LIVE German 2025 Election Results as they come in and analysi on who will be the next German Chancellor.

When are the German Elections?

The Elections are on Sunday the 23rd of Feb 2025

Why are they having a snap election?

The German coalition government failed a no confidence vote

Do Germans vote?

Germans vote in big numbers, usually as high 70+ percent voter turnout

Trump nominates Sullivan & Cromwell partner Jamie McDonald for top Manhattan prosecutor role

Get you up to speed: This law firm has deep ties to Trump. A partner is his pick to be Manhattan’s top prosecutor.

President Trump demanded the immediate confirmation of James “Jamie” McDonald as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York during the G7 summit in France. The situation remains uncertain after the president directed Jay Clayton not to appear for a scheduled confirmation hearing, impacting both nominations.

President Trump is facing uncertainty with the confirmation of Jamie McDonald as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, following his directive for Jay Clayton to skip a scheduled hearing. Investigations into the Justice Department’s dismissal of the Adani case have prompted Democratic Senators to raise concerns about potential political motivations behind the prosecutorial decisions made during Trump’s administration.

President Trump demanded the immediate confirmation of James “Jamie” McDonald for U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, emphasising the need for swift action to ensure continuity following Jay Clayton’s appointment as director of national intelligence. In response to concerns about McDonald’s ties to Sullivan & Cromwell and their potential impact on prosecutorial independence, Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren and Richard Blumenthal have initiated an investigation into the Justice Department’s decision to dismiss the Adani case.

What remains unclear — It is uncertain whether further investigations into the Justice Department’s decision to dismiss the Adani case will affect McDonald’s confirmation process.

Trump nominates Sullivan & Cromwell partner Jamie McDonald for top Manhattan prosecutor role

Washington — It was not yet 4 o’clock in the morning in Washington on Wednesday when President Trump, an ocean away at the G7 summit in France, issued a demand for Republican senators: James “Jamie” McDonald, his pick for U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, “must be confirmed” immediately.

“I may not be able to get the extraordinary Sullivan & Cromwell Partner, Jamie, approved, and I don’t want to take Jay Clayton away from the great job he is doing until Jamie is in place,” the president said on his Truth Social platform.

McDonald is Mr. Trump’s choice to helm one of the nation’s most prestigious federal prosecutors’ offices — known for its independence and tough enforcement of Wall Street malfeasance and other white-collar crimes. And he would succeed Jay Clayton, who has been tapped by the president to become the next director of national intelligence.

Though little known outside the power corridors of Washington and Manhattan, McDonald has been a notable force during Mr. Trump’s second term. At Sullivan & Cromwell, one of the world’s largest law firms, where Clayton also once worked as a partner, McDonald has played a central role in persuading the Justice Department to drop or settle a string of high-profile cases for the firm’s corporate clients, according to court records and sources familiar with the matter.

Now, questions about his ability to maintain prosecutorial independence could play a central role in any confirmation review, Democratic Senate sources told WTX US News, as Mr. Trump has sought to expedite his nomination.

Sullivan & Cromwell, where McDonald has worked since 2021, has emerged as a firm known for its close relationships with the White House during Mr. Trump’s second term.

Law firms have long sought to make use of close relationships at the Justice Department to assist their clients, which many lawyers consider zealous advocacy. But there are growing questions among senior lawyers at other big law firms and career prosecutors about whether Sullivan & Cromwell’s clients “are getting favorable treatment at the Justice Department — not because the facts of the law compel it,” but because some of the firm’s senior partners are aligned with the president, as one former Justice Department official who worked in a Democratic administration put it.

“Sullivan & Cromwell understands the D.C. game and knows that staying close to the president is the best way to navigate the current environment,” another former Justice Department official who worked in the second Trump administration told WTX US News.

On Saturday, the president said in a social media post that he is confident McDonald — a former federal prosecutor and regulator — “will deliver strong results for our Country.”

The future of both Clayton’s and McDonald’s nominations is in flux after the president directed Clayton not to appear for a planned confirmation hearing on Wednesday, upending Senate Republicans’ plans to quickly install Clayton and resolve a standoff with Democrats.

