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NPR News Now

NPR News: 11-15-2025 10PM EST

16 Nov 2025

Transcription

Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?

0.098 - 14.04 Eric Schmidt

Support for NPR comes from NPR member stations and Eric and Wendy Schmidt through the Schmidt Family Foundation, working toward a healthy, resilient, secure world for all. On the web at theschmidt.org.

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15.877 - 32.957 Louise Schiavone

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Louise Schiavone. Having been out of town for more than 50 days, members of the House of Representatives returned to their desks this week, voting to reopen the government with another short-term spending bill but no resolution of the standoff over the Affordable Care Act.

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32.937 - 43.777 Louise Schiavone

Moving to the top of the agenda in the coming week is a vote on the release of documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. NPR's Deirdre Walsh has the latest.

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43.977 - 56.059 Deirdre Walsh

Because of increasing calls from House Republicans to get these files out, the speaker decided to hold this vote next week. I mean, the politics for the party are really bad. The Republicans are divided.

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56.528 - 70.749 Deirdre Walsh

And this bill forcing the release of the Justice Department files is picking up more GOP votes each day, even at a time when the president and top Trump officials were pressuring some Republicans to block a bill from even getting a vote.

70.769 - 94.706 Louise Schiavone

NPR's Deirdre Walsh reporting from Washington. Immigration lawyers in San Diego say they are seeing a sudden increase in arrests of clients at the offices of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, many applying for permanent status or naturalization. As NPR's Martin Coste reports, the attorneys say that this looks like an emerging new Trump administration approach to reducing immigration.

94.866 - 109.79 Tessa Cabrera

U.S. CIS offices are bureaucratic places where detentions are rare, unlike immigration court. But lawyers in San Diego say that suddenly changed this week. Tessa Cabrera says she was with a client who didn't have legal status but was applying for a green card.

110.191 - 112.995 Unknown

To have two ICE officers storm into an office,

Chapter 2: What updates are there on the government spending bill and the Affordable Care Act?

113.178 - 118.707 Unknown

and immediately order my client to stand up and place him in handcuffs was just unlike anything I've ever experienced.

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119.227 - 139.118 Tessa Cabrera

USCIS would not say whether its arrest policy has changed. In a written statement, it says, quote, apprehensions at USCIS offices may occur if individuals are identified as having outstanding warrants, being subject to removal orders, or committing fraud, crimes, or other violations while in the United States. Martin Koste, NPR News.

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139.351 - 157.503 Louise Schiavone

A major corruption probe in Ukraine is focusing on associates of President Volodymyr Zelensky and charging they were involved in a plot to skim $100 million from the country's energy sector. All of this as Russians have been pounding Ukraine's energy hubs. NPR's Joanna Kakisis has more.

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157.583 - 179.493 Joanna Kakisis

This probe is extensive. It took 15 months, used about 1,000 hours of wiretaps. There were seven alleged participants, including Timur Mindich. He's a close business associate of Zelensky's. Investigators say this group manipulated contracts at Enerhoatom, which is Ukraine's state nuclear energy company, and they got kickbacks laundering roughly $100 million.

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179.873 - 190.507 Joanna Kakisis

The scandal has forced the resignation of two ministers in Zelensky's government so far, but Zelensky has not been implicated in this probe, and he is calling for the prosecution of those accused of committing crimes.

Chapter 3: What recent developments are happening with Jeffrey Epstein's documents?

190.807 - 210.617 Louise Schiavone

NPR's Joanna Kikisis. This is NPR News. The Coast Guard says migrants were aboard a wooden skiff that capsized in stormy seas off San Diego late last night. At least four people died and four were hospitalized. Authorities say several of the survivors claimed Mexican nationality.

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211.053 - 233.959 Louise Schiavone

Officials say that with land borders more heavily guarded now, migrants are increasingly turning to travel by sea aboard unstable open fishing boats, sometimes traveling hundreds of miles north in the dead of night. The American Psychological Association has released an advisory about AI chatbots and mental health needs, and PR's Ritu Chatterjee reports.

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234.239 - 254.88 Ritu Chatterjee

A recent U.S. survey found that nearly 50% of people with a mental health condition who use AI chatbots use them for psychological support. But the new advisory notes that most AI chatbots were not designed to treat psychological disorders, and so consumers should not use them to replace mental health care from a trained provider.

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254.86 - 276.307 Ritu Chatterjee

AI apps and chatbots can create a false sense of therapeutic relationship, with some chatbots falsely claiming that they are licensed therapists. The report also points out that several AI chatbots have engaged vulnerable youth in harmful interactions, encouraging them to self-harm and even attempt suicide. Read the strategy, NPR News.

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277.269 - 294.655 Louise Schiavone

Senator John Fetterman is home from the hospital two days after a fall related to a ventricular fibrillation flare-up On social media, the Pennsylvania Democrat posted a photo of himself saying that after 20 stitches, he's fine. This is NPR News.

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