What details emerged about the Dallas immigration facility shooting?
An attack months in the making on Lisa Brady. Fox News and investigators say the rooftop gunman who opened fire on an immigration facility in Dallas yesterday had specific targets. It's clear from these notes that he was targeting ICE agents and ICE personnel. Acting U.S. Attorney Nancy Larson says notes were found at the shooter's home.
He hoped his actions would terrorize ICE employees and interfere with their work, which he called human trafficking. The FBI says the suspect purchased a gun in August and used apps designed to track the presence of ICE agents. Larson calls it a tragic irony that the shooting ended up killing a detainee, wounding two others before the gunman killed himself. OneNote also claims he acted alone.
Investigators say at this point, that appears to be true. In Arizona, a man just convicted of eight murders and other crimes over three weeks in the Phoenix area back in 2017, just months after he'd been released from prison. Cleophas Cooksey says still that he's innocent.
Three days into a trial, a surprise settlement by Amazon, agreeing to pay $2.5 billion to settle claims it duped customers into enrolling in Prime membership and made it hard to cancel.
The agreement, which the Federal Trade Commission calls the largest civil penalty in its history, would require the e-commerce giant to pay a billion dollar penalty and create a one and a half billion dollar fund to pay consumers back. To settle the 2023 FTC lawsuit, Amazon also has to make sure it can no longer misrepresent the terms of a prime subscription and give users a simple way to cancel.
Fox is Lillian Wu. The FTC says affected customers could qualify for $51 each. Amazon does not admit any wrongdoing. The U.S. economy expanding more than first thought in the second quarter, 3.8% in the Commerce Department's new estimate, but three losses in a row on Wall Street. America's listening to Fox News. This is Ainsley Earhart.
Thank you for joining me for the 52-episode podcast series, The Life of Jesus. A listening experience that will provide hope, comfort, and understanding of the greatest story ever told. Listen and follow now at foxnewspodcasts.com or wherever you listen to podcasts. The Justice Department says it's suing several states for not turning over voter rolls.
The DOJ said in its filings, six states, California, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, and Pennsylvania won't turn over their voter lists to see if they are clean. By that, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said that means ensuring the security and accuracy of the names on the voter rolls.
She said Congress gives her the authority to ensure states' voter registration processes are working properly. The DOJ said those mandates include the Civil Rights Act of 1960 that allows inspection and analysis of those lists. Fox's Grinnell Scott. Several former Fed chairs are urging the U.S.
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