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Former-SpaceX employees file suit alleging they were fired after complaining of sexual harassment

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Eight former employees sued SpaceX and its CEO Elon Musk, alleging that Musk ordered them fired after they challenged what they called rampant sexual harassment and a hostile “Animal House“-style work environment at the company.

The employees, who filed suit in a California state court, detailed their complaints in a 2022 open letter to management they shared via a company intranet. The next day, four of the plaintiffs were fired, they alleged; others were terminated later after an internal investigation.

In January, the federal National Labor Relations Board filed its own complaint against SpaceX based on issues raised by nine fired employees.

Among other workplace concerns, the open letter called on executives to condemn Musk’s public behavior on X — the platform then known as Twitter — and to hold all employees accountable for unacceptable conduct. Musk’s actions included making light of sexual harassment allegations against him — charges that the billionaire denied.

“As our CEO and most prominent spokesperson, Elon is seen as the face of SpaceX — every tweet that Elon sends is a de facto public statement by the company,” the open letter said at the time. The letter also referred to Musk’s actions as a “frequent source of distraction and embarrassment.”

The plaintiffs are seeking unspecified monetary damages.

The complaint drew connections between Musk’s behavior — in particular, his often lewd posts on Twitter — and the working environment at SpaceX. It states that one of the plaintiffs, Yaman Abdulhak, noted that many of the inappropriate examples cited in a 2021 “appropriate behavior” employee training “closely resembled the contents of Musk’s tweets.” Abdulhak sent examples of those tweets to the SpaceX human resources director, who took no action, the complaint stated.

SpaceX did not immediately reply to an emailed request for comment.



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Watch: Trump takes stage at RNC for walkthrough ahead of Thursday speech

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Watch: Trump takes stage at RNC for walkthrough ahead of Thursday speech – CBS News


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Former President Donald Trump took to the stage at the Republican National Convention Wednesday afternoon for a walkthrough before his address on Thursday, which will be Trump’s first public speech since the assassination attempt against him last weekend. CBS News political correspondent Caitlin Huey-Burns has more.

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Summer heat is causing soda cans to burst on Southwest Airlines flights, injuring flight attendants

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The intense summer heat is causing soda cans to burst after being loaded on some Southwest Airlines flights, the airline confirmed to CBS News on Wednesday. 

Airline officials say they are aware of a series of incidents where cans of carbonated drinks have ruptured, often while being opened, resulting in an onboard mess and reports of about 20 injuries to employees so far this summer. 

There have been a few hand injuries reported by flight attendants because of the issue, including one that resulted in stitches. Southwest says the injury reports are similar to last year. The issue is generating more focus this year because it appears, at least anecdotally, to be occurring more frequently this summer.

Southwest Airlines officials say they are implementing measures to address the issue, including at several of its hotter provisioning locations such as Austin, Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, Las Vegas and Sacramento.

Chris Perry, a Southwest spokesperson, said the airline has been “communicating to our employees about it throughout the spring and summer.”

“We’ve developed a mitigation plan to address it,” Perry said.

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Southwest Airlines says it is aware of a series of incidents where cans of carbonated drinks have ruptured, often while being opened, resulting in an onboard mess and reports of about 20 injuries to employees so far this summer. 

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The issue may have to do with how Southwest stores and loads drinks on planes in extreme heat. Unlike other airlines, Southwest does not stock perishables on board, so it is not required to use air-conditioned catering trucks to deliver meals and drinks to the aircraft. Instead, drinks on Southwest provisioning trucks are more frequently exposed to outside temperatures. 

In an internal email obtained by CBS News from July 12 sent to flight attendants titled “Hot & Bursting Cans: Provisioning Procedural Changes,” company leaders said finding “viable solutions to bursting hot cans is our top priority.” 

The message, from Rachel Loudermilk, managing director of base operations, and Matt Sampson, provisioning director, tells the airlines’ 21,000-plus flight attendants that “none of us are satisfied that we are still seeing reported events.”

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Pictures of cans deformed by heat or cans that have exploded on flights are circulating online in postings to Facebook groups dedicated to Southwest employees.

