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May 8 2000 UTC Brief

In the Middle East

The U.S. says it disabled two empty Iranian tankers as they tried to enter an Iranian port, part of a widening confrontation around the Strait of Hormuz. CENTCOM says a Navy F/A-18 fired precision munitions into the ships’ smokestacks, and officials say more than 70 tankers have now been blocked from Iranian ports. Iran says it is not backing down on control of the strait, and both sides are still trading claims while a peace proposal sits on the table.

In education and cybersecurity

Hackers calling themselves ShinyHunters say they hit Instructure, the company behind Canvas, and copied a large amount of private data. The attack landed right near the end of the semester, which is a charming time to knock student records and school access sideways. Many Canvas systems are back up, but the full impact is still unclear, along with whether any institutions paid ransom.

In Britain

Labour took a historic beating in Wales, where first minister Eluned Morgan lost her seat and the party dropped to third place behind Plaid Cymru and Reform. In England, Reform also made strong gains in council elections, while the Greens picked up seats too. Voters, in a rare display of interest in local democracy, seem to have noticed what was on offer.

In U.S. courts and politics

A federal appeals court roundup brought rulings on eminent domain, silencer convictions, mistaken police entry, online searches, immigration detention, bankruptcy immunity, prison fraud, and COVID-era school discipline. The decisions left Baltimore neighbors without a Takings Clause win over a failed redevelopment project, upheld a silencer conviction under existing precedent, and allowed part of a lawsuit over a police raid to move forward.

In Congress, a Minnesota state lawmaker is seeking a subpoena for Rep. Ilhan Omar after she declined to cooperate with a probe into alleged ties to Somali fraudsters accused of taking $250 million from Twin Cities taxpayers. The request now goes to a House committee.

In crime

Richmond police say 21-year-old Amaya Dixon has been indicted on two counts of felony murder and two counts of child neglect in the deaths of her twin 17-month-old sons. Investigators say officers found the boys with apparent drowning injuries in an apartment bathtub on April 17, and both later died at a hospital. Police have not released a motive or said whether anyone else was in the apartment.

In science and health

A new study says Naegleria fowleri, the brain-eating amoeba, has been detected in Yellowstone, Grand Teton, and Lake Mead National Parks. The finding is another reminder that warm freshwater and hot spring environments can carry serious risks, even in places people usually visit for recreation rather than microbiology.

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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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