Dua Halisa-Cautel
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citizen who worked at a local VA hospital in Minneapolis.
Here's Greg Bovino, the Customs and Border Patrol commander-at-large, updating reporters.
President Trump speaking to The Wall Street Journal said, quote, We're reviewing everything and we'll come out with a determination.
Governor Tim Walz, meanwhile, told Trump, You can end this today.
A winter storm that has pounded more than half of the country from Arizona to Maine has buried New Jersey under nearly a foot of snow and sleet, as Bruce Kahnweiser reports.
On Monday, Israel is scheduled to cut off power and water to a number of facilities run by a UN agency that's come under fire by Israel.
Doing so would effectively close them down, the agency said.
NPR's Emily Feng is in Tel Aviv with this report.
And you are listening to NPR from New York City.
The Sundance Film Festival is in full swing for the last time in Park City, Utah, before it moves to Boulder, Colorado next year.
Empress Mondelez de Barco reports on some of this year's films.
It is day 93 for the Walk for Peace monks who started their journey to Washington, D.C.
And for the first time, the 19 men, dressed in gold and maroon clothes, faced wintry, icy conditions, walking through snow and frigid temperatures in North Carolina.
In Raleigh, at the state capitol, thousands gathered to meet them.
Governor Josh Stein thanked the monks for inspiring unity and hope in the country, telling them, "...we live in a time of partisan rancor."
This message comes from WISE, the app for international people using money around the globe.
Live from NPR News in New York City, I'm Dua Halisa-Cautel.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is defending the conduct of an immigration agent who shot and killed a man protesting federal immigration enforcement efforts in Minneapolis.
Noem said the officers acted in accordance with their training, as NPR's Ximena Bustilla reports.