10 murders appear linked to arrests of drug cartel leaders in U.S.

Updated on: August 21, 2024 / 7:02 AM EDT / CBS/AP 2 Sinaloa cartel leaders arrested in Texas 2 Sinaloa cartel leaders, including son of “El Chapo,” arrested in Texas 02:02 The murders of at least 10 people in the northern Mexican state of Sinaloa appear to be linked to infighting in the dominant drug smuggling cartel there, confirming fears of repercussions from the July 25 detention of two top cartel leaders. Last month, Joaquín Guzmán López , a capo from one faction of the Sinaloa cartel – the Chapitos or “Little Chapos,” the sons of imprisoned cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán – turned himself in to U.S. authorities. However, he allegedly abducted the leader of the rival faction, Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada , forcing him on to the same flight to El Paso and turning him in. Mexican authorities are caught in the middle of the coming storm: they weren’t involved in the July 25 capture, but they are unwilling to use the opportunity to crack down on the Sinaloa cartel. The cartel is splintering, and what’s at stake is who will take

DNC Day 3: Here’s what to expect from the third day of the Democratic convention

The Democratic National Convention continues on Wednesday as Day 3 gets underway in Chicago, with a focus on how the party’s new ticket plans to fight for Americans’ freedoms. The second day of the convention featured an exuberant presentation of support for the Harris-Walz ticket by the assembled delegates. State by state, delegations rallied around Vice President Kamala Harris’ nomination for president Tuesday in a ceremonial roll call vote, with prominent Democrats — and celebrities like rapper Lil Jon and actor Eva Longoria — representing their states.  Former President Barack Obama  headlined the second night of the convention, delivering a spirited address about his hope for the future and an earnest tribute to his former vice president, Mr. Biden, while issuing stark warnings about Donald Trump returning to the White House. The night also included speeches from former first lady  Michelle Obama  and second gentleman Doug Emhoff , among others. And the most anticipated appearances — from Harris and her running mate — are still ahead.  Former President Barack Obama arrives to speak next to former first lady Michelle Obama during the Democratic National Convention

Officers suspected of helping alleged “psychopathic serial killer” escape

August 21, 2024 / 6:59 AM EDT / CBS/AFP 8/20: CBS Evening News 8/20: CBS Evening News 19:19 Nairobi — Five Kenyan police officers appeared in court Wednesday, suspected of helping a man accused of murdering and dismembering dozens of women escape from a Nairobi jail cell. Police launched a manhunt Tuesday after alleged serial killer Collins Jumaisi and 12 Eritreans broke out of a police station in an upmarket area of the Kenyan capital. Jumaisi, 33, was described by police as a “psychopathic serial killer with no respect for human life” when he arrested last month after the horrific discovery of a number of mutilated bodies in a rubbish dump in a slum area of the Kenyan capital. He and the other detainees appeared to have escaped by cutting through a wire mesh roof at the station. “Our preliminary investigations indicate that the escape was aided by insiders,” acting national police chief Gilbert Masengeli said Tuesday. A photo released on July 15, 2024 by the Kenyan National Police shows 33-year-old Collins Jumaisi Khalusha, identified as the prime suspect in the killings of 42 women

Word Game: Aug. 21, 2024

TODAY’S WORD — SCOTOPIA (SCOTOPIA: skuh-TOE-pee-uh: Vision in dim light.) Average mark 41 words Time limit 45 minutes Can you find 41 or more words in SCOTOPIA? The list will be published tomorrow. YESTERDAY’S WORD — WELTERED weed weld welder welt welter were elder ewer leer lewd teed tree tweed reed reel rewet deer deet delete deter drew dwelt To purchase the Word Game book, visit WordGameBooks.com. Order it now for just $5 while supplies last! RULES OF THE GAME: 1. Words must be of four or more letters. 2. Words that acquire four letters by the addition of “s,” such as “bats” or “dies,” are not allowed. 3. Additional words made by adding a “d” or an “s” may not be used. For example, if “bake” is used, “baked” or “bakes” are not allowed, but “bake” and “baking” are admissible. 4. Proper nouns, slang words, or vulgar or sexually explicit words are not allowed. Contact Word Game creator Kathleen Saxe at kzsaxe@gmail.com.

