Thursday, June 15, 2017

Evening Edition: FBI: Attacker in lawmaker shooting purchased guns from licensed dealers

Why a single gunshot to the hip could be life-threatening; A sense of deja vu as the debate over gun control reignites; Giffords: After I was shot, I prayed this wouldn't happen again; Graphic: How strictly are guns regulated where you live?; U-Va. student evacuated from North Korea has extensive loss of brain tissue, no signs of trauma; Warmbier's father denounces North Korea; The Republican response to reports of an investigation into Trump, annotated; Bill Cosby jurors deadlock. Judge orders them to keep trying to reach a verdict.; EPA head defends White House’s plan for massive cuts to his agency; D.C. police issue warrants against Turkish security personnel involved in May brawl with protesters; The Navy thought this sailor was lost at sea. He was just found alive — on his own ship.; Scientists have documented a massive melt event on the surface of Antarctica; 'All this circus': Putin takes heat from broke, angry Russians in live call-in show ; The surprising number of American adults who think chocolate milk comes from brown cows;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
FBI: Attacker in lawmaker shooting purchased guns from licensed dealers
The weapons used in the assault, a high-powered 7.62 caliber rifle and a 9 mm handgun, were recovered at the scene as law enforcement officials work to piece together the last nomadic months of James T. Hodgkinson's life.
Why a single gunshot to the hip could be life-threatening
The pelvic area, where Rep. Steve Scalise was hit, contains numerous important structures, blood vessels and organs that are packed close together.
 
The Daily 202 | Analysis
A sense of deja vu as the debate over gun control reignites
It feels like the period of mourning gets shorter, and the finger-pointing comes quicker, after each heinous rampage.
 
Giffords: After I was shot, I prayed this wouldn't happen again
COLUMN | Former congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords says our nation must acknowledge that a deadly problem like this brings a responsibility to find solutions.
 
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Graphic: How strictly are guns regulated where you live?
We looked at five types of gun control enacted at the state level.
 
U-Va. student evacuated from North Korea has extensive loss of brain tissue, no signs of trauma
In a case that threatens to worsen already fraught international relations, doctors said they don't know what caused the brain damage suffered by Otto Warmbier, who was medically evacuated this week after a 17-month detainment in North Korea. When asked whether the brain damage could be the result of violence, doctors said Warmbier did not show any obvious indications of trauma or fractures.
 
Warmbier's father denounces North Korea
Otto Warmbier had been detained for 17 months and remains in a coma after North Korean authorities said he became ill with botulism following his trial.
 
Analysis
The Republican response to reports of an investigation into Trump, annotated
The GOP issued a set of "talking points," meant to guide allies of Trump's in rebutting the claims made in our article. The Post examines what they meant.
 
Bill Cosby jurors deadlock. Judge orders them to keep trying to reach a verdict.
After 30 hours of deliberations, the jury said it cannot reach a unanimous decision on all three counts of aggravated indecent assault.
 
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EPA head defends White House’s plan for massive cuts to his agency
Administrator Scott Pruitt said that the EPA will be able to fulfill its duties under a tighter budget with "proper leadership and management." Critics said the cuts negatively affect the agency's "critical mission of protecting the air we breathe and the water we drink."
 
D.C. police issue warrants against Turkish security personnel involved in May brawl with protesters
Police and other officials say 12 members of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's security team, some of them armed, attacked a group protesting his regime.
 
The Navy thought this sailor was lost at sea. He was just found alive — on his own ship.
"I just can't believe he's gone," his sister said. Then, Petty Officer 3rd Class Peter Mims was found aboard the USS Shiloh.
 
Scientists have documented a massive melt event on the surface of Antarctica
The surface melting could work hand in hand with an already documented trend of ocean-driven melting to compromise West Antarctica, which contains over 10 feet of potential sea level rise, scientists said.
 
'All this circus': Putin takes heat from broke, angry Russians in live call-in show 
Facing a wave of popular unrest not seen in years, President Vladi­mir Putin took to the nation's airwaves for his annual call-in show that gave Russians the chance to take up their problems directly with the Kremlin leader.
 
Wonkblog | Analysis
The surprising number of American adults who think chocolate milk comes from brown cows
Many people are agriculturally illiterate, researchers say. They blame the industrial food system.
 
 
     
 
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