Report of hijacked small plane grounds flights at Canada airportNew Foto - Report of hijacked small plane grounds flights at Canada airport

Travel at one of Canada's busiest airports was briefly halted Tuesday after federal police received a report that a small plane had been hijacked, officials said. Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the western Canadian province of British Columbia said that at 1:10 p.m. local time they received a report that a Cessna 172 "had been hijacked from the Vancouver Island area and was entering into airspace near Vancouver International Airport." "The suspect was the sole occupant of the aircraft," the statement added. In a recording of air traffic control posted to liveatc.net, an official can be heard stating: "We have an incident right above our airspace here — a hijacked 172," the Vancouver Sunreported. The plane landed in Vancouver at 1:45 p.m. and the "suspect was arrested without incident," the RCMP said, declining to provide further details. Images published by public broadcaster CBCandvideo shared onlineshow the small white Cessna surrounded by security vehicles on a runway after landing in Vancouver. The CBC reported the Cessna was operated by a flying club in Victoria, the provincial capital located on Vancouver Island. Witness Paul Heeney told the CBC that he was driving when he noticed a small plane flying low and banking to the right. "A few minutes later, we saw a second pass ... the plane was making a big clockwise circle," he said. Vancouver International Airport said in astatementthat nine inbound flights were diverted during the incident with a temporary halt to operations ordered across the airport in the West Coast city. Flights were grounded for 39 minutes. Airport head of communications Stephen Smarttold the CBCthat it "could have lasted a lot longer." "This is not something that we would experience on a regular basis," Smart said Trump pushes senators to make $9.4 trillion in spending cuts Mike Johnson breaks from Trump, calls on DOJ to release Epstein files Son of man who was violently detained by ICE reacts after release

Report of hijacked small plane grounds flights at Canada airport

Report of hijacked small plane grounds flights at Canada airport Travel at one of Canada's busiest airports was briefly halted Tuesday a...
Spanish mountain rescue teams search for American hiker missing in PyreneesNew Foto - Spanish mountain rescue teams search for American hiker missing in Pyrenees

Spanish rescue teams are searching for an American hiker who has been missing in the Pyrenees for eight days. Specialist mountain rescue teams and helicopters from the Air Service are searching for Cole Henderson, 27, in the Ordesa y Monte Perdido national park in northern Spain, the Guardia Civil told CNN on Wednesday. Henderson was last heard from on July 9, said Henderson's friend Max Senoff in a Facebook post published Tuesday. He sent a text saying that he had parked his car, turned his phone on airplane mode and was beginning his hike. He has not been heard from since. Henderson was reported missing on July 14, after he missed his flight home to the Netherlands on July 12, said the Guardia Civil. Authorities found Henderson's car in Torla, a town to the west of the national park, said the Guardia Civil. Senoff believes he may have been attempting to climb Monte Perdido, the third-highest peak in the Pyrenees, standing at 11,007 feet (3,355 meters). Social media footage shows the normal route from Torla, where Henderson's car was parked, still covered in snow in early July. The route is rated as "Peu Difficile" (PD), meaning "somewhat difficult" by the climbing community. While PD routes are often climbed without ropes, they might involve steep sections of climbing, or crevassed glaciers, and often require specialized equipment, such as ice axes or crampons. According to his social media profiles, Henderson attended St. Andrews School in Middletown, Delaware, before studying Computer Science at Rhodes College, Tennessee. CNN's Jack Guy contributed reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Spanish mountain rescue teams search for American hiker missing in Pyrenees

Spanish mountain rescue teams search for American hiker missing in Pyrenees Spanish rescue teams are searching for an American hiker who has...
A new recall of injected penicillin may put gains against syphilis in perilNew Foto - A new recall of injected penicillin may put gains against syphilis in peril