Horoscopes Aug. 21, 2024: Kim Cattrall, focus on work ethics

CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Hayden Panettiere, 35; Usain Bolt, 38; Carrie-Anne Moss, 57; Kim Cattrall, 68. Happy Birthday: Participate, get educated and consider the possibilities. Slow down and refuse to feel pressured by what others choose to do. Focus on work ethics, positive change and using what you already have working for you to improve your lifestyle, friendships and prospects. Take a wait-and-see attitude to persuasive organizations or people trying to exploit you. Replace your spending habits with a solid savings plan. Your numbers are 4, 12, 24, 28, 31, 42, 47. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Make undercover changes to avoid interference. Keeping your life simple and free from those who tend to overreact or try to take control will help you get what you want without penalties or loss. Don’t let the changes happening around you cause you to make a premature move. 3 stars TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Listen to your intuition and verify your feelings. Be polite, but ask direct questions. You cannot afford to let anyone take advantage of you or mislead you into thinking everything is OK when it’s

Bridge: Aug. 21, 2024

It’s reported that a truck loaded with Vicks VapoRub overturned, spilling its contents on a highway. Amazingly, there was no congestion for eight hours. Today’s South got all snarled up at 3NT. West led a diamond, and East took the ace (not best) and returned a diamond. Declarer won with the king, and West followed with the jack to deny that he held the queen. South then took the K-A of clubs and gave up a club. He expected a diamond return, but East led the jack of spades. South took dummy’s king and cashed three clubs, but then he could only take the ace of spades and lead a third spade. West got two spades and the ace of hearts: down one. COMMUNICATION South had nine tricks — five clubs, two diamonds, two spades — and could take them if he kept communication. At Trick Three he plays a low club from both hands. If East shifts to spades, South wins, comes to his king of clubs, cashes his queen of diamonds and returns to dummy’s second high spade to run the clubs. DAILY

Asking Eric: We thought it was OK to wear shorts to the wedding. Things got worse from there.

Dear Eric: Our family attended the wedding of two longtime friends. We were part of a close-knit friend group that saw each other through some difficult times over the years and spent vacations together. Months ago, a mutual friend posted their invitation to our small group chat, assuming that we had all received one. Except that we hadn’t. This prompted one of the brides to fire off private messages with convoluted explanations for the “delay” in our invitations. As the day approached, we began receiving logistical messages for the wedding. One of them was peculiar in that the list of recipients was not visible. “Shorts are welcome,” it read, because it was going to be very hot. Our family wore shorts. As we arrived, it became very obvious that no one else had gotten that memo. Not a single pair of shorts or informal attire in sight. The brides greeted us politely but coldly. As the wedding evening wore on, the slights kept getting more obvious. While a big group was dancing, me included, one bride loudly told me to stop dancing because that song

Harriette Cole: I can’t afford to lose this job, but it’s getting scary

DEAR HARRIETTE: I’m really stuck right now and could use some advice. I’m 29, and I work as a babysitter for a family that pays really well, which is crucial for my daughter’s therapy bills. The problem is that the parents have been treating me poorly — lots of verbal abuse and unreasonable demands. I’m concerned about my safety if their behavior escalates, but I also can’t afford to lose this job due to my financial needs. I’m trying to figure out how to deal with the family or look for another job, even if it means facing financial uncertainty. What do you think I should do? — Abusive Employer DEAR ABUSIVE EMPLOYER: Whenever you feel stuck, take a pause. Be still. Review your situation and your options carefully, and look for a solution. When we worry about things, it can be impossible to find a way out. In your case, the good news is that there are many families that need babysitters and many that are willing to pay well. There is no reason you should stay in an abusive relationship of any kind

The kidnapped heiress who became an ‘urban guerrilla’ and embraced her captors

Bill Harris, a postal worker and Marxist whose face would soon be on FBI Wanted posters from coast to coast, opened his local newspaper in late 1973 and became intrigued by an item from high society. Patricia Hearst, the 19-year-old heiress of a storied journalism empire, was engaged to be married. The article identified her as an art history student at UC Berkeley. Harris sensed an opportunity. He walked onto campus and found a ledger book in which Hearst had written her address. In this series, Christopher Goffard revisits old crimes in Los Angeles and beyond, from the famous to the forgotten, the consequential to the obscure, diving into archives and the memories of those who were there. “Who would have thunk it would be so simple? It was a fluke,” Harris, now 79, told The Times in a recent interview. “I looked in the book and thought, ‘I wonder.’” The Symbionese Liberation Army — the tiny cadre of Bay Area radicals that Harris belonged to — learned that Hearst lived without security at that address near campus. Harris and two confederates armed themselves and

