with his wife and 14-month-old daughter at a rented cabin in Wrightwood with almost no food and only enough diapers for about another day. By the morning, roads leading off the mountain and to a grocery store were blocked by rocks and debris, Brown said.

    “I came across [a road] where there was a car sucked away by the water and realized we were trapped here,” he said.

    A resident learned of his situation and posted a call for help in a Facebook group, and in less than an hour, neighbors showed up with more than enough supplies to ride out the storm, including bread, vegetables, milk, diapers and wipes.

    “I think we’re a little sad and upset that we’re not going to be home with our families,” Brown said, but the “kindness shown is definitely an overwhelming feeling.”

    Janice Quick, president of the Wrightwood Chamber of Commerce and a resident of the mountain town for 45 years, said a wildfire in 2024 left much of the terrain without tree coverage and “all this rain is bringing down a lot of debris and a lot of mud from the mountain area.”

    Residents around the burn scar zones from the Airport Fire in Orange County were also ordered to evacuate.

    Areas along the coast including Malibu were under flood warnings until the evening, and much of the Sacramento Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area were also under wind and flood advisories.

    Heavy rain douses Southern California

    The Los Angeles Fire Department rescued a man trapped in a drainage tunnel in northwest LA. No injuries were reported, but the man was being evaluated.

    Several roadways including a part of Interstate 5 near the Burbank Airport were closed due to flooding.

    Conditions could worsen with multiple atmospheric rivers during one of the busiest travel weeks of the year. The storm in Los Angeles was expected to strengthen into the afternoon before tapering off later in the evening.

    James Dangerfield, an 84-year-old resident of Altadena, said his family and neighbor helped place sandbags in his backyard earlier this week. A flash flood warning was issued for the neighborhood, but he wasn’t too worried because his house is on a hill.

    He and his wife, Stephanie, planned to remain there and spend Christmas Eve with their two adult daughters and grandchildren.

    “We’re just going to stay put, and everybody will have to come to us,” Dangerfield said. “We’re not going to go anywhere.”

    Mike Burdick, who takes care of his parents in Altadena near burn scars from the Eaton Fire, ran out to buy more sandbags in the morning when he saw that the pool was overflowing.

    “I literally woke up to just downpour,” he said.

    The family was prepared to evacuate with a week’s worth of essentials including for their dog and cat. They planned to attend a nearby holiday party in the evening.

    “We’re just going to make an appearance and get back safe to our animals,” Burdick said.

    Southern California typically gets half an inch to 1 inch of rain this time of year, but this week many areas could see between 4 and 8 inches with even more in the mountains, National Weather Service meteorologist Mike Wofford said.

    Much of California under weather warnings

    Forecasters said heavy snow and gusts were expected to create “near white-out conditions” in parts of the Sierra Nevada and make travel “nearly impossible” through mountain passes. There was also a “considerable” avalanche risk around Lake Tahoe, according to the Sierra Avalanche Center.

    The National Weather Service said a winter storm warning would be in effect for the greater Tahoe region until Friday morning.

    Power was knocked out to more than 125,000 due to a damaged power pole, according to the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. utility.

    The California Highway Patrol was investigating a seemingly weather-related fatal crash south of Sacramento. A driver who was apparently traveling at an unsafe speed lost control on a wet road and crashed into a power pole, Officer Michael Harper said via email.

    San Francisco and Los Angeles airports reported some minor morning flight delays.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency in six counties to allow state assistance in storm response.

    Flash flooding in Northern California has led to water rescues and at least one death, authorities said.

    The state deployed emergency resources and first responders to several coastal and Southern California counties, and the California National Guard was on standby.

    Atmospheric rivers transport moisture from the tropics to northern latitudes in long, narrow bands of water vapor that form over an ocean.

  • With the smoke cleared, key questions emerge in the wake of a deadly nursing home blast

    With the smoke cleared, key questions emerge in the wake of a deadly nursing home blast

    Twenty-four hours after two gas explosions ripped through a Bucks County nursing home, the dead and injured had been identified, survivors were accounted for, and the cleanup was underway. But unanswered questions about the blast’s cause mounted.

    On Wednesday morning, Peco provided a drastically different account of when its crews responded to reports of a gas odor on Tuesday, saying technicians had actually arrived hours — not minutes — before the blast at Bristol Health & Rehab Center.

    Then, the energy company went silent, declining to answer any additional questions as the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) took over a sprawling investigation that will also involve other federal law enforcement and regulatory agencies.