Sullivan & Cromwell has more than a dozen offices across the globe and is headquartered in Manhattan. Its managing partner, Robert Giuffra, was at one point considered a contender to be Mr. Trump’s attorney general during his second term, sources familiar with the transition said.

“Sullivan & Cromwell is one of the great institutions in our city,” John Catsimatidis, a Manhattan billionaire who is friends with Mr. Trump, told WTX US News.

Both McDonald and Giuffra represented Mr. Trump in past private matters. The firm is representing the president in his appeal of his criminal conviction for hiding a $130,000 payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels, as well as Mr. Trump’s appeal in a civil fraud lawsuit brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James.

And when Mr. Trump issued an executive order against the powerful law firm Paul, Weiss that could have crippled its access to the government, it was Giuffra who helped broker a deal between a business rival and the White House to drop the directive in exchange for the firm pledging $40 million in pro bono services. He did so alongside Boris Epshteyn, Mr. Trump’s personal attorney who has coordinated his legal defense strategy.

McDonald joined Sullivan & Cromwell after serving as assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York until 2017 and then as director of enforcement for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, an agency that regulates commodity and derivatives markets and pursues civil enforcement actions for violations.

Chris Giancarlo, who headed the CFTC during Mr. Trump’s first term, said he hired McDonald because he wanted someone who would be tough on enforcement. Giancarlo said he liked McDonald’s background as a prosecutor who pursued public corruption and organized crime cases.

“He is strong, but fair,” Giancarlo told WTX US News. “He doesn’t wear politics on his sleeve. To the extent people are concerned about political motivations, there is none of that with Jamie.”

The Adani case

More recently, Giuffra and McDonald have found extraordinary success brokering other deals between their clients who are facing investigations by law enforcement arms of the administration.

In May, the Justice Department’s unusual decision to ask a judge to dismiss criminal fraud and foreign bribery charges against Indian billionaire Gautam Adani and other defendants came after negotiations led by Sullivan & Cromwell.

The Adani case was slated to proceed, after it survived a review ordered by Mr. Trump into all pending foreign bribery matters to determine whether they should be dismissed, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter.

Before the motion to dismiss the case, senior Justice Department officials met with McDonald, Giuffra and Andrew DeFilippis of Sullivan & Cromwell, sources said.

In one such meeting at the Justice Department, Giuffra made a presentation that disputed evidence of the alleged bribery scheme, according to sources familiar with the matter and records reviewed by WTX US News. One slide touted how one of Adani’s companies is “powering India’s progress,” and another slide said the Trump administration “would not have brought the case.”

If prosecutors were to drop the charges, Giuffra also said at the meeting, Adani would be willing to invest $10 billion in the American economy, sources said. The meeting and discussion about the investment were reported earlier by The New York Times.

Adani has since agreed to pay $18 million to settle a parallel civil fraud case brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission. And in May, the Treasury Department announced that it had reached a $275 million settlement with an Adani Group subsidiary for apparent violations of U.S. sanctions against Iran. The subsidiary, Adani Enterprises, purchased shipments of liquefied petroleum gas sourced from Iran, the U.S. government said.

Both SEC and Treasury Department officials were also involved in meetings with the attorneys from Sullivan & Cromwell, according to sources with direct knowledge of the matter.

The SEC declined to comment for this story. WTX US News has also reached out for comment to the Treasury Department.

In May, just days after the government filed the motion to dismiss the Justice Department’s case against Adani, two prosecutors assigned to the case abruptly withdrew from it, according to court records. The motion did not include signatures from career prosecutors who brought the case, a departure from common practice that signaled dissent.

Democrats have since launched an investigation into the Justice Department’s decision to drop the Adani case. In a June 11 letter to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut questioned what they called the “transactional nature” of the decision to dismiss the case. The lawmakers suggested that Adani’s offer to invest $10 billion in U.S. energy and infrastructure projects smacked of a “quid pro quo.”

“I have serious concerns about a Trump loyalist who played a key role in the Adani dismissal serving in a critical U.S. Attorney role,” Warren told WTX US News.