Drugmaker Pfizer is warning doctors that it expects to run low on supplies of Bicillin L-A, a long-acting injection of the antibiotic penicillin, the preferred option for treating syphilis during pregnancy. The news – the latest twist in a drug shortage that began in 2023 – follows aJuly 10 recallof certain lots of Bicillin L-A that were found to be contaminated with floating particles. Pfizer says it has not received any reports of adverse events related to the recalled shots. "We have identified the root cause to be associated with stoppers supplied from an external vendor and are implementing the appropriate corrective and preventative actions," the company said in a statement, adding that it places the utmost emphasis on patient safety. "We fully recognize the importance of this medicine for patients and are working as quickly as possible to resolve the matter." Benzathine penicillin G, sold as Bicillin, is used to treat a number of common bacterial infections, such as strep throat, in adults and children. Because one shot can last up to two weeks, it's especially helpful for people who can't swallow pills or may not be able to remember to take them. In most cases, however, if the shots aren't available, doctors can turn to alternatives like the antibiotic doxycycline. But benzathine penicillin G is the only product that's approved and recommended to treat the sexually transmitted infection syphilis during pregnancy. If the infection is caught early, a single injection can keep the infection from spreading to a newborn, a condition called congenital syphilis. Without treatment, syphilis during pregnancy can cause miscarriages and stillbirths. It can also be fatal for infants. Syphilis can also cause vision and hearing problems in babies as well as deformities of the bones and teeth. As rates of syphilis rose in adults, more babies became infected, too. Over the past decade, rates of congenital syphilis have increased tenfold in the United States, from 335 in 2012 tomore than 3,800 in 2023, accordingto datafrom the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "We're in the midst of a congenital syphilis crisis, and we've been calling for an emergency declaration for congenital syphilis for years," said Dr. Jeffrey Klausner, a professor of clinical population and public health sciences at the University of Southern California's Keck School of Medicine. "This threatens to make that even worse." The shot has been a key part of the strategy that some states have been using to quell rising rates of congenital syphilis. Because too many pregnant patients infected with syphilis weren't making it into basic primary care, there's been a push in states includingNew MexicoandMinnesotato test all pregnant women for syphilis at multiple stages of pregnancy and whenever they show up in emergency rooms or urgent care clinics. After an initial positive test, providers are encouraged to treat a pregnant patient with a shot of long-acting penicillin at the same visit, without waiting for the results of a second confirmatory test. This push for one-stop testing and treatment has already had an effect. "With the latest release of data, we saw a slowing of rates, which was really exciting," said a CDC official familiar with the data who asked not to be named because they weren't authorized to speak to the media. That progress is the result of hard work bringing awareness to controlling syphilis and congenital syphilis, the official said. Bicillin L-A most recentlywent into shortagein 2023. During that time, the US Food and Drug Administration has allowed imports of two equivalent products, a French drug called Extencilline, and Lentocilin, which is imported from Portugal and sold by entrepreneur Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs. These imports continue to be authorized. Those forms of the medication are trickier to use, said Erin Fox, associate chief pharmacy officer at the University of Utah Health. "In a health system, it's very hard to use imported products," she said. The bar coding on the drugs isn't recognized by most hospital systems, and there may be differences in how the products are mixed and diluted, which can be confusing. Her hospital has been handling the shortage by being judicious about who gets Bicillin shots. It hasn't had to use an imported products yet. Pfizer has also been working to boost its supply. The company stopped shipping pediatric doses in 2023 and instead focused on making adult doses to prioritize supply for pregnant patients. According to theFDA's drug shortage website, Pfizer expected to have a delivery of pediatric doses available in October. Now, the companyhas advised customersthat it will give an update on the Bicillin supply no later than mid-August. Until stock has fully recovered, Pfizer said, it will ration available supplies of the shots. Providers will have to fill out medical request forms, and the company will send supplies on a per-patient basis. Sterile injectable products like Bicillin are especially vulnerable to shortages because they have a more complex manufacturing process than pills and tend to be prone to quality control issues. In this case, Pfizer is the sole supplier of Bicillin for the US. The nonprofit National Coalition of STD Directors said it's gathering information from members to understand how far-reaching the impact of the recall may be. One of its committees met Monday, and all of the participants were in the process of returning Bicillin doses to Pfizer. One state returned about 800 vials, "so we expect to hear this is widespread," said Elizabeth Finley, senior director of communications and programs for the organization. "We had a small reprieve for about, maybe a year, in terms of steady supply. And now this is just a complete kick in the teeth and really threatens our ability to prevent and control syphilis," Klausner said. The CDC had previously postedrecommendationsfor caring for syphilis patients during the shortage, but that information has sincebeen taken down. Fox, who investigates drug shortages for the Association of Health Systems Pharmacists, said she has asked the agency to repost it but hasn't received a response. CDC staffers who work on syphilis control were hit hard by recent government layoffs, although about 200 were reinstated in June. Federal funding cuts have also hampered state and local efforts to control sexually transmitted infections. The FDA updated itsdrug shortage pagewith links to Pfizer's recent guidance but has not postedPfizer's recall announcement. A spokesperson for the US Department of Health and Human services referred questions about the recall and potential supply problems to Pfizer. "I am concerned though that now, with a cut in funds to national and local STD programs, that we will start to see a drop in testing for syphilis," the CDC official said. "Cuts to Medicaid and Medicare, as well as other programs, will be devastating for syphilis control." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

