[MUSIC]
Two fatal shootings by immigration and customs enforcement officers this month. >> The administration said, "I say, Jins would stop conducting traffic stops, but then backtracked." >> I'm Ay Sharasko.
>> And I'm Scott Simon and this is up first from NPR News.
[MUSIC] >> The latest into the investigations of the fatal shootings by federal immigration agents and Texas and Maine. >> And an unprecedented mission is underway to save a valuable space telescope that's falling into earth. >> And finally, a world champion and soccer will be crowned tomorrow in New Jersey.
Will it be Argentina or Spain? >> No, we don't know, but stay with us.
βWe've got the news you need to start your weekend.β
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Please show your support today at plus.npr.org. >> On the latest NPR politics podcast, we separate fact from fiction in President Trump's prime time address on election security. >> Two things can be true at the same time. We have ignored vulnerabilities in our voting systems for a long time. And there is no evidence the election was rigged in 2020.
β>> The truth and the politics behind President Trump's claims about voter fraud on the latest episode of the NPR politics podcast.β
[MUSIC] >> Each story you hear on planet money starts with a question. What happens if we refund tariffs? Why are grocery so expensive? And NPR, we stand for your right to be curious because the forces shaping our world can be hard to see.
Follow NPR's planet money wherever you get your podcasts and start seeing how the economy really works. >> Earlier this week in immigration and customs enforcement officer shot and killed a man in Maine.
>> It was the second edley shooting by eyes officers this month.
Both of them started his traffic stops. NPR's Sergio Martinez-Beltramt has been covering both incidents and joins us now from Texas. Thanks for being with us. >> Let me with you Scott. >> There's still many questions about what led the immigration officers to take out their guns and killed these two men who were in their vehicles driving to work.
But you bring us a new concern today. >> Yes, the latest is that NPR has learned that the eyes officer who allegedly shot Duanduran Guerrero in Maine had a long history of violent behavior and struggles with serious mental health problems. That officer's name is David Brullet. NPR has reported his an army veteran and former police officer. My colleague Vanessa Romo talked to Brullet's ex wife Ashley Brullet. She said for years she tried to warn the army another study her former husband is troubled and abusive.
>> He hit me choke me and there was an incident where we had been fighting and I walked away and I got in the shower and he comes in with a gun and points it at me. And tells me that he's going to blow my brain to over the bathtub. >> There are no police reports from this incident so NPR has not been able to independently corroborate Ashley Brullet's accusations. We've reached out to David Brullet but he has not responded. The HS got without naming the officers said the agent involved had nearly a decade of law enforcement experience and had their required use of force training.
There are also a lot of questions surrounding the killing of Lorenzo Salgado Adajo in Houston, Texas. The father of three was also killed by federal immigration agents like the main shooting Salgado Adajo was not the intended target of the ice operation and no publicly available video evidence so far shows that either driver was clearly using their car as a weapon or threat as alleged by ice. And shortly another immigration officer is wearing a body camera. The headband there would be footage that people could watch that would shed light on the case wouldn't there.
>> Right, five months ago the Department of Homeland Security vowed to quickly send body cameras to every agent across the country and yet that hasn't happened. Now the agency says that all of the ice field offices will have body cameras in the next 60 days so by September.
Now it's important to know that ice has been allocated an enormous amount of money including 31 billion dollars earmarked just for technology including body cameras.
So critics say that if body cameras had been a true priority for the administration, they would have figured out how to get them deployed to all agents sooner.
β>> And as you've reported here, 2021 is already a record here for deaths of immigrants in ice detention, but it's also been deadly in terms of our shootings and violence on the street, hasn't it?β
>> Yeah, so at least seven people have been killed by federal immigration agents during enforcement operations since President Trump returned to office and there are many other instances where ice agents have used force against immigrants and other civilians.
In fact, the ACLU released a report this week that looks at more than 1200 en...
They found more than 400 instances of agent's pushing, tackling, or pinning people to the ground and using weapons like rubber bullets and tasers. The ACLU also found dozens of times where officers used potentially deadly tactics including chokeholds.
β>> This week there's a lot of back and forth on whether federal immigration agents were going to continue conducting traffic stops, which what's the latest on this?β
>> Yeah, earlier this week, he just said he was going to pause the traffic stops, but then President Trump ordered the agency to continue them. He called traffic stops an effective tool to arrest undocumented immigrants.
So the bottom line is God, they are still happening. There's potential that more of these encounters could quickly go south and turn volatile over deadly.
