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Ex-FDNY chief gets 3 years for taking bribes to fast-track safety inspections

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NEW YORK — A former New York City Fire Department chief was sentenced to three years in prison Wednesday for accepting tens of thousands of dollars in bribes to fast-track fire safety inspections at restaurants, hotels and other city businesses.

Anthony Saccavino, 61, pleaded guilty in January to running the scheme while heading the department’s Bureau of Fire Prevention, which regulates the installation of fire safety and suppression systems in New York City.

With the help of another chief, Brian Cordasco, Saccavino solicited and received $190,000 in bribe payments between 2021 and 2023, prosecutors said.

“Chief Saccavino led a pay-to-play bribery scheme that would offend the sensibilities of every hard-working New Yorker,” Manhattan U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton said in a statement.

A retired firefighter who ran an unsanctioned “expediting” business acted as the intermediary for the more than 30 projects that benefited from the accelerated reviews.

Saccavino was arrested in September alongside Cordasco, who also pleaded guilty and was sentenced in March to 20 months in prison.

Their arrests came days before the criminal indictment of Mayor Eric Adams on bribery charges that included allegations he sped up fire safety inspections at the Turkish consulate in exchange for illegal contributions. Adams has denied wrongdoing.

The case against the mayor, which was later ordered dropped by the Trump administration, was unrelated to the fire chiefs’ bribery scandal.

On top of his prison term, Saccavino was ordered to pay a $150,000 fine and to return $57,000 that he personally pocketed in bribes, prosecutors said.

His attorney did not respond to phone call requesting comment.



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Trump’s Pledge to the Middle East: No More ‘Lectures on How to Live’

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In Saudi Arabia, the president denounced Western intervention and nation-building, garnering both praise and eye rolls.



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House Republicans propose $5 billion for private school vouchers


WASHINGTON — House Republicans want to set aside up to $5 billion a year for scholarships to help families send their children to private and religious schools, an unprecedented effort to use public money to pay for private education.

The proposal, part of a budget reconciliation bill released Monday, would advance President Donald Trump’s agenda of establishing “universal school choice” by providing families nationwide the option to give their children an education different from the one offered in their local public school. Nearly all households would qualify except those making more than three times the local median income.

Supporters of private school vouchers say they want to give families assigned to low-performing schools more choices.

“Giving parents the ability to choose the best education for their child makes the (American Dream) possible,” said Republican Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, who sponsored a similar proposal in the Senate.

The program would be funded by donors who could contribute money or stock. In turn, they would receive 100% of the contribution back in the form of a discount on their tax bills. It would allow stock holders to avoid paying taxes that would be levied if they donated or transferred the stock.

Critics decried the proposal, saying it would aid the wealthy at the expense of the public school systems that serve the overwhelming majority of students. They said it would set up a tax shelter allowing savvy investors to make money under the guise of a donation.

All of this comes as the Trump administration downsizes the Education Department and cuts resources to public schools, including $1 billion in mental health grants and funding for teacher training.

“This is a significant threat,” said Sasha Pudelski of AASA, the School Superintendents Association. She added that states that have voucher programs often end up assisting families that were already paying for private school. “It’s opening the door even wider to what has already plagued voucher programs around the country, which is rampant waste, fraud, and abuse.”

Similar tax-credit scholarship and private school voucher programs have proliferated in red-leaning states like Texas, which just passed a $1 billion program. Public school advocates worry the programs hurt enrollment and per-pupil funding, ultimately leaving fewer resources for families that choose public schools.

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The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.



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Netflix will show generative AI ads midway through streams in 2026


Netflix is joining its streaming rivals in testing the amount and types of advertisements its subscribers are willing to endure for lower prices.

Today, at its second annual upfront to advertisers, the streaming leader announced that it has created interactive mid-roll ads and pause ads that incorporate generative AI. Subscribers can expect to start seeing the new types of ads in 2026, Media Play News reported.

“[Netflix] members pay as much attention to midroll ads as they do to the shows and movies themselves,” Amy Reinhard, president of advertising at Netflix, said, per the publication.

Netflix started testing pause ads in July 2024, per The Verge.

