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June 8 1600 UTC Brief

In the United States

In Athens, Georgia, four men have been sentenced in the shooting that killed 3-year-old Kyron Santino Zarco Smith and wounded his 9-year-old brother. Three received life sentences after convictions for malice murder and related charges, while 19-year-old Julian Cubillos pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and got 20 years. Prosecutors said the group was targeting a rival gang member, and the family said the verdicts brought some measure of relief after a long wait for justice.

Separately, Justice Samuel Alito is taking criticism over complaints about the tone used in a civil rights case, a striking standard from a justice who is not known for brevity when the subject is, say, everyone else.

In Texas, Houston defense attorney Dan Cogdell, who helped defend Ken Paxton in his impeachment trial and securities fraud case, has now endorsed Paxton’s Senate opponent, state Rep. James Talarico. It is a tidy reminder that even legal alliances have expiration dates.

In Britain

Rural Post Offices say they could be forced to close after business rates rise by £29 million over the next year. Around 600 branches that were previously exempt are being brought into liability after an April revaluation, and the smallest outlets are facing the biggest increases. The Post Office says the system is unfair to independent postmasters, while the Treasury says wider reforms are already under way.

Nationwide has nearly doubled chief executive Debbie Crosbie’s pay to £4.7 million, helped by £3.2 million in bonus payouts. The increase comes a year after the board backed its bonus scheme following the Virgin Money takeover, which is a very modern way of saying “the deal went well for management.”

Prime Minister Keir Starmer is also pressing tech firms to do more to protect children online, with a focus on stopping harmful content and the sharing of explicit images. The message is simple enough, even if the platforms will likely need several slides and a task force to pretend they misunderstood it.

In public safety

The sons of Nottingham attack victim Ian Coates have criticized the emergency response to Valdo Calocane’s attack, saying their father lay there for 15 hours and calling the response “utterly disgusting.” They say the inquiry raised troubling questions about officers being told to stand down and CCTV not being reviewed properly until later.

In the southern Philippines, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake killed at least four people, injured more than 200, and triggered a 3-foot tsunami. Authorities reported destruction and damage in a large coastal city, and the situation remains serious.

Consumer alerts

Target is voluntarily recalling some baby wipes over possible bacterial contamination. The company has not provided further details yet, but on this one the label “baby wipes” is probably not supposed to become a health warning.

And one lighter turn

On a Tennessee highway, a truck caught fire and its load of fireworks exploded in the roadway. Travelers got the full display without buying a ticket, which is not the usual customer experience anyone asks for.

About

This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.

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