In a statement shared with WTX US News, a spokesperson for Sullivan & Cromwell said that Giuffra, McDonald and all partners at the firm “have devoted their careers to and built their reputations on being exceptionally effective advocates for our clients, without regard to the administration in Washington.”

“Sullivan & Cromwell is hired to handle the most significant and challenging cases because we have the finest lawyers in the profession, and to suggest that the success of our firm and our partners is the result of anything other than the most rigorous legal argument and factual analysis and our judgment and experience is simply wrong,” the statement added.

A Justice Department official said that the department “often meets with outside counsel to discuss pending cases and potential resolutions to assure the best possible outcome for the American people” and that the decision to dismiss the case came after many months of discussion with the company’s lawyers and an internal review.

The Southern Coal case

McDonald was also one of the lawyers involved in convincing the Justice Department to drop a non-public criminal investigation into Southern Coal, a Roanoke-based coal mining company run by the son of Republican Sen. Jim Justice of West Virginia, sources familiar with the matter told WTX US News.

The investigation was sparked by concerns surrounding Southern Coal’s water testing following a longstanding consent decree with the Justice Department and several states, two sources with knowledge of the matter said. ProPublica reported earlier on the closure of the case, but McDonald’s role has not been previously reported.

Following meetings between Justice Department officials in the deputy attorney general’s office and lawyers for Southern Coal, including McDonald, the Justice Department instructed prosecutors to close the investigation, one of the sources said.

The investigation was still in its early stages when it was closed, the source said. A spokesperson for the Justice family’s legal team declined to comment.

In a statement to ProPublica earlier this month, Steven Ruby, an attorney for the Justice companies, said, “Ultimately the finding of the inquiry by the government was that there wasn’t any evidence to pursue criminal charges,” adding, “There’s never been any intentional wrongdoing by the companies.”

Sullivan & Cromwell declined to discuss the Southern Coal case or McDonald’s involvement. A Justice Department official said the defense attorneys followed a common practice by challenging the case.

“The bottom line is that this was a politically motivated prosecution for a case that can and should be resolved civilly,” the Justice Department official told WTX US News.

The Live Nation case

During his time at Sullivan & Cromwell, McDonald also represented music concert promoter Live Nation as it settled an antitrust case involving Ticketmaster, court records show.

The Live Nation case, filed in 2024 during the Biden administration, had bipartisan support among Republican and Democratic state attorneys general. Attorneys at the Justice Department who worked on the Live Nation case and attorneys for the states were surprised when they were notified earlier this year by Live Nation that settlement discussions would take place, according to sources familiar with the settlement.

“It was a very strange situation,” said a former Justice Department attorney. “We were told to keep the whole settlement discussions very tight and very close to the vest.”

Negotiations for the settlement between the government and Sullivan & Cromwell took place at the law firm’s offices in Manhattan, handled by Justice Department officials who did not work on the trial team. State attorneys general were left out of the meeting and remained in the lobby for several hours, sources said.

“We had people who were there and ready to join the conversation and were never included,” said Eleanor Blume, a senior legal adviser to California Attorney General Rob Bonta.

Blume added that the case’s handling “points to this being an extremely political decision.”

A Justice Department official said that the settlement “exceeded the outcomes of previous administrations” and that the department’s “overriding interest was providing immediate relief for consumers rather than risk an adverse decision or years of continued appellate litigation.”

All but a small handful of states decided to reject the settlement between the Justice Department and Live Nation, and continued to try the case. They prevailed, with a federal jury finding in April that Live Nation was liable for operating an illegal monopoly.

Palestinian football chief says US denied him visa to attend World Cup

Palestinian football chief says US denied him visa to attend World Cup

Jibril Rajoub attended opening match in Mexico but becomes latest football official hit by US visa issues, he saysThe head of the Palestinian Football Association has said he is unable to travel to the US with other federation heads attending the 2026 Fifa World Cup because he has not been issued a visa.

Jibril Rajoub went to the opening match between Mexico and South Africa in Mexico City on Thursday. But he is among several people accredited to attend the World Cup who have been denied visas or have yet to receive them from the US.

“I don’t believe that it’s fair to use or to abuse and deny the right of all footballers all over the world to attend,” the veteran Palestinian political figure said.

