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Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton. Recent court filings show that hundreds of immigrants arrested in Chicago during President Trump's immigration crackdown have no criminal record. NPR's Sergio Martinez Beltran has more.
Out of the 614 people on the list, 598 do not have a criminal record.
Chapter 2: What recent findings were revealed about immigrants arrested in Chicago?
That's 97% of the immigrants arrested. So per this document, most of the people in this sample have not committed a crime. Only 16 or 2.6% have a criminal history. Of those 16, four of them have criminal convictions. They range from domestic battery to DUI to indecent exposure and kidnapping. DHS, you know, regularly says that It is taking murderers and rapists off the streets.
However, none of the people on this list was convicted or arrested for murder or rape.
NPR's Sergio Martinez Beltran reporting, the House is heading towards a vote on a bill to force the Justice Department to release the Epstein files. Lawmakers pushed through previous efforts by President Trump and Republican leaders to stop the effort. But over the weekend, Trump changed his mind and urged Republicans to release the files.
The federal government has reopened, but not all government assistance programs are back up and running. As Cynthia Abrams of member station WPLN reports, without word from the Department of Health and Human Services, Tennessee has been unable to re-up its utility assistance program.
Typically, Tennessee receives around $72 million federal dollars each year to help residents pay their gas or electric bills. Like many programs, it was put on hold during the shutdown. But even though the government has now reopened, the state has not received any dollars, or even any notice of how much it can expect.
In the meantime, Tennessee is taking applications for assistance, like from Denise Simpson, a nursing student and mother of two. I don't care what nobody says. You have to be super mom with assistance. It takes a village. Most of the 12,000 households who have applied in the last two weeks, including Simpson, have yet to receive any help. For NPR News, I'm Cynthia Abrams in Nashville.
Temporary flight reductions at major airports have been lifted as more air traffic controllers return to work. NPR's Joel Rose reports.
The Department of Transportation and the Federal Aviation Administration say airlines can resume normal operations at dozens of major airports. The FAA said those restrictions had been necessary to keep the airspace safe, as the agency grappled with widespread staffing shortages of air traffic controllers during the government shutdown.
But with the shutdown over, air traffic controllers have finally received some of the back pay they earned, and regulators say staffing conditions are now back to what they were before the shutdown. Airlines say they're confident they can ramp up quickly and should be able to return to their full schedules before Thanksgiving holiday travel begins. Joel Rose, NPR News, Washington.
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