    Meanwhile, the new operator of the 174-bed nursing home, Saber Healthcare Group, is also coming under scrutiny amid questions about the poorly maintained facility on Tower Road that it took over from another provider just three weeks ago.

    It could take months to get answers about what caused, and who is at fault for, the blast that killed two people and left 19 hospitalized, one in critical condition.

    Experts and attorneys told The Inquirer the investigation will likely focus heavily on the actions of Peco and the nursing home’s operators.

    “If the facility doesn’t maintain the equipment and the gas in their own facility, then they would be responsible,” said Robert Mongeluzzi, an attorney who has represented victims of gas explosions. “If there were reports of the gas leak, and Peco is notified and the facility isn’t cleared … there’s going to be responsibility on both of them.”

    Windows and debris at the site of the Bristol Health & Rehab Center on Wednesday.

    In a statement, the NTSB said investigators will not be able to fully evaluate the natural gas service line until “a safe path is cleared.” That effort alone could take several days. The agency provided no timeline for its initial findings.

    Saber Healthcare Group took over operations at the nursing home on Dec. 1. Prior to that, the facility had been managed by another privately run for-profit healthcare company, the Ohio-based CommuniCare Health Services.

    CommuniCare, which had operated the home since 2021, racked up a long list of code violations for unsafe building conditions and substandard healthcare. Just two months ago, state inspectors cited the facility for lacking a fire safety plan, failing to maintain extinguishers, and allowing conditions that would cause poor smoke ventilation.

    Federal inspection records also show numerous citations over previous years for substandard healthcare, poor infection control, and mismanaged medical records, earning the facility a one-star rating. CommuniCare incurred more than $418,000 in fines due to violations in 2024, records show.

    “We have worked to improve and fix prior issues, and we will continue that work in the wake of this tragedy,” Saber said in a statement Tuesday.

    Attorneys watching the news unfold questioned whether Saber should have evacuated residents sooner on Tuesday. Peco’s own guidelines urge people who smell gas to evacuate the building immediately.

    “If you or I smelled gas in our apartment or house, we’d be like, ‘Where is it?’ You have to get everybody out,” said Ian Norris, an attorney at Philadelphia-based McEldrew Purtell who has sued Saber and other nursing home operators accused of negligence. “In a nursing home, you have a higher standard of care. They are dependent residents who are there on the basis that they need help.”

    A Saber representative said the company was looking into the evacuation procedures. In its statement Tuesday, the company said “facility personnel reported a gas smell” to Peco. The statement made no mention of an evacuation effort.

    The smell was confined to the kitchen area of the nursing home, according to the Saber representative.

    A Peco gas technician arrived at the nursing home on Tuesday afternoon. He was working alone in the basement below the kitchen area to address the issue, and as he went to his truck to retrieve more tools, the building erupted, said Larry Anastasi, president of IBEW Local 614, the union that represents Peco workers.

    Whether Peco’s gas lines played a role in the blast remains unknown. But the utility company’s aging gas infrastructure will likely come under closer inspection as the probe progresses, according to attorneys with knowledge of investigations following such explosions.

    One detail that became clear Wednesday was that Peco’s gas meter was located in the basement of the nursing home — not outside and aboveground as required by a 2011 order from the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC).

    The PUC, like Peco, declined to comment and referred questions to the NTSB.

    Workers set up fencing at Bristol Health & Rehab Center on Wednesday.

    While the age and condition of the gas line near the nursing home were not clear, Peco has acknowledged it had 742 miles of substandard gas lines across the state — including cast iron, plastic, and uncoated steel piping — that needed replacing. The lines accounted for 5% of Peco’s gas service but 82% of leaks, according to a report from the PUC.

    Peco plans call for all of those lines to be replaced by 2035 and to invest roughly $6 billion to inspect, modernize, and perform maintenance on all of its systems over the next five years.

    Richard Kuprewicz, an expert on gas pipeline safety and investigations, said it is too early to tell if Peco or the nursing home acted improperly. He warned against jumping to conclusions the day after the explosions.

    “We just don’t have the facts on this,” Kuprewicz said. “The tragedy is they had an explosion from a gas release that they knew was occurring. People will raise questions about this for months.”

    In the immediate aftermath Tuesday evening, Peco spokesperson Greg Smore said in a statement that the company’s crews had responded to the nursing home “shortly after 2 p.m.” Tuesday and that while they were on site, the explosion occurred. The blast was reported just before 2:20 p.m. Tuesday, according to Bristol Fire Chief Kevin Dippolito.