Fifa’s president, Gianni Infantino, said last year: “Everyone will be welcome in Canada, Mexico and the United States for the Fifa World Cup next year. We are working exactly for that.”

The US, however, has refused entry to delegates from several countries, including a referee from Somalia and a photographer travelling with Iraq’s team.

The US state department had no immediate comment on Rajoub’s visa, but last year it implemented new restrictions on Palestinian passport holders, including on anyone who had been employed by the Palestinian Authority.

It revoked a visa to allow Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, to travel to the UN general assembly last September.

 

US president Trump discusses memorandum of understanding with Iran and India

Get you up to speed: Replay: Trump meets Modi, addresses memorandum of understanding in Iran

US President Donald Trump met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to discuss a memorandum of understanding with Iran. The meeting took place in an unspecified location.

The investigation into the agreement between the United States and Iran remains ongoing, with officials assessing its broader implications for regional stability. Details regarding the timeline for the completion of the investigation have yet to be disclosed.

Following the recent meeting, US President Donald Trump expressed optimism about enhanced cooperation with India, emphasising the importance of strategic partnerships in addressing regional challenges. Meanwhile, India reiterated its commitment to balancing its energy needs with the need to maintain positive relations with Iran amid growing pressures from the United States.

What remains unclear — It is not specified what topics were discussed in detail during the meeting between President Trump and Prime Minister Modi.

US president Trump discusses memorandum of understanding with Iran and India

US president Trump discusses memorandum of understanding with Iran and
Rewatch as US President Donald Trump meets Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and addresses memorandum of understanding with Iran.

The Indians are perturbed that the United States chose Pakistan as the peace negotiators, which has created an uproar in India.

In India, it is not just what you Modi does domestically, his extremists propaganda and rhetoric is based on prompting India, whilst pushing Pakistan backwards, just as they have done in the Cricket, since taking over the reigns of ICC.

For Modi this is seen as a failure, an opportunity missed to put India on a global stage, instead Pakistan has been projected as an ambassador of peace.

Bungee instructor seen performing jumps with children amid fatal incident

Get you up to speed: Bungee instructor who ‘forgot to attach rope’ seen leaping off bridge with kids | News World

Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas, 21, died after being launched from the Skeleton bridge in Limeira, Brazil, without a bungee cord attached. Three bungee workers, including Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, have been charged with homicide following the incident.

Three bungee workers have been charged with homicide and were detained after an alleged attempt to flee the area following the incident. The investigation is ongoing, with authorities reviewing footage and witness statements to establish the sequence of events leading up to the launch of Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas.

This is a tragic incident that has shocked the global community, especially in South America. Family members and the local community are mourning her loss, with calls for stricter safety regulations in the bungee jumping industry.

What remains unclear — It is uncertain who was responsible for attaching the safety rope to Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas before her jump.

Bungee instructor seen performing jumps with children amid fatal incident

Bungee instructor seen performing jumps with children amid fatal incident
Footage shows a man, believed to be Egoroff, preparing to jump off the Skeleton bridge with a child clinging onto him and attached to a bungee rope (Picture: Instagram)

A bungee instructor accused of throwing a young woman to her death without a jump cord has been pictured performing stunts with children.

Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas, 21, died after she was launched from the Skeleton bridge in Limeira, Brazil, on Saturday, without the crucial bungee cord attached to her.

The three men who allegedly failed to attach the safety rope said previously they ‘can’t remember’ who was meant to put it on.

Bungee workers Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, 32, Maicon Fernandes Cintra, 42, and Vitor de Freitas Goncalves, 27, allegedly didn’t clip on Maria’s safety rope.

Bungee instructor who 'forgot to attach rope' doing another bungee jump
Egoroff and a child, both attached to harnesses and the rope, are seen jumping off the bridge (Picture: Instagram)

Bungee instructor Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff holding a child whose face is blurred.
The bungee instructor is seemingly preparing for a jump with another child (Picture: Instagram)

Three charged with homicide

They have been charged with homicide after being detained following an alleged attempt to flee Limeira.

