What happened in the tragic New Jersey fire incident?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston. Switzerland has declared five days of mourning for the victims of a New Jersey fire that tore through a bar at a popular ski resort town in the Swiss Alps. Authorities say at least 40 people have died and more than 100 others were injured, many of them seriously. NPR's Ruth Sherlock has more.
The Le Constellation bar in the Swiss ski resort town of Kranz, Montana, was a favourite for young people, including many teenagers. 16-year-old Axel Clavier described to the BBC trying to get out of the basement nightclub. He says, We thought we were going to suffocate because of the smoke. We didn't know where to exit. There was a huge crowd and I was alone.
I told myself I wasn't going to make it. He pushed his way up the one narrow staircase and smashed a window to escape. Witnesses outside the bar described seeing people coming out, some with their clothes still on fire. An investigation is underway into the cause of the fire. Officials say it was not a deliberate attack. Ruth Sherlock, NPR News.
It's been two weeks since the Justice Department was supposed to release all of the Epstein files in its possession. NPR's Stephen Fowler reports there are well over a million more pages yet to be released.
the DOJ has failed to fully meet a deadline set by a law signed by President Trump. The relatively few documents that have been made public have extensive redactions, and the government also says some of what's released should not be trusted.
While there's no public estimate of how many files remain or when they'll be made public, according to some emails released in the files, the number of documents collected as evidence in the criminal investigation into Epstein alone is well north of a million. Stephen Fowler, NPR News.
Social Security field offices across the nation lost 9 percent of their staff in the past year. NPR's Ashley Lopez says that's according to a new report from the Strategic Organizing Center.
Researchers compiled data from unions representing Social Security field office workers nationwide. These are local employees that provide direct services like help with identity cards, benefits applications, and benefits verification, among other community-specific needs.
Thousands of workers who provide those services have left the agency amid the Trump administration's push to reduce the size of the federal workforce. The report found that there are nearly 4,000 beneficiaries for every Social Security field office worker and In eight states, there are 5,000 beneficiaries for each worker.
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