Downtown church keeps the city’s mayhem at bay — one service at a time

South Hope Street is quiet on a Sunday morning. Five blocks over in Skid Row, police are investigating a shooting, but in the Financial District, calm prevails. Parking lots are nearly empty. Guests at the Sheraton are checking out early. The unhoused have mostly left their sidewalk beds, and Jeffrey Taylor and Deborah Johnson are preparing for church. With just a half hour before service, the husband-and-wife team fall into familiar routines: scanning the sidewalk and garden for wrappers, food scraps, clothing and needles, spraying deodorizer near the front door and hauling out the welcome sign, whose bottom line reads: … in this place will I give peace. The Third Church of Christ, Scientist of Los Angeles. Hope is a rare commodity on the struggling and hardened streets of downtown Los Angeles, and since 1910, Third Church of Christ, Scientist has extended this promise to passersby without interruption. Taylor and Johnson are not about to jeopardize that run. In a religion with no priests, they are the first and second readers, who conduct the weekly worship. A few minutes before noon — with two congregants

Mustard on Drake, Kendrick Lamar and the world-stopping ‘Not Like Us’

Yes, Mustard saw the viral video of the Amazon delivery driver dancing in the street to Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us.” And yes, he saw the kid in the blue dress shirt wilding out to the song in a clip from a recent Kamala Harris campaign rally. But the moment that really hit home for the hip-hop producer, whose work on “Not Like Us” helped Lamar land the knockout blow in his historic rap battle with Drake, was watching his 9-year-old daughter perform a routine to the track in a group recital at dance camp the other day. “She was right in the front, and I’m like, ‘You guys are dancing to a diss song about Drake — at school,’” he recalls with a laugh. “That was the best s— ever.” A festive, if savage, takedown set to a deviously catchy horn lick, “Not Like Us” has been virtually impossible to avoid since it dropped late on a Saturday afternoon in May — if you heard it that evening, you know exactly where you were — and vaulted immediately to the top of Billboard’s Hot

Behind the scenes with K-pop group Katseye and their L.A. fashion fairy godfather Humberto Leon

Base camp. Thursday, 9:30 a.m. Humberto Leon slinks around set wearing a faded T-shirt that says “Daddy” in bubble letters. He got it at some gay bar a while ago, and it works on multiple levels, he jokes. He is an actual father of 10-year-old twin girls. And he is also the kind of surrogate father figure of this set, of Katseye as a whole. Leon, with his Martine Rose loafers and True Religion Jeans, seems to be constantly scanning the room, walking around with his arms crossing his chest and his head slightly cocked. He snakes around the row of chairs where the girls are getting their hair and makeup done and makes slight adjustments. He is in the middle of encouraging Daniela Avanzini, a Cuban American member of Katseye, to embrace her naturally curly hair, while ensuring that her makeup brings out the golden undertones of her skin. “We’ve just been playing around because they all get bored of [their hairstyles], but this is my go-to for you,” Leon tells her in a shepherding tone. Humberto Leon wears all vintage from James Veloria

A California hospital told her family she left. Her body was found in cold storage months later, lawsuit says

For nearly a year after she seemingly vanished from a Sacramento-area hospital, Jessie Peterson’s family mounted a frantic search — distributing posters of her and calling any hospital and police department they could think of, but to no avail. But the 31-year-old wasn’t missing. She had never left the hospital alive. In a lawsuit filed this month, the Peterson family alleges that staff at Mercy San Juan Medical Center in Carmichael never notified them that Jessie had died. Instead, their attorney told The Times, they were led to believe she had checked out of the hospital — against medical advice — in April 2023. “You don’t just get to make these kinds of mistakes and think it’s OK,” attorney Marc R. Greenberg said. A spokesperson for Mercy San Juan, which is operated by Dignity Health and owned by CommonSpirit Health, declined to comment on the lawsuit. “We extend our deepest sympathies to the family during this difficult time,” a spokesperson wrote in an email. “We are unable to comment on pending litigation.” The lawsuit seeks $25 million in damages, including punitive damages for “outrageous and

Russia says dozens of Ukrainian drones shot down in biggest attack yet

August 21, 2024 / 6:05 AM EDT / CBS/AP Ukraine claims advance into Russia Ukraine claims capture of 92 settlements in Russia’s Kursk region 03:35 Moscow — Moscow came under one of the largest attacks yet by Ukrainian drones since the start of fighting in 2022, Russian authorities reported Wednesday, saying they destroyed all of those headed toward the capital. Russia downed 45 Ukrainian drones overnight, the Ministry of Defense said. It said 11 were destroyed over the Moscow region, 23 over the Bryansk region, six over Belgorod, three over Kaluga and two over Kursk, where Ukrainian forces have mounted an unprecedented incursion in recent weeks. “This was one of the biggest attempts of all time to attack Moscow using drones,” Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin said on his Telegram channel. He said strong defenses around the capital made it possible to shoot down all the drones before they could hit their intended targets. Some Russian social media channels shared videos of drones apparently being destroyed by air defense systems, which then set off car alarms.  A Ukrainian soldier of the 33rd assault battalion watches the