Netflix launched its ad subscription tier in November 2022. Today, it said that the tier has 94 million subscribers, compared to the 300 million total subscribers it claimed in January. The current number of ad subscribers represents a 34 percent increase from November. Half of new Netflix subscribers opt for the $8 per month option rather than ad-free subscriptions, which start at $18 per month, the company says.



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Breast Texture Patterns May Aid Risk Prediction from Mammography

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Unrecognizable female gynocologist looking at a mammogram at the hospital
Credit: andresr/ Getty Images

In one of the largest studies of its kind, researchers have used radiomics analysis to identify six distinct breast tissue patterns, beyond breast density, that are associated with breast cancer risk.

“We expect these phenotypes to improve future risk prediction to better identify women at high risk for breast cancer for risk-reduction strategies and tailored screening, as well as women at low risk for breast cancer who may be able to extend screening intervals,” wrote Stacey Winham, from the Department of Quantitative Health Sciences at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, and co-authors in Radiology.

They explained that although breast density is a known risk factor for breast cancer and false-negative findings on mammogram, women with similar proportions of breast density can have substantial heterogeneity in their tissue patterns.

“Unlike breast density, which is a global image measure, mammographic texture reflects the spatial distribution of the more subtle, localized complexity of breast tissue on the mammogram,” co-senior author Celine Vachon, also from the Mayo Clinic, told Inside Precision Medicine. “We hypothesize that the intrinsic heterogeneity of the structure and texture on a mammogram more accurately reflects the underlying predisposition of the breast to develop breast cancer and provides complementary information to breast density for breast cancer risk.”

To test this hypothesis, the researchers used radiomics to automatically identify and extract quantitative features from more than 30,000 digital mammograms obtained at three diverse breast screening practices.

“We systematically sampled almost 400 different mammographic features at various points throughout the entire mammogram image to get a comprehensive representation of texture and structure of breast tissue,” said Vachon. “We then used this information to develop six parenchymal phenotypes, or breast tissue patterns, that represent this variation.”

The phenotypes were developed using two complementary statistical approaches: hierarchical clustering and principal component (PC) analysis.

“The phenotype ‘clusters’ represent mutually exclusive sub-groups or categories of patients, whereas the PCs represent continuous scores based on a linear combination of the radiomic features,” Vachon explained. “The discrete subgroups defined through hierarchical clustering may improve interpretability and clinical utility by grouping patients into categories, whereas the continuous PCs reduce the high dimensionality of the radiomic features into a quantitative score and improve power for testing associations with breast cancer outcomes.”

These six phenotypes were then validated on mammograms from over 1,055 women with invasive breast cancer and 2,764 women without breast cancer.

The researchers reported that the six clusters and six quantitative PCs were significantly associated with a higher risk for invasive breast cancer after adjustment for age, body mass index, and Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) breast density.

Although the two methods provide similar information, the PCs allowed for greater power when examining the associations with breast cancer endpoints, Vachon noted.

Specifically, adding the PC information to age, BMI, and BI-RADS breast density significantly improved the accuracy for predicting overall breast cancer in Black women from 63% to 68%. The improvement from 60% to 61% was not significant for White women. However, the researchers noted that the odds for predicting cancer with PCs did not differ significantly between Black and White women.

Adding the PC phenotypes also significantly improved the accuracy, from 66% to 73%, for discriminating false negative findings, and from 68% to 77% for predicting interval cancers.

This suggests that “the PCs may be incorporated into risk prediction of [false-negative] findings to identify women at highest risk of missed and/or fast-growing tumors, which may inform supplemental screening recommendations,” Winham et al remarked.

“Our next steps are to understand whether these phenotypes contribute to known risk factors for breast cancer and established risk models for breast cancer,” said Vachon. “Our hope is that this information can be used in addition to current risk models to better stratify women at high and low risk.

She added: “We plan to extend their investigations to larger groups of women in the U.S. population, especially examining 3D mammograms, and combining these radiomic risk factors with genetic and other lifestyle factors to improve our ability to define who is (and is not) at increased risk of invasive breast cancer.”



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Prosecution concludes direct questioning of Cassie Ventura in federal sex trafficking case. Cross examination will begin tomorrow.