The 24 year who lost her life on a bungee jump

Footage has surfaced appearing to show Egoroff perform bungee stunts with children off the Skeleton bridge as part of his job.

One clip from 2023 shows a child wearing a helmet and a harness clinging onto a man believed to be Egoroff before he jumps down from the edge of the bridge.

Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas
Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas died after the elastic bungee rope was not clipped onto her harness (Picture: Instagram)

A screengrab of Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freita, 21, jumping off the bridge with no rope. (Picture: Police)
The moment the workers launched Maria, who is stretched out in the ‘superman’ pose, from the bridge’s edge

In other footage shared on social media, Egoroff performs a backflip off the same location by himself.

Workers are also seen launching other customers with ropes attached from the ‘superman’ pose into the air.

Ms Rodrigues de Freitas had been excited about her trip beforehand, which involved doing a bungee jump.

She posted a picture of the rope operator Entre Cordas’s banner and caption ‘Who was the crazy person who let me jump off a bridge?’

The mum of Ms Rodrigues de Freitas said at her funeral on Sunday: ‘That damned rope took you away from me forever.

‘My beloved daughter, you are gone, and all that remains here is pain and longing. I will love you forever.’

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VivaTech event highlights ai concerns and innovations in france

VivaTech event highlights ai concerns and innovations in france

VivaTech Begins

VivaTech, one of Europe’s largest technology events, has commenced in Paris with a focus on artificial intelligence, attracting around 200,000 visitors.
Visitor Scale
VivaTech is attracting approximately 200,000 attendees, highlighting its significant role as a major hub for technological and startup advancements in Europe.
VivaTech Insights

“I think it can be amazing, but we need to be aware of the possibilities,” said Maria Isabel Fernandez Polo, reflecting on the benefits and risks of AI.

AI dominates conversations at VivaTech

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Published on

One of Europe’s biggest technology and startup events, VivaTech, is underway in the French capital, with AI at the top of the agenda. Around 200,000 visitors, including one of the world’s most famous entrepreneurs, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, alongside ViveTech regular, French President Emmanuel Macron.

Out on the show floor, EU News has been asking visitors the same two questions: which technology worries them most, and which one excites them most. The answer to both, more often than not, is artificial intelligence.

“Oh, definitely AI,” said one student from Morocco. Spanish tech worker Maria Isabel Fernandez Polo said AI is a tool that can deliver real benefits, but one that needs careful handling. “I think it can be amazing, but we need to be aware of the possibilities,” she said.

Some visitors are most taken by specific products. Kivuila Mavuidi from DRC pointed to Google’s chatbot: “Obviously it’s Gemini, Gemini from Google,” he smiled.

Maurice Lévy, former CEO of Publicis Groupe and co-founder of VivaTech, sees something both promising and possibly unsettling at the heart of this year’s show. “Humanoid robotics, because this is something which is scary, and opens new dreams,” he said.

A French student summed up the mood many feel toward AI more broadly. “It has double edges. It can have a lot of benefits for humanity, but at the same time it could take us to places that we don’t want to go,” she said.

Some of France’s biggest companies have a presence here, among them LVMH, Orange, L’Oréal and Airbus, alongside hundreds of smaller startups showing off fresh innovations.

A memorable demonstration came from audio company Skyted, whose marketing consultant Clémence Gorjux showed off an earpiece designed to let people speak privately even in noisy public places. The device is designed for business leaders and politicians, as well as individuals, who want to chat quietly without anyone hearing in public places.

Not every innovation on show comes from a corporate giant. Batterizy, a French association where 75% of employees are disabled people, is exhibiting a solar-rechargeable mobile battery system aimed at festivals and building sites.

With thousands of innovations spread across the halls, VivaTech’s 10th edition is also offering at least one answer for the more anxious visitor. French company Lifepods is showcasing a personal survival capsule, built for flood zones, tsunami risk areas and earthquake zones. Perfect for the disaster-movie scenario when the AI powered robots take over the world.

US government transfers all detainees from Florida’s Alligator Alcatraz facility

Get you up to speed: US transfers immigrants out of Florida Alligator Alcatraz detention centre

The United States government announced that all immigrant detainees have been transferred out of the Alligator Alcatraz detention facility in Florida, resulting in its effective closure. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed this decision due to concerns regarding the start of the Atlantic hurricane season.