    But in a revised statement Wednesday morning, the company backtracked, saying its crews actually arrived “a few hours” before the explosion. It would not provide a specific time.

    Peco said it shut off natural gas and electric service “to ensure the safety of first responders and local residents.” But, again, it would not say when.

    Depending on where the gas leak was, Kuprewicz said, significant amounts of gas could continue to seep out after a shutoff.

    “There isn’t one standard answer for all this,” he said. “Even when you shut it off, it doesn’t [always] stop flowing.”

    Inquirer staff writers Samantha Melamed and Barbara Laker contributed to this article.

  • 10-year-old boy severely burned in Northeast Philadelphia plane crash reunites with bystander who saved him

    10-year-old boy severely burned in Northeast Philadelphia plane crash reunites with bystander who saved him

    Ramesses Dreuitt Vazquez scooted his wheelchair on a Mount Airy playground, pressing the ground with his sneakers to approach the man credited with saving his life.

    Caseem Wongus had last seen the child staggering from a flaming car after a medical jet torpedoed onto Cottman Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia, blasting wreckage into the neighborhood around the Roosevelt Mall and killing all six people onboard.

    Now the 10-year-old Philadelphia boy smiled through his scars, reaching his arm out to greet Wongus, who bent down and hugged him.

    Wongus, 26, was nervous to see Ramesses, unsure what to expect. On the night of the Jan. 31 crash, Wongus used his jean jacket to smother flames on Ramesses’ back. He then comforted Ramesses in the back seat of a police cruiser as they raced to St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children. The child’s clothes had burned away; his sneakers had melted to his feet from the heat.

    In the 10 months afterward, Ramesses fought for his life at a Boston hospital. He had 42 surgeries for burn wounds that affected 90% of his body, and had fingers and ears amputated. He was moved to a rehabilitation hospital in South Jersey before being released earlier this month.

    He reunited with his rescuer on Tuesday night at an event to mark what would have been the 38th birthday of Ramesses’ father, Steven Dreuitt Jr., who died when the car he was driving caught on fire.

    Family and friends gathered on the park’s basketball court to release balloons.

    Wongus asked Ramesses how he felt about getting swag from the Philadelphia Eagles and Phillies while in the hospital. “I’m really not much of a baseball fan; I’m more of an Eagles fan,” replied Ramesses, wearing a knit Eagles hat.

    The boy’s light and casual tone made Wongus smile.

    “I’m glad to see him with his family and to see how well he’s doing — seeing him just trying to function as a kid again and scooting around in the wheelchair on the basketball court,“ Wongus said.

    The balloon release was organized by Alberta “Amira” Brown, 60, Dreuitt’s mother and Ramesses’ grandmother. During the balloon release, she and Ramesses’ mother thanked Wongus for saving him.

    “If it wasn’t for this person here, Ramesses would not be here today,” Brown said, as family and friends applauded.

    Brown also asked those in attendance to support her son’s other child, Dominick Goods, an 11th grader at Imhotep Institute Charter High School in East Germantown.

    Both grandsons, she said, need the community’s love and support: “I have one that is completely, completely mentally distraught and one is physically distraught.”

    Dominick, who is Ramesses’ half brother, lost his father and his 34-year-old mother in the plane crash. Dominique Goods Burke, who was engaged to Dreuitt, was in the car’s passenger’s seat. The Mount Airy couple had picked up Ramesses from his mother’s home in Germantown and then headed to the Roosevelt Mall to run an errand. Goods Burke escaped from the car with severe burns and internal injuries.

    Dominick turned 16 two weeks before his mother died in April at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.

    “I want each and every one of you to imagine what a 15-year-old kid went through that night, being left home alone and waiting for his parents and his brother to come home, and no one ever did,” Brown said.

    “Don’t forget my grandson Dominick. I beg of you,” she said.

    Dominick Goods, 16, lost both of his parents in the jet crash in Northeast Philadelphia on Jan. 31. The teen and his family gathered at a Mount Airy playground to celebrate what would have been his father’s 38th birthday. The teen’s grandmother, Alberta “Amira” Brown (right), asked those gathered to support him.

    After watching balloons float skyward amid shouts of “Happy birthday, Steven,” Dominick drifted away from the crowd of about 40 people for a few moments alone.

    Ramesses, bundled under a fuzzy white blanket, playfully chased after his mother, Jamie Vazquez Viana, in his wheelchair, teasing about rolling over her feet.

    “Hey, that’s not fair,” she said.