>> And pay our share here on Martinez Beltran. >> Thanks so much. >> You're welcome. [ Music ] >> A daring rescue mission hundreds of miles up in the sky is underway. >> The mission aims to save a valuable space telescope before it burns up in Earth's atmosphere.
>> In PR's Nate Rott has been following the effort and joins us now. Welcome. >> Thank you. >> All right, so this almost sounds like the plot of a space thriller.
>> Tell us more. >> Yeah, right, it probably would have like Matt Damon or Ryan Gosling since they
seem to be in pretty much every space movie these days. >> Yes, yes. >> But actually I should, the hero of this story, if it all works out as planned, is not going to be any single person. It's going to be a robot called Link. That's roughly the size of a refrigerator. And of course, the many people who designed and built
βand launched it a couple of weeks ago. >> Okay, so where is this hero robot now?β
>> Yeah, so it's launched, and it's in low Earth orbit right now. And after it completes a bunch of tests, which are ongoing, it's going to link up with the Neil Garals Swift Observatory or Swift for sure. >> Okay, so tell me about Swift. This is the telescope that Link is trying to save, right? >> Yeah, that's right. So Swift was launched in 2004 to study something called Gamma Ray Bursts,
which are these super energetic, super rare cosmic explosions that can occur when a star goes supernova or when like two dense neutron stars collide. Here's Brad Sanco, a research astrophysicist at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. >> It lasts for only a few seconds, but they radiate more energy in that period of time than the Sun will in its entire lifetime. So these are the most dramatic explosions since the Big Bang.
>> And Swift was designed to swiftly adjust its position to capture data on them. And it's been used together other data too since it's been launched, helping scientists, here on Earth, better understand our universe. >> Okay, I see what you did there with the name, Swift and Swiftly, but why is Swift in trouble? >> Yeah, so this part is wild. Sanco says pretty much every satellite or object in low Earth orbit is slowly falling back to Earth,
but the timeline for Swift has sped up by years because of all the solar activity that's been happening recently with our Sun. So there have been a lot of solar flares over the last couple of years, which have caused these beautiful auroras. Sanco says, like anybody, he appreciates them too. >> But every time I see one of those at cringe, because every time the Sun does that, it causes the Earth's atmosphere to puff up, and that leads Swift to fall at a faster rate.
>> So without any intervention, I usually say, they now think Swift will re-enter the atmosphere
βand burn up by the end of this year. >> Okay, that's really soon. >> Yeah, so that's why theyβ
race to launch this robot, which was designed by an Arizona based startup to try and give Swift a boost. Its goal is to sync up with Swift to grab onto it with these three lobster claw robotic arms and then gently push it up into a higher orbit. And I usually part of what makes this thing so
remarkable is that this has never been done before. Like the Hubble Space Telescope has been
serviced, but it was done by people, by astronauts in space. This is a fully autonomous robot lifting a telescope that was never designed to be lifted. >> Assuming this works and that they're able to successfully lift this telescope could it work for other satellites and telescopes? >> Well, that's definitely the hope that instead of just letting commercial satellites or research ones re-enter the atmosphere and burn up, this technology could allow them to be serviced.
So, you know, components could be upgraded, their altitudes boosted, which Sancos says would make the space industry much more sustainable. But he also says this technology is likely to draw a lot of interest from the defense community if it works, because, you know, being able to move another
Country satellite could be something that governments are interested in doing.
>> That's Nate Rot from MPR Science Podcast, shortwave. Thank you so much. >> Hey, thank you. >> The FIFA World Cup is coming to an end tomorrow. New Jersey will host the final between defending champion, Argentina and Spain. >> It is a battle between two international football, heavyweight and conservators, the capstone achievement for the player, many call the best of all
time, Lionel Messi. Sports reporter Michelle, stay out of the big ten network join us. Michelle, thanks for being with us. >> Good morning, Scott. >> Boy, Argentina, of course, is a defending champion. Spain is the current European champion, but they have conceded just one goal in seven matches, but, but, but, but,
βArgentina has these dramatic comebacks. What do you expect to see?β
>> Well, Spain has been just so efficient this tournament. One goal allowed in seven games. Are you kidding me? That is truly outrageous. Meantime, Argentina has turned so many games that look like for sure losers into winners. Remember, they needed kind of a wobbly second half from England to get through. If you like your soccer, nice and efficient and tidy route for Spain, if you like watching a game and having heart palpitations around team Argentina,
my gut says this one goes to extra time. I'm rolling with Spain, but, like the youth say, Argentina is a vibe, anything could happen. >> Look, I want to ask you about the players to watch. I want to begin with one. Ooh, no, I see more. Forgive me if I say Simon,
because Spain's goalkeeper, I mean, six shut up matches. This guy's amazing.