The trial of Sean “Diddy” Combs concluded its third day in Manhattan federal court on Wednesday, with the prosecution finishing its direct questioning of Cassie Ventura, his former girlfriend and the government’s star witness. The defense’s cross-examination of Ventura will begin Thursday morning.

The 55-year-old hip-hop mogul is facing charges of sex trafficking, racketeering conspiracy and transportation to engage in prostitution. Federal prosecutors say that for decades, Combs abused, threatened and coerced women to participate in marathon sexual encounters called “freak offs,” and used his business empire, along with guns, kidnapping and arson, to conceal his crimes.

Ventura told the court her decade-long relationship with Combs was frequently marked by violence and physical abuse, describing in detail the drug-fueled “freak offs” that would take days to recover from. Jurors were also shown a 2016 surveillance video of Combs hitting, kicking and dragging Ventura in the hallway of a Los Angeles hotel.

Combs has pleaded not guilty. If convicted, he could face life in prison. He is being held without bail in a Brooklyn jail. A jury of 12 New Yorkers and six alternates will decide his fate. The trial is expected to last at least eight weeks.

Follow the live blog below for the latest updates on the trial, culled from various reporters and news organizations in the courtroom, including the Associated Press, CNN, the New York Times and NBC News.

If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, you can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE (7233). Find more resources here.

Live98 updates



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Google DeepMind creates super-advanced AI that can invent new algorithms


Google’s DeepMind research division claims its newest AI agent marks a significant step toward using the technology to tackle big problems in math and science. The system, known as AlphaEvolve, is based on the company’s Gemini large language models (LLMs), with the addition of an “evolutionary” approach that evaluates and improves algorithms across a range of use cases.

AlphaEvolve is essentially an AI coding agent, but it goes deeper than a standard Gemini chatbot. When you talk to Gemini, there is always a risk of hallucination, where the AI makes up details due to the non-deterministic nature of the underlying technology. AlphaEvolve uses an interesting approach to increase its accuracy when handling complex algorithmic problems.

According to DeepMind, this AI uses an automatic evaluation system. When a researcher interacts with AlphaEvolve, they input a problem along with possible solutions and avenues to explore. The model generates multiple possible solutions, using the efficient Gemini Flash and the more detail-oriented Gemini Pro, and then each solution is analyzed by the evaluator. An evolutionary framework allows AlphaEvolve to focus on the best solution and improve upon it.

Many of the company’s past AI systems, for example, the protein-folding AlphaFold, were trained extensively on a single domain of knowledge. AlphaEvolve, however, is more dynamic. DeepMind says AlphaEvolve is a general-purpose AI that can aid research in any programming or algorithmic problem. And Google has already started to deploy it across its sprawling business with positive results.



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The Devil Wears Prada Star Stanley Tucci Reveals Where He’d Wine and Dine the Film’s Iconic Character, Miranda Priestley (Exclusive)

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NEED TO KNOW

  • Stanley Tucci reflects on his beloved role as Nigel in The Devil Wears Prada
  • In a new interview with PEOPLE, Tucci shares where he’d hypothetically take Miranda Priestley to eat in Italy — and it’s very on brand
  • The actor also opens up about his new National Geographic series, Tucci in Italy, where he explores the rich culinary traditions of five picturesque Italian regions

Stanley Tucci’s award-winning film career has him spanning a wide range of roles, but his role as fashion magazine art director Nigel in the 2006 film, The Devil Wears Prada, was one that solidified him into the hearts of a generation. 

In an exclusive interview with PEOPLE to discuss his upcoming new series, Tucci in Italy, the multi-hyphenate star, 64, gave a fun response when asked where he would take the movie’s main character Miranda Priestly, editor-in-chief of the fictional fashion magazine, Runway. 

In the movie starring Anne Hathaway (who played fashion world newbie Andrea “Andy” Sachs), Tucci’s role as Nigel was part mentor for Andy and part right-hand to Miranda, played by Meryl Streep.

Stanley Tucci (left) and Meryl Streep (right) in ‘The Devil Wears Prada’.

20th Century Fox Film Corp. 


Miranda, who’s drawn comparisons to Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour, is a no-nonsense boss who demands everything around her go off without a hitch. 