    She declined to talk to a reporter but has shared some details of her son’s recovery on a GoFundMe page.

    “Ramesses is my little warrior who fought death and won, but he now faces a lifetime of reconstruction surgeries, intense therapy, and long-term burn care,” Vazquez Viana wrote.

    Wongus smiled through tears as he watched Ramesses chat with his 12-year-old cousin, Anthony “AJ” Jenkins, about video games. His cousin, who gave him an Xbox game for his birthday in October, asked if he had been playing it.

    Ramesses explained why he had not. “I have to sign in and put in my dad’s email and his number and all that, and I don’t have that,” Ramesses told his cousin.

    Jenkins, a seventh grader who is one of Brown’s seven grandchildren, said he cried during the balloon release, envisioning his uncle watching them.

    Family, friends and community members came out for the balloon release to celebrate the life and birthday of Steven Dreuitt Jr., who would’ve turned 38 on Dec. 23. He died in the Jan. 31 plane crash in Northeast Philadelphia.

    “I imagined in my mind that my uncle asked God, `Can I just look down there for a minute?,’ and he sat on the clouds and he watched as his balloons came up to him,” Jenkins said.

    Later in the evening, at his grandmother’s house, Dominick lit a candle for his father, while Ramesses looked on.

    Jenkins said he again pictured his uncle’s spirit. This time, clasping both his sons’ hands to help them light it.

    Ramesses Dreuitt Vazquez, 10, watches his older brother, Dominick Goods, 16, light a candle to remember their father, Steven Dreuitt Jr., who died in the Jan. 31 plane crash in Northeast Philadelphia. The brothers celebrated what would have been their father’s 38th birthday on Dec. 23.

    Jenkins said he is awed by his cousins’ physical and emotional strength. Ramesses “keeps pushing hard” to get stronger, even though his father is gone. Dominick had clung to hope that his mother would survive and was devastated, the cousin said.

    “It’s been really hard for him. I couldn’t be in that place. I’d be stuck. I couldn’t be strong enough,” Jenkins said. “They inspire me to be a better person. I want to show my uncle and his two sons that I am working hard for them.”

    Before heading over to the playground on Tuesday evening, Dominick gave Ramesses an early Christmas gift.

    Ramesses’ eyes grew wide as his mother helped him unfurl tissue paper to reveal a coveted pair of 2025 Air Jordan 8 “Bugs Bunny” Nike sneakers.

    “You like them. I can see it on your face,” his mother said.

    “I’m gonna hide them,” Ramesses replied. He didn’t want anyone to take them from him.

  • Bari Weiss defends held ‘60 Minutes’ story in email to CBS News staff

    Bari Weiss defends held ‘60 Minutes’ story in email to CBS News staff

    Bari Weiss explained her decision to hold a 60 Minutes segment earlier this week in an email to CBS News staff Wednesday, saying she is working to win back the trust of American viewers.

    “Right now, the majority of Americans say they do not trust the press. It isn’t because they’re crazy,” she began. “To win back their trust, we have to work hard. Sometimes that means doing more legwork. Sometimes it means telling unexpected stories. Sometimes it means training our attention on topics that have been overlooked or misconstrued. And sometimes it means holding a piece about an important subject to make sure it is comprehensive and fair.”

    The new CBS News editor in chief continued: “In our upside-down moment, this may seem radical. Such editorial decisions can cause a firestorm, particularly on a slow news week. And the standards for fairness we are holding ourselves to, particularly on contentious subjects, will surely feel controversial to those used to doing things one way. But to fulfill our mission, it’s necessary.”

    The postponed segment was set to cover the Trump administration’s deportations of Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador’s CECOT prison and had been heavily promoted by CBS before its scheduled Sunday air date.

    On Sunday, the correspondent for the segment, Sharyn Alfonsi, wrote to colleagues that Weiss had “spiked” the story. While she did not share the explicit reason, she suggested that Weiss was dissatisfied that the Trump administration did not participate in the story.

    “If the administration’s refusal to participate becomes a valid reason to spike a story, we have effectively handed them a ‘kill switch’ for any reporting they find inconvenient,” Alfonsi wrote Sunday. “If the standard for airing a story becomes ‘the government must agree to be interviewed,’ then the government effectively gains control over the 60 Minutes broadcast.”

    In a Monday morning meeting, Weiss told colleagues she “held that story because it wasn’t ready,” according to a person who attended the meeting who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share nonpublic comments. “We need to be able to make every effort to get the principals on the record and on camera.”

