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    Summers leaves, Ukraine pressure and Comey case fumble

     
    TODAY’S NATIONAL story

    Summers out at Harvard, OpenAI amid Epstein furor

    What happened
    Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers yesterday took leave from his teaching and directorial duties at Harvard University and stepped down from the board of OpenAI, amid new revelations about his cozy relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. The university on Tuesday told The Harvard Crimson it was reopening an investigation into “individuals at Harvard included in the newly released Jeffrey Epstein documents,” a group that included Summers. 

    Who said what
    Summers, who served as Treasury secretary from 1999 to 2001 and Harvard’s president from 2001 to 2006, is “among the highest-level U.S. personalities to pay a price for his relationship to Epstein,” Reuters said. Emails released by the House last week showed the two men communicating up until 2019 — long after Epstein’s 2008 conviction on soliciting sex from a minor and shortly before he was arrested and died of suicide in prison. In 2018, Summers, who is married, sought his advice on pursuing a romantic relationship with a woman who viewed him as a mentor, leading Epstein to call himself Summers’ “wingman.” 

    Summers announced Monday that he was “stepping back” from his public commitments, and on Tuesday he told his economics class that despite his “regret” and “shame” over the Epstein emails, “I think it’s very important that I fulfill my teaching obligations” for “a time,” according to online footage posted by students. Along with reversing course on teaching, Summers has “shed a number of other positions this week,” The New York Times said, including affiliations with Santander bank, several prominent think tanks, and as a contributor to Bloomberg and the Times.

    What next?
    President Donald Trump yesterday signed a law that compels the Justice Department to release its cache of Epstein investigation files within 30 days. It’s “unlikely” we will see “potent new evidence of criminal misconduct” in those files, said Politico’s Ankush Khardori, “but I expect a whole lot of embarrassing stuff to come out. And we got a preview this week with the stuff on Larry Summers.” 

     
     
    TODAY’S INTERNATIONAL story

    Trump pushes new Ukraine peace plan

    What happened
    A senior U.S. military delegation arrived in Kyiv yesterday as President Donald Trump’s administration was finalizing a 28-point proposal to end the war in Ukraine. The plan, “negotiated between the Trump administration and Russia” with no Ukrainian input “would require Kyiv to surrender territory, significantly reduce the size of its army and relinquish some types of weaponry,” The New York Times said, citing officials. It reflects the “maximalist demands the Kremlin has made throughout the war” and Kyiv has “long denounced as amounting to capitulation.”

    Who said what
    Trump’s revived push for a peace deal “began late last month” with a secret meeting in Miami between his peace envoy Steve Witkoff and Russian emissary Kirill Dmitriev, Politico said. It would “require Ukraine to surrender to Russia the entire eastern Donbas region, even lands that Russian forces have not captured,” the Times said, as well as other terms “unacceptable to Kyiv.” 

    The administration is “attempting the same approach it used to achieve a U. S.-brokered cease-fire in Gaza last month — draft a multi-point outline and then push the warring parties to accept it,” The Wall Street Journal said. It is “likely to run into strong opposition in Kyiv and from European governments,” but proponents of the plan argue that “Russia’s steady but incremental gains on the battlefield” and a “corruption scandal involving associates” of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will “add pressure on Kyiv to make a deal.”

    What next?
    As European officials “publicly voiced concern about the plan,” the Journal said, Secretary of State Marco Rubio “cast it as an ‘exchange of serious and realistic ideas’ and not a diktat that the U.S. is seeking to impose on the two sides.” 

     
     
    TODAY’S LEGAL Story

    Comey grand jury never saw final indictment

    What happened
    U.S. District Judge Michael Nachmanoff yesterday grilled federal prosecutors on irregularities in their indictment of former FBI Director James Comey, forcing acting U.S Attorney Lindsey Halligan to acknowledge she had not shown the full grand jury the final indictment it was supposed to have approved. Another prosecutor, Tyler Lemons, revealed under questioning that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche’s office had told him not to discuss a memo by his predecessors explaining why they declined to charge Comey. 

    Who said what
    Yesterday’s “extraordinary” revelations emerged during an “excruciatingly awkward hearing” that “drove home just how slapdash” the Comey prosecution “appeared to have been from its inception,” The New York Times said. Nachmanoff seemed “stunned” at how Halligan, an insurance lawyer with not former prosecutorial experience, appeared to have bungled the grand jury process. 