A new recall of injected penicillin may put gains against syphilis in peril

A new recall of injected penicillin may put gains against syphilis in peril Drugmaker Pfizer is warning doctors that it expects to run low o...
Tish Cyrus recalls getting too high from a weed brownie at one of daughter Miley's birthday partiesNew Foto - Tish Cyrus recalls getting too high from a weed brownie at one of daughter Miley's birthday parties

Kevin Mazur/BBMA2017/Getty Tish Cyrusis, uh,bluntlyopening up about a time she accidentally got too high at one of daughterMiley's birthday parties. Tish recalled the story onTuesday's episodeof theBoyfriend Material with Harry Jowseypodcast when the host asked her if there was ever a time she "accidentally got too high" prior to her sobriety. "Oh yeah, it was not good at all," she replied, as her other daughter Brandi chimed in to remind her that it happened "a few times." The specific incident that came to mind for Tish happened years ago at one of Miley's birthday parties at Beacher's Madhouse in Hollywood. "Miley would have parties there, and it was a whole thing, but this was actually before I smoked, and I ate some brownies at the party," Tish explained. The manager and producer said that she then went home, fell asleep, and woke up two hours later to find that "everything was spinning, and I was coming freaking unglued." She continued, "I actually called Miley and I was like, 'Oh my gosh, Mile. I feel so weird and so sick. I need to go to the emergency room. You have to come get me right now.'" Lester Cohen/Getty Tish said Miley was concerned, but also confused, because she had just seen her mother at the party and she was seemingly fine. "She was like, 'Did you eat something? Tell me,' and I was like, 'No. The only thing I ate was a brownie.' And she goes, 'At Beacher's?' And I'm like, 'Yes,'" Tish recalled. At that point, Miley figured out her mother's error and asked how much of it she had consumed. When Tish told her she ate "the whole thing," Miley replied, "holy crap." Sign up forEntertainment Weekly's free daily newsletterto get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. But, as Brandi pointed out, that particular instance was an accident, and there were other times she knowingly got too high. At one of daughter Noah's performances in Denver, Colo., for instance, Tish was supposedly "so stoned you couldn't speak," Brandi claimed. "You were mute, and then you tried to get yourself back to my apartment, and I had to call someone to let you in, because you literally weren't speaking." "Maybe it's good I am sober," Tish deadpanned. Tish first opened up about her sobriety in an Instagram video announcing the rebranding of her and Brandi's podcast fromSorry We're StonedtoSorry We're Cyrusin October last year. "Everybody knows that I love smoking weed. Weed was my brand, but I have now not smoked for five months,"Tish said at the time. "So we are back with a new name:Sorry We're Cyrus." For the full conversation with Tish and Brandi, check out the podcast, above. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Tish Cyrus recalls getting too high from a weed brownie at one of daughter Miley's birthday parties

Tish Cyrus recalls getting too high from a weed brownie at one of daughter Miley's birthday parties Kevin Mazur/BBMA2017/Getty Tish Cyru...
Arrest after 'American Idol' music supervisor and husband found shot dead in LA homeNew Foto - Arrest after 'American Idol' music supervisor and husband found shot dead in LA home

A suspect has been arrested in the murder of an "American Idol" music supervisor and her songwriter husband, police in Los Angeles said Tuesday, even as many questions about the slayings remain unanswered. The victims -- Robin Kaye and her husband, Thomas Deluca, both 70 -- were found shot to death in their Los Angeles home during a welfare check on Monday, authorities said. The suspect -- 22-year-old Raymond Boodarian -- was arrested at his home on Tuesday, LAPD Lt. Guy Golan told reporters on Tuesday. He said Boodarian had scaled a fence onto the property and was inside when the victims arrived home and then shot and killed them during a "violent struggle." It is believed the couple were killed on July 10, when the Los Angeles Police Department received two calls about a possible burglary at the address in Encino after a person was seen jumping the fence onto the property. Officers responding to the calls that day were unable to go into the home because it is highly fortified, with 8-foot walls with spikes, police sources said earlier. Police flew a helicopter over and saw no signs of a burglary or of any other trouble and left, the official said. However, surveillance footage later reviewed by police showed the suspect scaling the fence and then apparently entering an unlocked door, Golan said. The victims arrived home about 30 minutes later, he said. A friend of the victims called police on Monday for a welfare check, Golan said. Responding officers saw blood on the porch and broke a window to get inside where they found the victims with multiple gunshot wounds. They both had gunshot wounds to the head, police said earlier. The motive remains unclear, Golan said. He said the house did not appear to be ransacked. "We're looking into multiple avenues on what the motive may be," he said. Police do not believe Boodarian knew the victims and said Boodarian is not a suspect in any other burglaries, police sources said earlier. There is no camera footage from inside the house that shows what went on, the lieutenant said. The LAPD will look into how police responded to the initial burglary call last week to make sure it was handled appropriately, he said. MORE: Man accused of murdering and dismembering wife, in-laws found dead in cell Kaye had been with the TV show "American Idol" since 2009, according to a spokesperson for the ABC singing competition series. "We are devastated to hear of Robin and her dear husband, Tom's, passing," the spokesperson said in a statement. "Robin has been a cornerstone of the Idol family since 2009 and was truly loved and respected by all who came in contact with her. Robin will remain in our hearts forever and we share our deepest sympathy with her family and friends during this difficult time."