    CBS News did not respond to a request for comment Wednesday, but in a previous statement a spokeswoman said, “The 60 Minutes report on ‘Inside CECOT’ will air in a future broadcast.”

    Weiss joined CBS News as editor in chief in October after newly formed parent company Paramount Skydance bought her website, the Free Press, for $150 million. Paramount Skydance is run by David Ellison, the son of billionaire Oracle cofounder and Trump ally Larry Ellison.

    Critics have echoed Alfonsi’s concerns. “This is what government censorship looks like,” Sen. Edward J. Markey (D., Mass.) wrote in a social media post. “Trump approved the Paramount-Skydance merger. A few months later, CBS’s new editor-in-chief kills a deeply reported story critical of Trump.”

    To get its deal approved by the Trump administration, Paramount Skydance made concessions, including appointing an ombudsman with Republican Party ties to police bias in news, and it vowed to eliminate diversity initiatives, a focus of the Federal Communications Commission chairman, Brendan Carr.

    Weiss’ defenders have blasted the show’s staff as insubordinate and misdirected. “Every one of those producers at 60 Minutes engaged in this revolt, fire them. Clean house,” White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said in a video posted on X.

    Tanya Simon, the executive producer of 60 Minutes, told staff in a private meeting Monday that she stood by the segment, which was approved by the network’s standards department and lawyers, according to a partial transcript of the meeting obtained by the Washington Post.

    “In the end, our editor-in-chief had a different vision for how the piece should be, and it came late in the process, and we were not in a position to address the notes,” Simon said. “We pushed back, we defended our story, but she wanted changes, and I ultimately had to comply.”

    Even though the segment never aired in the United States, it was briefly made available in Canada. In that version, Alfonsi said the Department of Homeland Security had declined an interview request and referred questions to the government of El Salvador, which she said didn’t reply. It also included clips of President Donald Trump and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.

    Weiss’ Wednesday email to staff was cosigned by CBS News President Tom Cibrowski, as well as two of Weiss’s recently appointed deputies: Charles Forelle, the managing editor, and Adam Rubenstein, the deputy editor.

    “No amount of outrage — whether from activist organizations or the White House — will derail us,” the email concluded. “We are not out to score points with one side of the political spectrum or to win followers on social media. We are out to inform the American public and to get the story right. Restoring the integrity of the news is a difficult task. We can’t think of a more important one. Merry Christmas — and thank you, especially, to everyone who is working over this holiday.”

  • Trump-backed candidate Nasry Asfura declared winner of Honduras’ presidential vote

    Trump-backed candidate Nasry Asfura declared winner of Honduras’ presidential vote

    TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Trump-backed candidate Nasry Asfura won Honduras’ presidential election, the country’s electoral authorities said Wednesday afternoon, ending a weeks-long count that has whittled away at the credibility of the Central American nation’s fragile electoral system.

    The election continued Latin America’s swing to the right, coming just a week after Chile chose the far-right politician José Antonio Kast as its next president.

    Asfura, of the conservative National Party received 40.27% of the vote in the Nov. 30, edging out four-time candidate Salvador Nasralla of the conservative Liberal Party, who finished with 39.39% of the vote.

    Asfura, the former mayor of Honduras’ capital Tegucigalpa, won in his second bid for the presidency, after he and Nasralla were neck-and-neck during a weeks-long vote count that fueled international concern.

    On Tuesday night a number of electoral officials and candidates were already fighting and contesting the results of the election. Meanwhile, followers in Asfura’s campaign headquarters erupted into cheers.

    “Honduras: I am prepared to govern,” wrote Asfura in a post on X shortly after the results were released. “I will not let you down.”

    The results were a rebuke of the current leftist leader, and her governing democratic socialist Liberty and Re-foundation Party, known as LIBRE, whose candidate finished in a distant third place with 19.19% of the vote.

    Asfura ran as a pragmatic politician, pointing to his popular infrastructure projects in the capital. Trump endorsed the 67-year-old conservative just days before the vote, saying he was the only Honduran candidate the U.S. administration would work with.

    Nasralla has maintained that the election was fraudulent and called for a recount of all the votes just hours before the official results were announced.

    On Tuesday night, he addressed Trump in a post on X, writing: “Mr. President, your endorsed candidate in Honduras is complicit in silencing the votes of our citizens. If he is truly worthy of your backing, if his hands are clean, if he has nothing to fear, then why doesn’t he allow for every vote to be counted?”