At one point in the film, she asks Andy to order and deliver a high-quality steak to her office. As fans of the film will remember, Andy ends up having to throw the steak away after Miranda makes other arrangements, to Andy’s surprise. 

Steak scene from ‘The Devil Wears Prada’.

20th Century Fox 


Tucci draws inspiration from the particular scene in the film. “I would take her to … she likes steak, right?” he recalls. “I would take her to Tuscany and I would give her the beef steak of Fiorentina [Florence]. A delicious steak.” As for the wine pairing, Tucci simply adds, “Yeah, lots of it.” 

In his forthcoming show, Tucci, author of What I Ate in One Year and Taste: My Life Through Food, will continue to flex his culinary prowess. 

The five-episode series will take viewers on a picturesque journey across five Italian regions, absorbing the intricate details of some of the world’s most culturally rich dishes.    

Tucci travels to Tuscany, Lombardy, Trentino-Alto Adige, Abruzzo, and Lazio, meeting chefs, fishermen, food scientists and even cowboys who string together the history and importance of regional ingredients and dishes through immersive storytelling. 

“I’m guided by my taste buds,” Tucci explains, “that’s important to the point of the show, really, in a way. I’m always guided by my taste buds. It’s my first thought when I wake up wherever I am.”

The first episode of Tucci in Italy premieres on National Geographic on May 18.



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Parents wade through floodwater to reach students during Maryland emergency flash flooding


WESTERNPORT, Md. – Family members waded through waist-deep floodwater to reach their children in Western Maryland on Tuesday after torrential rain quickly inundated three schools in Allegany County, prompting emergency rescues.

A Flash Flood Emergency was declared near Westernport, Maryland when storms dropped up to 5 inches of rain within hours.

Allegany County Administrator Jason Bennett said the area is known as the “Mountainside of Maryland” because it’s surrounded by mountains. All that water flows downhill, and by Tuesday afternoon, “we began to have real problems,” Bennett told FOX Weather.

Photos show cars floating in the parking lot of an Allegany County District school. 

“This one absolutely came up on us very quickly,” Bennett said.

Georges Creek Elementary and Westernport Elementary students were evacuated by boat as the water began to enter buildings. Students and staff sheltered in place at Westmar Middle School and Mountain Ridge High School.

First responders from Western Maryland, including multiple volunteer fire departments and swift-water rescue teams, headed to the scene,  rescuing 150 students and 50 staff from Westernport Elementary. 

WHAT FLOOD WATCHES, FLOOD WARNINGS AND FLASH FLOOD EMERGENCIES MEAN

Some families took things into their own hands, wading through the rising water to reach their children and help rescue others. 

A photo shared by the Maryland State Fire Marshal’s Office shows a man carrying a girl on his shoulders with water up to his chest. Officials said he was a good Samaritan, not with a fire department. 

Allegany County Public School officials said 12 students stayed over overnight at Mountain Ridge High School until their families could pick them up on Wednesday morning. 

“We went from having parking lots that were bare to being filled with water within a 30-to-40-minute timeframe. That’s why we had a couple of the schools that kind of got stuck the way they were,” Bennett said. “So it was a very difficult time, a lot of water to deal with and a lot of damage and a lotta cleanup for us to deal with today.”

Photos shared by the Kitzmiller and Bloomdale volunteer fire departments show boats carrying students away from the school and the playground submerged in water. 

Potomac Fire Co. No. 2 Public Information Officer Jonathan Dayton estimated that about 200 homes and buildings were flooded in Allegany County. 

County officials said no one was reported injured or missing during the event in Western Maryland. 

Tragically, the same storms caused flooding in West Virginia and Virginia, where a 12-year-old boy was swept away by floodwaters. His body was found on Wednesday.



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Lawmakers seek investigation into South Carolina’s firing squad execution

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — Two South Carolina legislators have requested an investigation into the state’s firing squad execution last month after lawyers for the inmate said his autopsy showed the shots nearly missed his heart and left him in extreme pain for up to a minute.

The Democratic and Republican representatives asked the governor, the prison system and leaders in the state House and Senate for an independent and comprehensive review of the April 11 execution of Mikal Mahdi.

