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Gunmen kill 5 at drug rehab center in Mexico, escape by using metal spikes to puncture tires of security forces

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10 bodies found in Mexico amid cartel violence


10 bodies found in Acapulco, Mexico, amid cartel violence

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Armed assailants attacked a drug rehabilitation center in Mexico, killing four people and wounding five others, local authorities said Wednesday.

The attack took place in Salamanca in the central state of Guanajuato on Tuesday night, the municipal government said in a statement.

Police and the National Guard “initiated a chase to find those responsible,” but the attackers escaped by throwing down metal spikes to puncture the tires of security forces in pursuit, it said.

Police said three bodies of those killed were found inside the rehab center while a fourth was found in the street.

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National Guard members patrol outside a rehabilitation centre where, according to local government, unknown gunmen killed four people and injured five in Salamanca, Guanajuato state, Mexico on October 2, 2024.

MARIO ARMAS/AFP via Getty Images


No suspects have been arrested yet.

Disputes between drug gangs have led to rehab centers being targeted in several attacks in Mexico.

Authorities say some rehab centers are used as safe havens by suspected members of criminal groups, who are attacked by their rivals when found.

In July 2022, six people were shot dead at a drug rehab center near the western Mexican city of Guadalajara. Two years before that, heavily armed men stormed a drug rehab center in the central city of Irapuato and killed 27 people.

Guanajuato is Mexico’s most violent state, according to official homicide statistics, due to fighting between the local Santa Rosa de Lima cartel and the powerful Jalisco New Generation. Last month, the U.S. sanctioned a man known as “The Tank” for allegedly leading the Jalisco cartel’s fuel theft arm, supplying it with tens of millions of dollars a year by selling stolen gasoline through a network of seemingly legitimate businesses.

Mexico has recorded more than 450,000 murders since December 2006, when a controversial military anti-drug operation was launched.

The violence continued after Claudia Sheinbaum took office Tuesday as Mexico’s first female president in the nation’s more than 200 years of independence.



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Special counsel filing reveals new evidence in 2020 federal election case against Trump

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Special counsel filing reveals new evidence in 2020 federal election case against Trump – CBS News


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Newly unsealed filings by special counsel Jack Smith includes extensive evidence of former President Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election. Trump denies the charges.

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“Let’s discuss with ethics”: Jets owner, as ambassador, fielded requests from wealthy businessmen, records show

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When the New York Jets arrive in London for Sunday’s game against the Minnesota Vikings — one of three NFL matchups this year being played across the pond — it’ll be a homecoming of sorts for the team’s owner.

Robert Wood Johnson IV, known as “Woody,” was ambassador to the United Kingdom during the Trump administration. But if Johnson thought he was leaving football behind when he secured the post of top diplomat to a crucial ally, records show his status as a former (and future) NFL executive followed him. He and his staff repeatedly looped in State Department ethics personnel as wealthy people from both sides of the Atlantic sought favors.

For instance, on April 9, 2018, Johnson received a request from Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shad Khan, according to documents obtained from the State Department through a Freedom of Information Act request.

“Mr. Khan is going to be in Paris in May for a CEO conference. He would like to bring a group of the CEOs and their spouses to the Embassy in Paris for a tour,” wrote a staffer for Johnson seeking guidance. “With that said, the Ambassador has asked us to check with [redacted] to see if this is something that he can help with.”

The names of many of the senders and recipients of emails obtained by CBS News were redacted by the State Department, citing privacy guidelines. The agency also redacted much of the advice given to Johnson and his staff, citing deliberative privilege.

Khan’s request was “a bit out of the norm for what a (sic) Embassy would do,” wrote one staffer in an email.

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Emails obtained via the Freedom of Information Act show then-Ambassador Woody Johnson seeking ethics guidance for requests from wealthy businessmen in 2018 and 2019.

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Johnson’s requests for guidance came on both personal and professional matters. He asked for advice when Ukrainian-born oligarch Len Blavatnik, a British and American citizen, invited him to an Arsenal soccer “match in his private box.” The advice in response is redacted.

“Let’s discuss with ethics,” Johnson wrote in an email after being asked to sit for an interview with a person writing a biography of Dan Snyder, then the owner of the team that is now the Washington Commanders.

And Johnson’s ties to the Jets occasionally surfaced in requests, as when a man named Robert Lloyd Griffith — then a representative of an organization called the Cardiff Business Club — said in a letter to Johnson that he’d be in New York the day “that the Jets would be playing the Giants and how it would be special for he and his friends to attend the game.”

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Emails obtained via the Freedom of Information Act show then-Ambassador Woody Johnson seeking ethics guidance for requests from wealthy businessmen in 2018 and 2019.

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Ambassadors are appointed by presidents and confirmed by the Senate. While most are career diplomats, many are political appointees awarded the prestigious jobs for their support of the president, according to former Ambassador Dennis Jett, a Penn State University professor. Johnson donated more than $1 million to Trump’s first campaign, inaugural committee and a joint fundraising committee bridging the Republican National Committee and Trump’s first reelection campaign.

Jett in 2016 published research that found a correlation between donations and “the quality of diplomatic posting granted by the candidate,” showing countries with strong economies and popular tourism destinations were often rewarded to high-end donors.

But once those donors become ambassadors, they often face requests that career diplomats in lower-profile posts might not field, Jett said.

“It’s probably a good thing that he sent these to an ethics person, though I don’t know what the ethics person would say. It’s not something that involves his official duties,” said Jett, a critic of Johnson who noted a 2020 State Department inspector general report that alleged Johnson made “inappropriate or insensitive comments on topics … such as religion, sex, or color” to employees.

Johnson denied doing so, and said in response to the report, “if I have unintentionally offended anyone in the execution of my duties, I deeply regret that.” In January 2021, the State Department’s Office of Civil Rights concluded that the allegations were unsubstantiated.

A spokesperson for the Jets declined comment after CBS News sent questions for Johnson.

Citing the allegations, Jett said he was “surprised that Johnson has ethical standards high enough” to have sought regular ethics advice.

Johnson even did so when planning his own personal travels. In August 2019, he sought permission to watch a Jets pre-season game in-person, while on personal leave.

“Ambasador – Good news! You can attend the Jets pre-season game. Per the instructions from the State Department Ethics Lawyer, don’t invite anyone with a UK connection to attend the game with you, and no tweets about it. But otherwise, good to go,” wrote then-Deputy Chief of Mission Yael Lempert, a career diplomat.



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Rising violence in the Middle East as Rosh Hashanah begins

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Rising violence in the Middle East as Rosh Hashanah begins – CBS News


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Overnight, at least seven Hezbollah members were killed in an Israeli strike that hit Beirut. It comes after Israel’s military said eight soldiers were killed amid intense fighting with Hezbollah in Lebanon.

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