    He and others opponents of Asfura have maintained that Trump’s last-minute endorsement was an act of electoral interference that ultimately swung the results of the vote.

    The unexpectedly tumultuous election was also marred by a sluggish vote count, which fueled even more accusations.

    The Central American nation was stuck in limbo for more than three weeks as vote counting by electoral authorities lagged, and at one point was paralyzed after a special count of final vote tallies was called, fueling warnings by international leaders.

    Ahead of the announcement, Organization of American States Secretary General Albert Rambin on Monday made an “urgent call” to Honduran authorities to wrap up a special count of the final votes before a deadline of Dec. 30. The Trump administration warned that any attempts to obstruct or delay the electoral count would be met with “consequences.”

    For the incumbent, progressive President Xiomara Castro, the election marked a political reckoning. She was elected in 2021 on a promise to reduce violence and root out corruption.

    She was among a group of progressive leaders in Latin American who were elected on a hopeful message of change in around five years ago but are now being cast out after failing to deliver on their vision. Castro said last week that she would accept the results of the elections even after she claimed that Trump’s actions in the election amounted to an “electoral coup.”

    But Eric Olson, an independent international observer during the Honduran election with the Seattle International Foundation, and other observers said that the rejection of Castro and her party was so definitive that they had little room to contest the results.

    “Very few people, even within LIBRE, believe they won the election. What they will say is there’s been fraud, that there has been intervention by Donald Trump, that we we should tear up the elections and vote again,” Olson said. “But they’re not saying ‘we won the elections.’ It’s pretty clear they did not.”

  • A nurse who ‘came here to make a difference’ was among those killed in fiery explosion at Bucks nursing home

    A nurse who ‘came here to make a difference’ was among those killed in fiery explosion at Bucks nursing home

    As first responders arrived at the Bristol Health & Rehab Center on Tuesday afternoon, they were faced with a nightmarish scene: A nursing facility that housed 120 people had exploded, and dozens were trapped.

    Shards of wood, glass, and paneling littered the lawn. The smell of gas hung thick in the air — and flames were spreading.

    “Send everybody,” an officer immediately radioed, according to the Bristol Township police chief.

    Police, firefighters, and even neighbors and a utility worker rushed into the blaze and began pulling people to safety — hoisting them through busted windows and missing doors, from stairwells and the basement flooding with water.

    Then a second explosion erupted, sparking another fire and raising uncertainty about how many people were stuck beneath the rubble.

    Muthoni Nduthu 52, a nurse at Bristol Health and Rehab Center died in the explosion while working Tuesday, Dec. 23.

    By Wednesday, the scale of the damage and its toll on the Lower Bucks County town had come into focus. Two women had died: Muthoni Nduthu, 52, of Bristol, who worked at the facility as a nurse for over a decade, and a resident whose name had not been released.

    Nduthu had emigrated from Mombasa, Kenya, to the Philadelphia area about two decades ago, and earned her nursing degree from Jersey College, said Rose Muema, a friend who spoke on behalf of Nduthu’s family Wednesday.

    “She came here to work,” Muema said. “She came here to make a difference.”

    Muthoni Nduthu’s eldest son, Clinton, tears up while a family friend spoke of his mother, who was killed in an explosion while at work Tuesday.

    Nduthu, a devout Catholic, had three sons — Clinton, 30; Joseph, 24; and K.K., 18 — and a 4-year-old granddaughter. She was bubbly, hardworking, and committed to the people she loved, her friend said. On the night before she died, she cooked her famous spiced chicken for her family to enjoy.

    As Nduthu’s family grieved on the eve of Christmas, others poured through the doors of area hospitals, visiting with the 19 people who remained hospitalized from their injuries from the blast. One person was in critical condition, police said.

    All other residents and employees of the facility have been accounted for.

    The cause of the explosion remained under investigation, Bristol Township Fire Chief Kevin Dippolito said Wednesday, though bystanders speculated that it could be connected to a gas leak that utility officials had responded to earlier Tuesday.

    First responders work the scene of an explosion and fire at Bristol Health & Rehab Center, Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025.

    The National Transportation Safety Board, which helps investigate explosions, said it could take days to clear the wreckage to allow investigators to safely reach and evaluate the natural gas service line.

    The tragedy has also brought new scrutiny to the facility’s long history of safety and care violations.

    The nursing home, a collection of brick buildings on a two-acre campus in Lower Bucks County, was previously known as Silver Lake and was acquired by Saber Healthcare Group earlier this month. Previously, it was owned by CommuniCare Health Services, a privately run for-profit nursing home operator based in Cincinnati.