The facility, designed to house up to 3,000 detainees, was criticized for its inadequate shelter during extreme weather events. Transferring all detainees was confirmed as the Atlantic hurricane season commenced with the arrival of Tropical Storm Arthur in the Gulf of Mexico.

The Department of Homeland Security confirmed the completion of all detainee transfers from Alligator Alcatraz, citing safety concerns due to the onset of the Atlantic hurricane season. Amy Godshall from the American Civil Liberties Union stated, “Transferring people out of this cruel facility is an important step,” urging for its permanent closure and denouncing the harm caused during its operation.

What remains unclear — The authorities have not disclosed the number of detainees who were transferred or their new locations.

US government transfers all detainees from Florida’s Alligator Alcatraz facility

News|MigrationUS transfers immigrants out of Florida Alligator Alcatraz detention centre

The facility, located near the Everglade wetlands, has drawn human rights concerns and lawsuits over its conditions.

Published On 18 Jun 202618 Jun 2026

The administration of United States President Donald Trump has announced that all immigrant detainees have been transferred out of a Florida detention facility known as Alligator Alcatraz, effectively shuttering the controversial facility.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said on Wednesday that everyone being held in the state-run facility had been transferred out, citing concerns about the start of the Atlantic hurricane season.

“For the safety of the illegal alien detainees, we transferred them to other facilities,” department spokesperson Lauren Bis told The Associated Press news agency in a statement.

She did not specify how many people were transferred, or where they were sent. Her statement also did not indicate whether the detention facility was permanently shuttered, though reports of its impending closure had intensified for months.

Several anonymous officials told The New York Times in May that the isolated facility, located inside Florida’s Big Cypress Natural Preserve, was too costly to maintain.

The facility has attracted significant scrutiny since it was first announced nearly a year ago, on June 19, 2025.

Named after the infamous Alcatraz Island prison in San Francisco, “Alligator Alcatraz” was billed as a temporary facility that would make use of its wetland surroundings as a deterrent for escape.

“If people get out, there’s not much waiting for them other than alligators and pythons. Nowhere to go. Nowhere to hide,” said Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier.

When it opened last July, Trump toured the facility personally with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, a fellow Republican.

Trump has pushed for the mass deportation of immigrants during his second term, and DeSantis, his former rival in the 2024 presidential race, has sought to deploy state resources to aid that effort.

But the detention centre, located on an abandoned airstrip, faced controversy almost as soon as it started operations.

Indigenous leaders from the Miccosukee and Seminole nations opposed the construction as detrimental to their homes and ceremonial sites in the nearby Everglades.

Lawyers and rights groups, meanwhile, questioned whether the centre’s temporary units would provide adequate shelter from the intense heat, heavy rains and hurricanes typical of South Florida. The hurricane season stretches from June through November.

Over its year of operation, Alligator Alcatraz has been the subject of lawsuits and human rights complaints.

Detainees in the facility described being denied access to lawyers, medical neglect and food filled with worms. The government announced it would transfer detainees out of the facility in May.

“Transferring people out of this cruel facility is an important step, but it does not erase the harm that has already been done,” said Amy Godshall, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

She helped lead a lawsuit against the state and the federal government, alleging a lack of access to legal services in Alligator Alcatraz. The detention centre’s remote location, it claimed, was part of a strategy to cut detainees off from resources.

“The state and federal government must permanently close this facility and commit to never detaining people there again,” Godshall said.

Detention facilities like Alligator Alcatraz have been the subject of protests across the country, with critics denouncing inhumane conditions as the norm.

Alligator Alcatraz was designed to hold up to 3,000 people, and officials claimed that its “aluminium-frame structure” was capable of withstanding wind speeds equivalent to a Category 2 hurricane.

Confirmation that the site’s detainees had all been transferred to other facilities came as the Atlantic hurricane season saw its first named storm of the 2026 season: Tropical Storm Arthur.

The storm is currently in the Gulf of Mexico, where it is expected to move towards Louisiana.

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