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NPR News: 04-16-2025 1PM EDT

Wed, 16 Apr 2025

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Chapter 1: What is the current legal issue involving the Trump administration and deportations?

25.106 - 43.373 Windsor Johnston

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston. A federal judge in Washington, D.C. has ruled that there is probable cause to find the Trump administration in contempt for violating his order to immediately pause any deportation flights under the Alien Enemies Act.

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43.973 - 67.661 Windsor Johnston

The administration invoked the act to target members of a Venezuelan prison gang that President Trump says are invading the United States. Senator Chris Van Hollen has arrived in El Salvador to push for the release of a Maryland man who was wrongfully deported last month. The Maryland Democrat says he'll continue to advocate for the release of Kilmar Abrego-Garcia.

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Chapter 2: Who is Kilmar Abrego-Garcia and what is being done to help him?

68.086 - 79.279 Senator Chris Van Hollen

The goal of this mission is to let the Trump administration, to let the government of El Salvador know that we are going to keep fighting to bring Abrego Garcia home.

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79.74 - 103.779 Windsor Johnston

The Trump administration responded to Van Hollen's trip, calling Abrego Garcia a, quote, criminal immigrant who is already home. The Salvadoran citizen entered the United States illegally, but an immigration court later granted him protection from deportation to El Salvador. Ebrego Garcia has been living in the U.S. legally and has no criminal record.

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Chapter 3: How did the Trump administration respond to Senator Van Hollen's advocacy?

104.499 - 113.765 Windsor Johnston

President Trump has signed a new executive order aimed at reducing prescription drug prices. NPR's Cindy Lupkin reports the order has several parts.

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Chapter 4: What are the key points of President Trump's new executive order on prescription drug prices?

114.085 - 132.918 Cindy Lupkin

The president signed an executive order instructing the administration to advance cost-cutting moves like increasing generic drug competition. The order also aims to improve Medicare drug price negotiation, which passed as part of the Inflation Reduction Act signed by President Biden in 2022. An official said he thinks the Trump administration can get more savings than the Biden administration.

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Chapter 5: How does the executive order aim to increase savings on drug costs?

133.478 - 144.784 Cindy Lupkin

Because the number of drugs subject to negotiation increases each year, greater savings over time were baked into the law. The order also instructs the FDA to facilitate state programs to import lower-cost drugs from Canada.

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145.485 - 159.211 Windsor Johnston

Sydney Lepkin, NPR News. Hamas is rejecting a new Israeli ceasefire in Gaza. The proposal calls for disarming the militant group as a condition for ending the war. NPR's Daniel Estrin reports from Tel Aviv.

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Chapter 6: What is Hamas's response to the latest Israeli ceasefire proposal?

159.622 - 180.324 Daniel Estrin

The new Israeli proposal is to pause the war in Gaza for a month and a half, free about half of Hamas's living Israeli hostages within the first week and negotiate the disarmament of militant groups. A Hamas official tells NPR the group rejects the proposal. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because Hamas was still preparing a formal response to mediators.

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180.684 - 202.273 Daniel Estrin

But in a statement, Hamas and other Palestinian groups said their weapons were for self-defense. They said the ceasefire proposal did not include guarantees to end the war and withdraw Israeli troops from Gaza. Israel's defense minister says Israel is changing tactics and won't withdraw troops from areas they capture in Gaza. Daniel Estrin, NPR News, Tel Aviv.

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202.533 - 223.014 Windsor Johnston

It's NPR. The civil rights group, the NAACP, is suing the U.S. Department of Education. It's challenging the agency's threats to end federal funding for schools that don't get rid of DEI programs. The group says the Trump administration effort blocks legal work to provide equal opportunities to black students.

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223.815 - 238.023 Windsor Johnston

A new study shows a further decline in TV series and films shot in Los Angeles, once the entertainment capital. NPR's Mandelita Barco reports production on L.A. soundstages has plummeted as well.

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238.543 - 258.934 Mandalit del Barco

On-location productions in Los Angeles dipped more than 22 percent the first three months of this year. according to Film LA, which issues film permits in the area. The nonprofit group found production also shrank on LA soundstages. Spokesman Philip Sokolowski says other states and countries have lucrative tax credits to lure productions out of California.

259.375 - 263.177 Mandalit del Barco

Meanwhile, studios and streamers are ordering fewer series and films.

263.397 - 271.902 Philip Sokolowski

It's not just Los Angeles that is feeling this. It's happening in every other major production center. And with less work to go around, the competition for what's left is intensified.

272.082 - 285.116 Mandalit del Barco

The report says the recent wildfires had only a small effect on L.A. filming. Productions are still rebounding from the COVID-19 pandemic and delays by the Hollywood writers' and performers' strikes. Mandalit Del Barco, NPR News, Los Angeles.

285.357 - 303.654 Windsor Johnston

A jury has yet to be selected for the retrial of disgraced movie producer Harvey Weinstein. Weinstein is back on trial on sexual assault accusations. A prior conviction was overturned after New York's highest courts at his first trial included witnesses who shouldn't have testified. This is NPR.

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