    Just two months ago, state inspectors cited the facility for lacking a fire safety plan, failing to maintain extinguishers, and having hallways and doors that could not contain smoke. Corrections were ordered to be made by the end of November.

    Federal inspections also flagged substandard healthcare, poor infection control, and mismanaged medical records, earning the facility a one-star rating. Operators were fined more than $418,000 in 2024, records show, due to ongoing violations.

    It remains unclear whether the fire safety deficiencies were addressed.

    Bristol Township Fire Chief Kevin T. Dippolito said the cause of the nursing home explosion remains under investigation.

    Peco crews had responded to the nursing home earlier Tuesday on reports of a gas odor, a spokesperson for the utility said, adding that “it is not known at this time if Peco’s equipment, or natural gas, was involved in this incident.”

    One Peco employee who was on site working to stop the gas leak was seriously injured, said Larry Anastasi, president of IBEW Local 614, the union that represents Peco workers.

    The technician was working alone in the basement of the nursing home, then left to get more tools from his truck. As the worker was walking back into the building, Anastasi said, it erupted.

    The worker then rushed into the building to help others escape, Anastasi said.

    “He was trying to go in and get more people,” the union chief said. “[First responders] had to grab him and said, ‘Brother, you need to stop and go in the ambulance.’”

    The technician, whom Anastasi declined to name to protect his privacy, suffered burns to his face and hands, as well as injuries caused by shrapnel, he said. He remained hospitalized at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital’s Burn Center but was expected to be released later Wednesday.

    Also among the wounded was a 35-year-old certified nursing assistant who was nearly finished with her shift when the building she had worked at for five years suddenly exploded.

    Andrea Taylor said her daughter Natalie remained hospitalized Wednesday and had suffered a punctured lung and severe bruising throughout her body. She asked that her daughter be identified only by her first name to protect her privacy.

    Taylor said her daughter initially did not remember anything about the explosion, but as Wednesday wore on, her memory started to return.

    Natalie, she said, had gone into the cafeteria to heat up some soup when she said she smelled something strange.

    “What’s that smell?” Taylor said her daughter asked a colleague just before the floor fell out from under them.

    The explosion appeared to come from the basement, she said, collapsing the floor of the kitchen and cafeteria. Natalie and a colleague fell into the basement, she said, and hoisted themselves out over debris with the help of first responders. She said Natalie helped pull out her coworker, who suffered a fractured leg.

    She said her daughter is in pain, with bruising across her face and back, but lucky to be alive.

    “We’re lucky to have her,” she said. “We’re not asking for anything, just for prayers.”

    Throughout Wednesday, cranes continued to lift debris from the wreckage as local, state, and federal investigators worked to make sense of the disaster.

    Wheelchairs and other debris are scattered outside Bristol Health and Rehab Center after an explosion on Dec. 23.

    Donna Straiton, 67, watched from behind a line of yellow caution tape, staring at what remained of the nursing home where she had worked for 20 years.

    Straiton worked in the dementia unit, she said, before retiring in February 2024. In her final years working there, fire alarms routinely went off, she said. She estimated the facility locked down no less than twice a month as the smell of gas wafted in the air.

    Most often, she said, the alarm system indicated the issue was in the basement, but she never saw a fire.

    “The fire department would come and we’d get an all clear, and then it would be back to business as usual,” she said.

    In a statement, Saber Health called the explosion devastating and said the company was determining the extent of the damage. Staff at the nursing facility had reported a gas smell to Peco, and the utility company had been investigating prior to the explosion, Saber said.

    “Just 24 days ago, Saber Healthcare Group became affiliated with Bristol Health and Rehab Center,” the company said. “We have worked to improve and fix prior issues, and we will continue that work in the wake of this event.”

    Bristol Township Police Chief Charles “CJ” Winik lauded the first responders who he said sprinted toward danger, through collapsing walls and ongoing explosions. Initial officers were overwhelmed, he said, and it was a team effort to pull injured residents, including those who could not walk or used wheelchairs, from the wreckage.

    “I’ve never seen such heroism,” he said.

  • Crowds flocked to the final Wanamaker Light Show of the season. No one knows when it’s coming back.

    Crowds flocked to the final Wanamaker Light Show of the season. No one knows when it’s coming back.

    They came to the Wanamaker Building on Christmas Eve because it’s what they have done all the years they have been alive. They came bundled against the chill because they never had come before — and did not want to miss it now. They came out of love for the ghosts of Christmas past — and to share in the merriment of a cherished tradition with children who had yet to see the lights dance or hear the great organ play. They came because it is all going away, and no one knows for sure when it will be back.