They also want the firing squad removed from the methods of execution that an inmate can choose until an investigation is complete. Condemned prisoners in South Carolina can also choose lethal injection or the electric chair.

Reps. Justin Bamberg and Neal Collins wrote in their letter that the request doesn’t diminish the crimes Mahdi was convicted of, nor was it rooted in sympathy for the 42-year-old inmate. Mahdi was put to death for the 2004 shooting of an off-duty police officer during a robbery.

“This independent investigation is to preserve the integrity of South Carolina’s justice system and public confidence in our state’s administration of executions under the rule of law,” they wrote.

Bamberg, a Democrat, and Coillins, a Republican, are deskmates in the South Carolina House.

Prison officials said they thought the execution was properly conducted. House and Senate leaders did not respond. Republican Gov. Henry McMaster said he sees no need to investigate.

“The governor has high confidence in the leadership of the Department of Corrections. He believes the sentence of death for Mr. Mahdi was properly and lawfully carried out,” wrote spokesman Brandon Charochak in an email.

Even without an investigation, what happened at Mahdi’s execution may get hashed out in court soon. A possible execution date for Stephen Stanko, who has two death sentences for murders in Horry County and Georgetown County, could be set as soon as Friday. He would have to decide two weeks later how he wants to die.

Mahdi had admitted he killed Orangeburg Public Safety officer James Myers in 2004, shooting him at least eight times before burning his body. Myers’ wife found him in the couple’s Calhoun County shed, which had been the backdrop to their wedding 15 months earlier.

The autopsy conducted after Mahdi’s execution raised several questions that the lawmakers repeated in their letter.

The only photo of Mahdi’s body taken at his autopsy showed just two distinct wounds in his torso. A pathologist who reviewed the results for Mahdi’s lawyers said that showed one of the three shots from the three prison employee volunteers on the firing squad missed.

The pathologist who conducted the autopsy concluded that two bullets entered the body in the same place after consulting with an unnamed prison official who said that had happened before in training. Prison officials said all three guns fired and no bullets or fragments were found in the death chamber.

“Both bullets traveling on the exact same trajectory both before and after hitting a target through the same exact entrance point is contrary to the law of physics,” Bamberg and Collins wrote.

In the state’s first firing squad execution of Brad Sigmon on March 7, three distinct wounds were found on his chest and his heart was heavily damaged, according to his autopsy report.

The shots barely hit one of the four chambers of Mahdi’s heart and extensively damaged his liver and lungs. Where it likely takes someone 15 seconds to lose consciousness when the heart is directly hit, Mahdi likely was aware and in extreme pain for 30 seconds to a minute, said Dr. Jonathan Arden, the pathologist who reviewed the autopsy for the inmate’s lawyers.

Witnesses said Mahdi cried out as the shots were fired at his execution, groaned again some 45 seconds later and let out one last low moan just before he appeared to draw his final breath at 75 seconds.

Bamberg and Collins said Mahdi’s autopsy itself was problematic.

The official autopsy did not include X-rays to allow the results to be independently verified; only one photo was taken of Mahdi’s body, and no close-ups of the wounds; and his clothing was not examined to determine where the target was placed and how it aligned with the damage the bullets caused to his shirt and his body.

“I think it is really stretching the truth to say that Mikal Mahdi had an autopsy. I think most pathologists would say that he had ‘an external examination of the body,’” said Jonathan Groner, an expert in lethal injection and other capital punishments and a surgeon who teaches at Ohio State University.

Sigmon’s autopsy included X-rays, several photos and a cursory examination of his clothes

Prison officials have used the same company, Professional Pathology Services, for all its execution autopsies, Corrections Department spokeswoman Chrysti Shain said.

They provide no instructions or restrictions to the firm for any autopsy, she said.

The pathologist who conducted the autopsy refused to answer questions from The Associated Press.

Bamberg and Collins also want the state to allow at least one legislator to attend executions as witnesses.

State law is specific about who can be in the small witness room: prison staff, two representatives for the inmate, three relatives of the victim, a law enforcement officer, the prosecutor where the crime took place, and three members of the media.



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