Live from NPR News, I'm Dale Wilman.
The U.S. attacked a ship near the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday.
“President Trump wrote on truth social that the U.S. Navy took control of an Iranian flag”
to cargo ship. It's called the Tuska. He said a U.S. guided missile destroyer, quote, "blue hole in the engine room." The Tuska had previously been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury and the IRGC fired on multiple boats, which Trump claimed was a violation of the ceasefire.
That's Doribuscare and reporting from Von Turkey, which is close to the Iranian border. Iran says it will respond soon to what it calls an act of piracy. President Trump said Sunday that U.S. representatives are heading to Pakistan for another round of peace talks between the two countries. But this latest action could put those talks in jeopardy.
The current ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran expires on Wednesday. Eight children were killed in the mass shooting this weekend in Shreeveport, Louisiana. Police say the sole suspect has believed to be the father of seven of the children.
“The mother of those children and another woman were also shot and wounded.”
NPR's Joe Hernandez has our reports. The Shreeveport Police Department says officers were called to a home in the city Sunday morning for what a police spokesperson described as a domestic disturbance. The suspect then allegedly committed a carjacking and led police on a chase before officers opened fire and the suspect died.
The children who were killed ranged an age from one to fourteen years old. Police said one of the victims fled to an adjacent home and that authorities were alerted
to a third crime scene nearby.
Authorities said some of the victims were his "decindance." Shreeveport Mayor Tom Arsano said the killings were perhaps the worst tragic situation the city has ever seen. Joe Hernandez and PR news. It's still not quite clear just who will be competing to be bruised next president.
One week after the country's presidential primary took place, election results still have not been made public. As NPR's carry con reports, the current political impasse is just the latest challenge to democratic institutions in that South American country. Electoral officials are still counting the votes and estimate they may not have the final
results until the middle of next month.
The conservative daughter of disgraced former president Alberto Fujimori took the first
place spot out of a field of 35. But all eyes are on second place to challenge Kiko Fujimori in the June general election. Right now little more than 10,000 votes separate the two top vote getters. Leading is a nationalist congressman who allies with an imprisoned-leftist former president and third place an ultra-conservative politician, Peru has been suffering from a perpetual
political crisis with its conservative congress, liberally using a constitutional clause to remove and appoint presidents. Kerry Con and PR news Rio de Janeiro. And you're listening to NPR news. The federal government could lose billions in tax revenue each year if fewer immigrants
filed their taxes. His NPR's Windsor Johnston reports a new analysis finds fear and policy changes may be pushing some people out of the system.
The Yale Budget Lab projects the U.S. could lose nearly $500 billion over the next 10
years of tax filings decline. Undocumented immigrants already contribute tens of billions of dollars each year through payroll and income taxes. But economists warned that fear could cause more people to avoid filing their returns or move into off the books work.
Director of Policy Analyst Richard Prisenzano says that kind of shift can backfire. If those folks are worried about being deported or being investigated, they want to have less interaction with the government. And so this piece could actually bring less revenue in. The report warns that even a modest drop in participation could lead to significant losses
over time. Windsor Johnston and PR news, Washington. Counter-terror officers in London are investigating a series of our synotax in that city they're trying to understand whether the attacks are the work of Iranian proxies, the latest attack on a synagogue Saturday caused minor damage.
The synagogues chief rabbi says British Jews are facing a campaign of violence and intimidation. Popleo was an Angola on Sunday, he prayed at the popular Catholic shrine that sits at the epicenter of the African slave trade. He or its parishioners did build a better, more welcoming world where there are no more wars, no injustices, no poverty, and no dishonesty.
“One religious scholar called the visit an important moment of healing.”
I'm Dale Wilman, NPR News.