    On Wednesday, thousands crowded into the gilded Grand Court of the Wanamaker Building for a last chance to meet at the eagle and behold the Wanamaker Light Show this holiday season. And to witness the end of what has been a truly blessed Christmas for the endangered Philadelphia holiday tradition.

    People watching the light show from the second floor at the Wanamaker in Philadelphia, Pa., on Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025.

    Both the Light Show and Dickens Village were saved by fundraising efforts announced after the sale of Macy’s earlier this year. In November, organizers said that with 700 individual donors and gifts from philanthropic foundations, they had raised enough of their $350,000 goal to bring back both attractions for at least one more holiday season — and to begin planning for their future care. While a permanent home for the Light Show, which began in 1956, remained an unsettled question, organizers had raised just enough to produce the holiday attractions in the shuttered department store this year.

    With the attraction’s future in doubt, the crowds kept flocking to the Wanamaker Light Show. Over 100,000 visitors have come through since both holiday attractions opened on Black Friday — a number that far exceeded planners’ expectations, said Kathryn Ott Lovell, president and CEO of the Philadelphia Visitor Center, who also led the fundraising effort. While the show remained free, guests donated more than $40,000 during its seasonal run.

    “It’s been totally overwhelming,” said Lovell, working the door before Wednesday’s afternoon final shows. “But also joyful and exciting and heartwarming. We didn’t anticipate these crowds.”

    Due to the planned construction within the Wanamaker Building, the Light Show and Dickens Village will take a pause in 2026 and 2027, Lovell said. But advocates for the show remain in conversation with new building owner TF Cornerstone about continuing the holiday traditions at the Wanamaker in years to come.

    “Everybody wants this show saved,” Lovell said.

    Marissa Miller, of Fairmount, is holding her child Ivy Jordan, 2, watching the light show with her family at the Wanamaker in Philadelphia, Pa., on Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025.

    Indeed, almost since the first show in November, lines had stretched out the door onto Market Street, often wrapping all the way down Chestnut Street, with organizers merrily hiring more staff and security and welcoming scores of volunteers.

    “There was a sense of ‘we have to get here because it might not be here again,’” Lovell said, adding that she is more optimistic than ever that the show will have a future.

    That’s exactly why Dori Pico, 68, of Center City, was first in line at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, a full hour and a half before shows began running every 30 minutes.

    “It’s the last time we might be seeing this,” said Pico, who had attended the shows after moving to Philadelphia in recent years, and wished that she had gotten to experience one with her father, Juan Vincente Lugo, before he passed away.

    Dori Pico, of South Philadelphia, is watching the light show for a third time and as a tradition for her dad who passed away last year at the Wanamaker in Philadelphia, Pa., on Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025.

    Down a few spaces, Paulette Steffa, 72, originally of Cheltenham, clutched a photo of her and siblings at Santa’s knee during the first Light Show in 1956. Attending Wednesday’s show with her brother Peter, she said she had been to the Light Show every year since, and had even attended the first performance of this year’s season.

    “We were here the day it opened,” Steffa said. “We needed to be here on the last day.”

    Soon, the lights in the Grand Court dimmed, and an expectant hush fell over families huddled around the 2,500-pound bronze eagle sculpture.

    Darlene Harley of Overbrook had ridden the train to Center City so her great-great-granddaughter, Aryah, 7, could see the show before it goes away for a few years, or maybe longer. Her parents and grandparents had always brought her as a child, Harley said.

    “And now I wanted her to see,” she said as the show began and 100,000 individual bulbs twinkled to life in the grand space.

    Soon, everyone was looking up, as Frosty and Rudolph and the Sugar Plum Fairies danced in light. Families waiting in line for Dickens Village peered over the ledge of an upper floor for a closer look. Peter Richard Conte, who has played the pipes of the world’s biggest organ since 1989, had only just played the familiar opening chords of “O Tannenbaum” when Steffa began to cry.

    Watching in the dark, she thought of all those childhood shows when her parents, Andi and Peter, made sure they were at the front of the line. She remembered all those holiday wishes on Santa’s knee and scrumptious holiday breakfasts in the old Crystal Tea Room. All those years, all those memories at the Wanamaker Light Show.

    “It’s part of Philadelphia,” she said.

    Many families and friends gather at the Wanamaker for the last light show in Philadelphia, Pa., on Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025.