    Lemons argued that the final indictment was just the two charges the grand jurors had already approved minus one they rejected, so “the new indictment wasn’t a new indictment.” If Halligan did not present the final version to the grand jury, “there is no indictment,” Comey lawyer Michael Dreeben countered. And since the statute of limitations on the alleged perjury ran out on Sept. 30, “that would be tantamount to a bar of further prosecution in this case.”

    What next?
    Nachmanoff declined to issue an immediate decision yesterday, saying the “issues are too weighty and too complex.” But his “intense focus” on the indictment’s validity “suggested he may view it as critical and, perhaps, fatal to the government’s case,” Politico said. The case also “appears to be on increasingly flimsy ground” in other courts, as another federal judge prepares to rule on whether Halligan was invalidly appointed and a magistrate judge has flagged possible “prosecutorial misconduct” in her grand jury presentation.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    A leopard has been spotted on South Africa’s west coast for the first time in 170 years. A  remote camera trap set up by South Africa National Parks (SANparks) captured an image of the leopard in West Coast National Park. The leopard’s emergence follows decades of conservation efforts; SANparks has worked with wildlife organizations, local governments, universities and private landowners to restore ecological corridors and educate communities on how to live in harmony with wild animals.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Sumo’s faltering ban on women

    The sumo ring has always been a “sacred” arena where “only men may tread, bound by centuries of ritual and pride,” said The Japan Times. But now that Japan has elected its first woman prime minister, the question arises: “If she can stand at the center of power, why not in the center of the ring?” 

    It won’t be long before this thorny question faces a real-world test. On Sunday, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will have to decide whether to break with tradition and step into the sumo ring (dohyo) to present the trophy to the Grand Sumo champion in Fukuoka. 

    Sumo rings remain off-limits to women and girls, but that ban has sparked controversy for decades. In 1990, Mayumi Moriyama, Japan’s first woman cabinet minister, asked the Japan Sumo Association (JSA) if she could present a trophy on behalf of the prime minister. Her request was rejected. 

    Takaichi, a social conservative who opposes women having the right to keep their maiden name after marriage, looks unlikely to rock the boat. The prime minister “wishes to respect sumo tradition and culture,” said Minoru Kihara, the chief cabinet secretary. “The government has not yet made a decision on the matter.” 

    The JSA said it had formed a panel to look into the issue, but it has yet to reach its conclusion. Sumo is “still hiding behind vague words like ‘tradition’ and ‘custom,’” Tomoko Nakagawa, a former mayor of Takarazuka who faced her own dohyo exclusion, told The Japan Times. “That era is over. If we let this moment slip by, nothing will ever change.”

     
     
    On this day

    November 20, 1945

    The Nuremberg Trials began in Germany, charging 24 leading Nazis with war crimes and crimes against humanity. The trials ended with 11 of the defendants sentenced to death. The story of Nuremberg is told in a film of the same name currently in theaters, starring Russell Crowe and Rami Malek.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Trouble ahead for GOP’

    “Trump signs Epstein measure,” the Houston Chronicle says on Thursday’s front page. “Maybe not so fast on release of Epstein files,” as DOJ’s “refusal is still possible,” The Dallas Morning News says. “MAGA base won’t drop Epstein issue,” The Palm Beach Post says. “Trump’s 2nd term at crossroads,” says USA Today. “Poll shows election trouble ahead for GOP,” says the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “Noem and panel split on future of FEMA,” says The Washington Post. “Trump administration pushes new plan to end Ukraine war,” The Wall Street Journal says. “Sexual crimes at sea are up, to little justice,” says The New York Times. 

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    One-wheel wonder

    A French college student broke the world record for longest wheelie, balancing on the back wheel of his bike for 93 miles straight. Oscar Delaite, 19, completed the feat in 6 hours and 31 minutes, cycling 752 times around an indoor track. He trained for more than a year, spending 10 to 15 hours a week wheeling about. Delaite has several world records already under his belt, including the longest one-handed wheelie (1 hour, 46 minutes, 34 seconds).

     
     

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

    Image credits, from top: Victor J. Blue / Bloomberg via Getty Images; Saul Loeb / AFP via Getty Images; Mehmet Eser / Middle East Images / AFT / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images
     

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