Inmate who escaped courthouse in Mississippi holds authorities in standoff in Chicago

By Adam Harrington, Chrissy Amaya Updated on: August 21, 2024 / 6:00 AM EDT / CBS Chicago Escaped inmate from Mississippi barricaded inside Chicago restaurant Escaped inmate from Mississippi barricaded inside Chicago restaurant 00:22 CHICAGO (CBS) — A suspect who escaped during a court hearing in Mississippi in June was found in Chicago Wednesday and was in a standoff with police in a West Side restaurant, authorities said. CBS affiliate WREG-TV in Memphis reported that Joshua Zimmerman escaped from the DeSoto County Courthouse in Hernando, Mississippi on June 14. Authorities said he changed from a jumpsuit into civilian clothing and left through a door where no officers were around, the station reported. Joshua Zimmerman DeSoto County, Mississippi Sheriff’s Office Zimmerman had been charged with attempted murder and armed robbery in an incident in Southaven, Mississippi in September of last year. WREG reported Zimmerman was accused of attacking an elderly man who had hired him to work at his house. DeSoto County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Justin Smith said Tuesday night that multiple law enforcement agencies, including the U.S. Marshals Service, have been searching for Smith

Abortion rights ballot measures to go before voters Montana and Arizona

Updated on: August 21, 2024 / 5:26 AM EDT / CBS/AP Texas mother Kate Cox on reproductive rights Texas mother Kate Cox on reproductive rights 02:56 Voters in Arizona and Montana will be able to decide in November whether they want to protect the right to an abortion in their state constitutions. The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a 200-word summary that abortion rights advocates used to collect signatures for a ballot measure is valid, clearing the way for the issue to remain on the ballot. The Arizona secretary of state’s office said last week it had certified 577,971 signatures – far above the required number that the coalition supporting the ballot measure had to submit in order to put the question before voters.   Montana Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen on Tuesday certified Montana’s constitutional initiative for the November ballot. Under both measures, abortions would be allowed until fetal viability – the point at which a fetus could survive outside the womb, typically around 24 weeks. In Arizona, there are some exceptions for post-viability abortions to save the mother’s life or to protect

Ship hit by 3 suspected Houthi missiles in latest Red Sea attack

Updated on: August 21, 2024 / 5:54 AM EDT / CBS/AP Israel carries out airstrikes in Yemen Israel carries out airstrikes in Yemen following Tel Aviv attack 02:46 Dubai, United Arab Emirates — A commercial ship traveling through the Red Sea came under repeated attack Wednesday, leaving the vessel “not under command” in an assault suspected to have been carried out by Yemen’s Houthi rebels , the British military said. There were few details about the attack, but it appeared to be the latest in the Houthis’ monthslong campaign targeting commercial and military ships in what the group has said is a response to the ongoing Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip. The attack saw men on small boats first open fire with small arms, the British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center said. The ship also was hit by three projectiles, it added. “The vessel reports being not under command,” the UKMTO said, likely meaning it lost all power. “No casualties reported.” The Houthis did not immediately claim the attack, though it can take them hours or even days to acknowledge their assaults. A

Sacramento County hospital misplaced woman’s body for a year, family alleges

By Madisen Keavy August 21, 2024 / 2:26 AM EDT / CBS Sacramento Family sues Sacramento County hospital over allegations daughter’s body was misplaced Family sues Sacramento County hospital over allegations daughter’s body was misplaced 02:53 SACRAMENTO COUNTY — A Sacramento County hospital is accused of misplacing a woman’s body. The woman’s mother told CBS13 she had no idea her daughter had died for a year. Jessie Peterson was admitted to Mercy San Juan Medical Center in Carmichael in April 2023. According to her mother, Ginger Congi, it was not uncommon for her daughter to receive medical treatment for Type 1 diabetes. She was diagnosed when she was a teenager, Congi said, and although it was difficult, Peterson “just carried on.”  “She loved to run. She loved sports. She loved dance. She played the guitar,” Congi said.  Last April, Peterson called her mother asking to be picked up from the hospital. Congi said her daughter wanted to leave. Congi told her she was in the safest place, admitted for treatment after a diabetic episode. This would be the last time the two spoke.  The day