>> Yeah, let's hear it for the Spanish Simone's. >> Oh, see the Simone, see the Simone. I like to think we are distantly related. I know, actually, I like to think I'm as uncle and children. >> Just tell everyone that, yeah, sure, at the World Cup Watch Party, you're going to one Sunday. Six shutouts is absolutely absurd, absolutely watch him. On the other side, though, you've got Leonardo Messi. He's almost 40 years
βold. He's playing what certainly will be his last World Cup match, I think. He is the goat.β
He's trying to write the greatest final line of the greatest sports biography around. And Spain's counter to that is a wondercand, a teenager, Laminiamal, just 19 years old, playing well beyond his years Scott. >> And he has been anointed by the hand of God. We will see in the photograph at this point. >> Yes, yes, yes, a baby Laminiamal, being bathed because his parents want to unice of contest by BarΓ§a player at the time,
Leonel Messi. Yes, being bathed and being photographed. His parents won this contest. And they say to be familiar with your opponent, this takes it to the next level. >> Look, tell us about the concerns about the air quality and the Northeast, because of all the smoke from Canadian wildfires. >> Yeah, of course, the conditions have not been very good over the last couple of days, but it looks like the conditions have improved
enough since Friday that Sunday's forecast looks clean and they don't expect really any impact on the match. Hopefully this smoke ends up being something that everybody forgets about by kickoff and it resolves itself before we have to make it a bigger deal. The forecast looks good. >> Look, Michelle, as I don't have to tell you, there was so much controversy surrounding the organizing in the world cup before it ever began. Now that we're just two days from its end,
of course, there's a third place match between England and France this afternoon.
What are you going to treasure and cherish the highlights?
β>> I think I am going to remember the U.S. team the most and winning a knockout match for the first timeβ
since 2002 on home soil and front of their own fans. I'll also remember Cape Verde. Boy, what a Cinderella story they had. Population smaller than Louisville Kentucky taking Argentina to extra time. They were sort of the honorary sweethearts and I'll remember the Scottish fans just absolutely taking over Boston. So many memorable moments. There was a lot of trepidation, I think, before this because the field was so big. 48 teams, three host countries.
There's a totally new format. Nobody had run before. But, you know, I have never heard so many
Americans with no connection to soccer, sort of lament the end of this tournament that includes me. Does American soccer change meaningfully after this? >> Well, I anticipate my next question, of course, because I think certainly ever since I can
Remember soccer has always been the next great spectator sport here in America.
>> Yeah, they're always on the doorstep, right? It's the next big thing and then another
World Cup comes and goes and it kind of drops back to, you know, fifth or the sixth
βmost watch sport in this country. I think just based off the number of people who didn't really,β
you know, weren't certainly soccer fans. And now are locked in for all these games. I think there will be a little bit of a meaningful bump. I'm personally very sad that this tournament is over. On the talent development side, of course, I think there is a lot that remains to be figured out. But as far as Americans watching this game and when we look back on 10 years and say, American soccer change this summer, I think this is the best shot it's had in a very long time.
>> Michelle, Steve, thanks so much. >> You bet.
>> That's up first for Saturday, July 18th, 2026, I'm Isharosco.
>> And I'm Scott Simon. Dave, Mister's produced today's podcast along with Michael Radcliffe and Gabo Connor. >> Our editor is Fernando Naro, helped by Eric Westerville and Melissa Gray. >> Our director is a lintatoric who worked alongside our technical director, David Greenberg. His engineering team is Simon Lazlo, Johnson, Jason, and so Ben Goodhoe. >> Our senior supervising editor is Shannon Rhodes.
Our executive producer is Evie Stone.
>> Our deputy manager editor is Katherine Layton. >> Tomorrow on the Sunday story, what defines a family? A group of strangers tries to answer that question after DNA tests revealed they were all half siblings conceived through artificial insemination.
β>> Thanks for listening and for supporting your local NPR station and if you need to find your local NPR station andβ
really all of us need to just go to stations.npr.org. [MUSIC] >> This is Eric Glass at the American Life. Do you know our show? >> Okay, well either way I'm going to tell you about it.
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[MUSIC] >> This week, I'm consider this.
βWhat more have we learned about Todd Blanch, President Trump's pick for attorney general?β
>> Are you in President Trump for him? >> I'm his lawyer, was his lawyer, and now I'm the deputy attorney general. >> We unpack that slip of the tongue. Another takeaway is from Blanch's Senate hearing on consider this. You can listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcast.


