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NPR News: 04-30-2026 3AM EDT

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Live from MPR News, I'm trial Snyder.

The Pentagon says the Iran war has cost $25 billion so far.

MPR's Quill Lawrence reports on Defense Secretary Pete Heggsess testimony Wednesday

on Capitol Hill. Heggseth was defending the administration's proposed $1.45 trillion defense budget with a focus on rebuilding U.S. military industry. But it's the first time he's appeared under oath since the Iran war started, and Democrat at a Smith asked why President Trump ordered the attack after claiming to have destroyed

Iran's nuclear weapons program last year. Well, their nuclear facilities have been obliterated, underground, they're buried, and we'll watch you. We'll watch you. We had to start this war.

You just said, 60 days ago, because the nuclear weapon was an imminent threat. Now you're saying that it was completely obliterated. They had not given up their nuclear ambitions. Since Heggsess said the biggest adversaries are Democrats and some Republicans were criticizing the war.

Quill Lawrence and P.R. News.

The congressional black caucus is pledging to fight back after the U.S. Supreme Court

when Wednesday's ruling that strikes down a majority black congressional district in Louisiana. The CBC's chair, New York Congresswoman Yvette Clark, is calling the ruling an outright power grab that could lead to more redistricting efforts across the country that could aid Republican efforts to retain control of the House. Jerome Powell planning to remain on the board of the Federal Reserve after his term as chair

ends next month, Powell said Wednesday that he will stay on for an undetermined period of time, citing what he said were unprecedented legal attacks by the Trump administration. And P.R. Scott Horsley. That is unusual. Fed shares usually walk away from the central bank when their term is done, but, you know,

Powell is a staunch defender of the Fezibility to operate independently of political pressure. And that has really been challenged during the Trump administration. President threatened to fire Powell, he's tried to fire another Fed governor, the Justice Department, even launched a criminal investigation of Powell and his colleagues. Yes.

Customs said it expects the first of its terror-free funds to hit on May 11th in piercing

lead a sell-out report that so far, only a portion of refunds are getting refunded. Companies that paid President Trump's tariffs before they got struck down by the Supreme Court began to request refunds on April 20th. That's when U.S. Customs launched a special online process to file claims and importers have submitted claims for tens of millions of shipments.

Roughly a third of those claims did not mean the technical requirements from U.S. Customs,

importers can fix errors and refile. The claims that did go through and made it past another layer of disqualifications cover roughly a fifth of the shipments that the government says are due for refunds. That's as of Sunday or about a week into the process. What records suggest that refunds are already on the way for about 3% of the shipments.

Alina Sidduch and Pierre News, Washington. And you're listening to NPR News. Washington State's governor is ordering one of the country's largest immigration detention centers to allow state health inspectors in from Member Station, KUOW. Sarah Myzistan has more.

Washington State, health officials say the facility about an hour south of Seattle has been refusing entry to inspectors for the past three years. That's despite over 3,000 complaints from detainees reporting conditions such as dirty water, contaminated food, unsanitary living conditions, and accounts of sexual assault. Here's Governor Bob Ferguson.

Washington State has a right to ensure the health and wellness of people detained within our borders period full stop. The center has on average held around 1,300 detainees on any given day. The company that owns the facility did not respond to a request for comment. For NPR News, I'm Sarah Myzistan, into coma.

And Louisiana, a grand jury, has indicted the sheriff of Orleans, Paris, and her chief financial officer on charges linked to last year's escape of 10 inmates. Officials say sheriff Susan Hudson is facing 30 felony counts and CFO, Bianca Brown is facing 20. Louisiana's attorney general says sheriff Hudson did not personally open the doors for the

inmates, but that she enabled the escape by refusing to comply with basic legal requirements. After spending Wednesday, New York City, King Charles and Queen Camilla are to make a few stops in Virginia today and participate in a formal farewell event with President Trump at the White House as they wrap up their four day state visit. This is NPR.

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