Arrest after 'American Idol' music supervisor and husband found shot dead in LA home

Arrest after 'American Idol' music supervisor and husband found shot dead in LA home A suspect has been arrested in the murder of an...
Joe Rogan rips DOJ's handling of Epstein files in scathing rant against Trump adminNew Foto - Joe Rogan rips DOJ's handling of Epstein files in scathing rant against Trump admin

Joe Rogan used his latest podcast episode to weigh in on the Epstein files controversy amid public uproar over the Department of Justice's probe into the late pedophile and his associates. The podcast giant lambasted the Trump administration'sannouncement that there was never a listor footage revealing clients of the high-flying sex pest. "They've got videotape and all [of] a sudden they don't," Rogan, 57, said on the latest episode of his podcast "The Joe Rogan Experience," released Tuesday. "You had the director of the FBI on this show saying, 'If there was [a videotape], nothing you're looking for is on those tapes,'" Rogan added, referring to Director Kash Patel's appearance on the show in June. "Like, what? Why'd they say there was thousands of hours of tapes of people doing horrible s–t? Why'd they say that? Didn't Pam Bondi say that?" Rogan was referring tocomments Attorney General Pam Bondimade on July 1 — just days before the Department of Justice announced there was no "Epstein list" or incriminating footage of the disgraced financier's associates — in which she told reporters the FBI was reviewing "tens of thousands of videos" of Epstein "with children or child porn." And months earlier, Bondi intimated that the supposed Epstein list was on her desk awaiting review — though she later clarified that there was an Epstein investigation file ready for her review, not the so-called list at the center of countless conspiracy theories. The turnaround comes after President Trump spent months talking about plans to release everything the government had on Epstein and his associates — evenpublishing "The Epstein Files: Phase 1"to great fanfare in February. Next to nothing new was revealed in those files. Rogan didn't seem to buy the Trump administration's new stance, suggesting the president was trying to distract supporters from his campaign promises about Epstein. "Just bomb Iran and everybody forgets. Everybody forgets about it," Rogan said, referring to Trump's late June strikes on Iranian nuclear weapons facilities. It was just the latest bone Rogan had to pick with Trump, whom he endorsed ahead of the election, on his podcast in recent weeks. Earlier in July, hecalled the president's ICE roundups of illegal immigrants"insane," and said authorities should focus on investigating dangerous criminals instead of raiding Home Depot parking lots to make arrests. "There's two things that are insane. One is the targeting of migrant workers. Not cartel members, not gang members, not drug dealers. Just construction workers. Showing up in construction sites, raiding them. Gardeners. Like, really?" Rogan said. He appeared to be referring to the incidents that sparked the Los Angeles protests in June, when ICE agents staked out parking lots where manual laborers gather to find work during mornings. The Department of Homeland Security disputed Rogan's characterization of ICE's arrests, with a spokesperson saying "an overwhelming majority" of ICE arrestees in Trump's crackdown had prior criminal convictions. Rogan, whose podcast commands an audience of about 10 million listeners, has had a mixed stance on Trump. He used to be a virulent critic of the president, but ended up endorsing him ahead of the 2024 election, saying Elon Musk's arguments in favor of Trump convinced him.

Joe Rogan rips DOJ’s handling of Epstein files in scathing rant against Trump admin

Joe Rogan rips DOJ's handling of Epstein files in scathing rant against Trump admin Joe Rogan used his latest podcast episode to weigh i...

 

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