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The email lays out a series of changes Southwest has undertaken, especially in cities with hot temperatures, to address the problem since the beginning of the summer, including stocking fewer cans on provisioning trucks to limit the amount of time the cans spend on the flight line (and in the heat), placing carbonated drinks in coolers on trucks in hot weather locations, monitoring truck and can temperature with thermometers during shifts, and “not boarding product when the outside temperature reaches levels known to elevate the risk of bursting cans.”

The airline confirmed it has also told employees not to open cans that are noticeably hot to the touch or appear deformed due to heat exposure.

But the email adds that the airline has come to “recognize that additional immediate solutions are necessary” and are now considering making additional changes in Phoenix and Las Vegas, including halting the onboarding of cans with a temperature over 98 degrees (which would be checked with heat guns on the provision trucks).  Non-alcoholic beverages that top 98 degrees would be returned to the warehouse to cool. The airline is also considering positioning refrigerated trailers at its warehouses to keep cans cool before they are loaded onto provisioning trucks to be brought to the flight line.

The email says Southwest began testing air-conditioned provisioning trucks this month and is having conversations with Coca-Cola to analyze the viability of the current cans and to consider alternatives, including a 7.5-ounce option. The airline currently stocks traditional 12-ounce soda cans.

As part of the testing in Arizona and Nevada, cans are being marked so they can be identified if they originated from refrigerated or non-refrigerated trucks.

Perry, the Southwest spokesperson, stressed that the airline is taking the issue seriously. 

“We are investigating the issue and looking at changes to ensure safety for our employees and customers in the midst of extreme temperatures and climate change,” he said.

TWU Local 556, the union that represents Southwest Airlines flight attendants, did not respond to multiple requests for comment, but pictures of the burst cans are circulating online in postings to Facebook groups dedicated to Southwest employees. Many posts express frustration and concerns over safety. Some noted the cans that burst did not appear to be hot at the moment.

Southwest operates about 4,200 flights a day. 



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Tree may have blocked sniper team’s view of Trump rally gunman, map shows

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A tree may have prevented one of the sniper teams tasked with protecting former President Donald Trump at his Pennsylvania campaign rally from clearly seeing the would-be assassin as he climbed on a roof and opened fire, according to a CBS News analysis of video and satellite imagery.

The tree, located between the shooter and the sniper team closest to him, may have impaired the team’s line of sight as the gunman climbed onto the roof from where he fired multiple rounds. That sniper team, which was positioned on a roof over Trump’s right shoulder, did not fire the shot that killed the gunman, two federal law enforcement officials told CBS News.

A U.S. Secret Service sniper stationed in a building behind the former president fired one round, killing the gunman, according to multiple law enforcement officials. Two federal law enforcement officers told CBS News the Secret Service team that ultimately killed the shooter was located on a building behind Trump’s left shoulder — with a view that was not blocked by the tree, the CBS analysis shows. That team was initially directed to go another way, so the snipers had to reorient themselves before taking down the gunman, CBS News’ Charlie de Mar reported.

Map shows location of the shooting site at Trump rally
A map showing a tree possibly blocking the line of sight of a sniper team at the Trump rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

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The motive of gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks remains a mystery four days after the shooting at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania — during which Trump and two others were injured and a rallygoer was killed. A federal law enforcement bulletin obtained by CBS News identified the gunman as “an apparent lone attacker” and the FBI is investigating whether he was a politically motivated homegrown domestic violent extremist.

Minutes before the assassination attempt, a sniper from a local tactical team took a photo of the gunman and saw him looking through a rangefinder, a local law enforcement officer with direct knowledge of the events told CBS News.  Cellphone video taken Saturday shows rally attendees pointing toward the shooter and trying to alert authorities to his presence — a full two minutes before the 20-year-old opened fire.

The U.S. Secret Service is facing mounting questions about the security flaws that allowed the shooter to fire from a rooftop near the rally. Meanwhile, House Republicans are ramping up efforts to investigate the attempted assassination.

President Biden said earlier this week that he is directing an independent review of security and events at the rally to determine what went wrong, while the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general is opening an investigation into the rally’s planning.

Eric Trump, the former president’s son, told CBS News his father doesn’t have stitches after he was shot, but has a “nice flesh wound.” He said his father’s hearing is fine and that he is “in great spirits.”

With reporting from Erielle Delzer, Alex Clark, Rhona Tarrant and Kaia Hubbard



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