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    Epstein update, Pacific earthquake and a controversial new judge

     
    Today's EPSTEIN story

    Maxwell offers congressional testimony for immunity

    What happened
    Convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell offered yesterday to testify to Congress about her relationship with her late boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein as the White House struggles to contain the fallout from its handling of the Epstein case.

    President Donald Trump, who is widely believed to be mentioned multiple times in the investigation files, said yesterday he fell out with his onetime friend Epstein because the child sex offender repeatedly "took people that worked for me" at Mar-a-Lago's spa. Trump said the women he "stole" included Virginia Giuffre, the best-known victim of Epstein's sex-trafficking ring. Giuffre, who died by suicide in April, said in a 2016 deposition that Maxwell lured her away from Mar-a-Lago in 2000 with promises of travel and "good money" for massage work.

    Who said what
    Maxwell's lawyer David Markus told the House Oversight Committee that his client would "cooperate" with its subpoena if she were assured of "formal immunity" from questioning and given a list of questions beforehand, among other conditions, to avoid "further criminal exposure." Without these requested assurances or a presidential grant of clemency, he said, Maxwell would invoke her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. 

    The Oversight Committee "quickly rejected that condition," insisting "immunity will not even be considered," The Washington Post said. Trump told reporters on Monday he was "allowed" to pardon Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year sentence, "but right now it would be inappropriate to talk about it." 

    What next?
    Maxwell has had meetings with top Justice Department officials about her role in the Epstein case and is appealing her sex trafficking conviction to the U.S. Supreme Court. 

     
     
    Today's NATURAL DISASTER story

    Massive earthquake sends tsunami across Pacific

    What happened
    A powerful magnitude 8.8 earthquake off Russia's far-eastern Kamchatka Peninsula yesterday triggered tsunami waves across the Pacific Ocean. Russia said the shallow quake caused damage in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky and elsewhere on the peninsula and flooded the Kuril Islands with waves as high as 19 feet. Smaller waves were reported in Japan and Hawaii, where hundreds of thousands of people were urged to evacuate to higher ground. Tsunami alerts were also in effect in Alaska, the U.S. West Coast and down the Pacific Rim to New Zealand.

    Who said what
    The earthquake, centered about 78 miles southeast of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, "ranks among the top six strongest ever recorded," The Washington Post said. The deadly tsunami-sparking quakes off Japan in 2011 and Indonesia in 2004 were both roughly 2.8 times more powerful, at magnitude 9.1.

    Tsunamis can "travel more than 500 miles per hour in deep water," The New York Times said, but "despite their portrayals in Hollywood films," they are not "tall, curling tidal waves that could be surfed." Instead, said The Associated Press, they are "typically multiple waves that rush ashore like a fast-rising tide."

    What next?
    Initial tsunami waves of up to 4.5 feet high hit California and Washington around 1 a.m. local time, and they were expected to build through the night, according to the National Weather Service. "We haven't seen a big wave," Hawaii Gov. Josh Green (D) said last night local time. But "we don't want anyone to let their guard down."

     
     
    Today's POLITICS Story

    Senate confirms Trump lawyer Bove to top court

    What happened
    The Senate last night confirmed Emil Bove, the controversial Justice Department official who previously served as one of President Donald Trump's criminal defense lawyers, to a lifetime seat on the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals. The 50-49 vote followed allegations from three whistleblowers that Bove lied in his Senate hearing and told Justice Department officials they might need to ignore court orders in immigration cases.

    Who said what
    Trump has "indicated he expects" a "degree of loyalty" from "his judges," Politico said, and "Bove's allegiance to Trump goes deeper than those of Trump's previous judicial picks." Bove denied being Trump's DOJ "enforcer" or "henchman," but his confirmation "provided at least a tacit Senate endorsement of the president's efforts to bend the justice system to his will," The New York Times said.

    Most Republicans — including Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), a longtime whistleblower defender — "dismissed" the whistleblower complaints about Bove's "conduct at the Justice Department," The Associated Press said. But Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said his actions at the DOJ led her to conclude he "would not serve as an impartial jurist." Sen Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said she voted against Bove because nobody who "counseled other attorneys that you should ignore the law" should get a "lifetime seat on the bench."

    What next?
    Bove will serve as one of the 14 judges on the 3rd Circuit court, hearing cases from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and the U.S. Virgin Islands. 

     
     

    It's not all bad

    The nonprofit Connecting a Caring Community provides college-bound foster youth in Southern California with dorm-room necessities. Foster children commonly have only one bag filled with belongings, and the organization's Dec My Dorm program fills in the gaps by supplying bedding, towels, toiletries, household items and decor. This month, 143 L.A.-area kids were outfitted with everything necessary to "go to college with dignity," said Dec My Dorm Chair Phyllis Shinbane.

     
     
    Under the radar

    EPA wants to green-light a twice-banned herbicide

    The Environmental Protection Agency wants to reallow the use of dicamba as a commercial weed killer. The Trump administration proposal comes despite the herbicide having been blocked twice by federal courts because of its potential for causing ecological damage.

    Dicamba has been a commonly used weed killer for the past 50 years, but its usage increased after 2016 when agricultural giant Monsanto genetically engineered crops to be resistant to it. Environmental groups sued the EPA over its approval of dicamba because of the weed killer's potential to "drift away from the intended target, especially during warmer temperatures, and harm neighboring crops, nearby ecosystems and rural communities," said The Washington Post. In 2020, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the EPA and vacated the herbicide's registration.

    Following the decision, the EPA once again registered dicamba for use on genetically modified soybeans and cotton. Environmental groups challenged the EPA again, and in 2024, a different federal court vacated the registrations and prevented the sale of the herbicide for a second time. But perhaps the third time's the charm. A 2025 EPA review of dicamba did not find any "dietary, aggregate, nonoccupational or occupational risks of concern for potential human health exposure."

    While the new EPA review found no risk to human health from dicamba, previous analyses showed "elevated risk of liver and intrahepatic bile duct cancers," as well as a specific type of leukemia, said a 2020 study published in the International Journal of Epidemiology. "None of these associations has been previously reported in the epidemiologic literature."

     
     
    On this day

    July 30, 1935

    Penguin Books launched in the U.K., quickly becoming a publishing juggernaut through its sale of paperback books. Just 10 months after the company started, Penguin had already printed 1 million paperbacks. Today, Penguin Random House remains one of the largest book publishers in the world, releasing about 15,000 books every year.

     
     
    TODAY'S newspaperS

    EPA to 'kill key weapon on climate'

    "EPA aims to kill key weapon on climate," The Boston Globe says on Wednesday's front page. If the EPA's "shift to deny danger" of "climate crisis" is enacted, "the agency would lose its authority for reining in emissions," says The New York Times. "Gunman thought he had brain injury" as he "appeared to target NFL in Manhattan shooting," The Washington Post says. "Union Pacific in deal to buy Norfolk Southern," The Atlanta Journal-Constitution says. "Merger to create pan-U.S. railroad," says The Wall Street Journal.

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Hanging out in Holland

    An Airbnb host in the Netherlands has been ordered by local officials to take down the suspended mountaineering tent she hangs from her house and rents out for $35 a night. Architect Elza Heemskerk decided to hang up the tent after seeing similar accommodations in Peru and is pushing back against claims that it's unsafe. "I know a thing or two about buildings," she told the Algameen Dagblad newspaper, adding that "12 securely fastened bolts" were keeping the tent in place.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Theara Coleman, Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Summer Meza, Devika Rao, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Richard Corkery / NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images; John Saeki / AFP via Getty Images; Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call Inc. via Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images
     

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