Friday 30 September 2016

Evening Edition: Trump Foundation lacks certification needed to raise funds

Trump-Miss Universe feud escalates with accusation of a 'sex tape'; Before 6 a.m., Trump proved Clinton's point about his temperament; This is where your smartphone battery begins; Ala. Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore suspended for defiance on same-sex marriage; Rosetta spacecraft, the first ever to orbit a comet, meets its end after 12-year mission; World leaders bid a final farewell to former Israeli leader Shimon Peres; Can 'SNL' take down Trump? Is it going to try?; A Trump tactic that bewilders supporters: Dredging up Bill Clinton's old sex scandals ; The Daily 202: This week was full of reality checks for Trump's campaign ; What they said, what they meant; Philippines president: Hitler killed millions of Jews, I will kill millions of drug addicts; White House accuses Congress of ‘buyer’s remorse’ on 9/11 bill; A rule change to make it easier to catch pedophiles will lead to government mass hacking, critics say; Two American sisters died at a luxury Indian Ocean resort. Now their family is searching for answers.; For three days after a crash, he was trapped in a car with his dead girlfriend. Now he faces charges.; Va. teen accused of stealing 65-cent carton of milk at middle school opts to face trial;
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
Charles Ommanney / The Washington Post
Trump Foundation lacks certification needed to raise funds
The foundation — sustained for years by donors outside the Trump family — never obtained the registration that New York requires to solicit money from the public, state officials said.
Trump-Miss Universe feud escalates with accusation of a 'sex tape'
Donald Trump's attack on former Miss Universe Alicia Machado, which appeared to be based on rumors circulating on the Internet, came amid a controversy over his comments about her weight gain in the months after she won her title in 1996.
 
Before 6 a.m., Trump proved Clinton's point about his temperament
With his pre-dawn tweet storm, Donald Trump did everything Hillary Clinton could have hoped he would, drawing out a now-week-long story about Alicia Machado, making things up and — above all — reinforcing questions about whether he has the temperament to be president.
 
This is where your smartphone battery begins
Thousands of miners in this remote landscape in southern Africa dig by hand. Children, too. They're searching for cobalt, a key mineral in lithium-ion batteries. In many ways, the current Silicon Valley gold rush — from mobile devices to laptops to driverless cars — is built on the power of these batteries. But it comes at an exceptional cost.
 
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Ala. Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore suspended for defiance on same-sex marriage
This is the second time since 2003 that the state's top judge has been effectively pulled from office for violating judicial ethics by encouraging probate judges to deny marriage licenses to gay couples.
 
Rosetta spacecraft, the first ever to orbit a comet, meets its end after 12-year mission
Providing useful science up to the last moment, the space probe crashed — as planned — into the ancient comet it had been orbiting for the past two years.
 
World leaders bid a final farewell to former Israeli leader Shimon Peres
Leaders from 70 countries gathered in Jerusalem and paid respects to Peres, the 93-year-old former prime minister, president and Nobel Peace Prize winner who died at a Tel Aviv hospital this week.
 
Can 'SNL' take down Trump? Is it going to try?
The show's 42nd season opens as the comedy world is engulfed in an angry debate about how to make fun of Donald Trump — and whether some have given him a pass on his more objectionable stances. It has prompted some of the show's writers, actors and producers to ask: What if he wins? Will anyone blame them if he does?
 
A Trump tactic that bewilders supporters: Dredging up Bill Clinton's old sex scandals
Donald Trump — whose own extramarital affair and resulting divorce were laid out in lurid detail by the circa 1990 New York tabloids — has said he has been mulling whether to bring up Bill Clinton's affairs in the next presidential debate.
 
The Daily 202: This week was full of reality checks for Trump's campaign
Trump doesn't get even. He gets mad.
 
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What they said, what they meant
Sign up to have The Fix's Aaron Blake text you the highlights of each debate as it unfolds.
 
Philippines president: Hitler killed millions of Jews, I will kill millions of drug addicts
Since President Rodrigo Duterte took office in July, more than 3,300 Filipinos have been killed by police or assassins. He's now comparing his campaign to kill criminals to the Holocaust.
 
White House accuses Congress of ‘buyer’s remorse’ on 9/11 bill
Republican congressional leaders said the new law may have to be revisited over worries that it will expose U.S. officials to lawsuits abroad.
 
A rule change to make it easier to catch pedophiles will lead to government mass hacking, critics say
The change would aid the government in its sweeping national investigation into child porn on the "dark Web." But critics fear federal law enforcement, with one warrant, could hack thousands of computers whose locations are unknown.
 
Two American sisters died at a luxury Indian Ocean resort. Now their family is searching for answers.
The bodies of Annie and Robin Korkki, who were described as "healthy and adventurous," were discovered last week in Seychelles.
 
For three days after a crash, he was trapped in a car with his dead girlfriend. Now he faces charges.
Police say Kevin Bell lied to officers and tried to hide the crash that killed his girlfriend because he feared getting arrested.
 
Va. teen accused of stealing 65-cent carton of milk at middle school opts to face trial
When the student didn't cooperate with a trip to see the principal, authorities said, he was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct and petit larceny.
 
 
     
 
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