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Two Delta attendants fail breathalyzer test before international flight

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Airlines are improving on-time arrivals by upping the estimated time of flights


Airlines are improving on-time arrivals by upping the estimated time of flights

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Two flight attendants for Delta Air Lines were pulled from an international flight after failing a breathalyzer test in Amsterdam on Friday.

Randomly tested by Dutch authorities before a flight to New York’s JFK International Airport, a female flight attendant reportedly showed a blood alcohol level seven times over the legal limit for crew members and a male flight attendant failed by .02, an official familiar with the situation confirmed. 

The female Delta employee was fined 1,900 euros, or about $2,000, and her male colleague was fined €275, or about $290. Another flight attendant from a different airline was also fined €1,800 (around $1,900) for being 6.5 times over the limit with the trio flagged during a three-hour period in which police screened 445 pilots and flight attendants at Schiphol Airport, according to Aviation A2Z.

A spokesperson for the Atlanta-based carrier told CBS News that the incident did not affect the flight. 

“Delta’s alcohol policy is among the strictest in the industry and we have zero tolerance for violation. The employees were removed from their scheduled duties and the flight departed as scheduled,” the spokesperson said.

European aviation regulations restrict alcohol consumption for aircrew, and the Netherlands specifically bans pilots and crew members from drinking within 10 hours of a flight, Aviation A2Z reported. But the European Air Safety Agency warns that adhering to a “bottle to throttle” time rule does not guarantee compliance with legal blood alcohol concentration limits. 

In the United States, the Federal Aviation Administration recommends 8 hours between drinking and flying, and that employees be removed from their duties if their blood alcohol concentration registers 0.02 or above on a required test.



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Oprah Winfrey selects “Small Things Like These” as new book blub pick

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Oprah Winfrey unveiled her latest book club selection, “Small Things Like These” by Claire Keegan, during an appearance Tuesday on “CBS Mornings.”

The story, set in Ireland in December 1985, follows Bill Furlong, a father and local merchant, as he uncovers the truth about a Magdalene laundry — a convent where women and girls were forced into labor under harsh conditions.

“What resonated with me? First of all, read the story, and I had never heard of the Magdalene Laundries,” Winfrey said. “This story, which is heartwarming and meaningful, and it’s about a father trying to do the best he can for his family, and then has this decision to make…. For me to run across a story that’s based in truth, but is actually fiction, was what was really exciting to me.”

Keegan explained her focus on the details of daily life, saying, “We think about our lives and measure them so often by the big things that happen … but in fact, it’s how we run our daily lives that is our character.”

Winfrey resonated with a particular line from the book: “Was there any point in being alive without helping one another?” 

“That is how I live my life,” Winfrey said. “But it’s also the reason why it’s such a beautiful Christmas story this time of the year.”

The book also explores real-life history. The Magdalene Laundries operated in Ireland from 1922 to 1996, and Keegan noted that survivors are still seeking acknowledgment and apologies from the Catholic Church.

Winfrey also announced her new podcast “The Oprah Podcast”  in partnership with Starbucks. It features conversations about books and social issues. She shared that the first episode includes an interview with a woman who was sent to a Magdalene laundry at age 12.

“Small Things Like These” has been adapted into a movie starring Oscar winner Cillian Murphy. The book is available now, and episodes of “The Oprah Podcast” can be streamed on YouTube and other platforms.



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Man charged for alleged plan to send guns, ammo to North Korea

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Man charged for alleged plan to send guns, ammo to North Korea – CBS News


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Shenghua Wen, A Chinese national, has been charged for an alleged plan to send North Korea guns, ammunition and other equipment from the United States. Prosecutors allege Wen received $2 million to purchase the equipment, according to a complaint.

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Ashley Benefield, former ballerina convicted of killing husband in “Black Swan” murder case, is sentenced to 20 years in prison

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A former ballerina was sentenced to 20 years in prison Tuesday in the 2020 shooting death of her estranged husband in Florida.

CBS affiliate WTSP reports that Ashley Benefield was sentenced to 20 years, with credit for time served, followed by 10 years probation. The case, which became known as the “Black Swan murder” trial, garnered national attention, with some comparing Benefield to the protagonist of the 2010 film “Black Swan.” 

The former ballerina was found guilty by a jury in July of manslaughter for shooting and killing her husband, Doug Benefield, in September 2020 after an argument.

Ashley Benefield, 32, claimed that she killed her then-58-year-old estranged husband in self defense during an argument at her mother’s home, where she had moved from South Carolina after leaving him. Authorities said she shot him twice.

“I just held the gun like in front of me and I said, stop, and he like turned and he got into this like almost like a fighting stance. He started like moving his arms and his hands around…he started coming towards me and he lunged at me, and I just pulled the trigger,” Ashley Benefield testified at her trial.

Ashley Benefield
Ashley Benefield is pictured during her trial. On July 30, 2024,  Benefield was found guilty of manslaughter with a firearm in the shooting death of her estranged husband Doug Benefield. 

Pool/Bradenton Herald


The pair had wed after knowing each other for less than two weeks, “48 Hours” reported. At the time of their marriage, Ashley Benefield was 24 and Doug Benefield, a widower whose wife had died about nine months earlier, was 54.

As “48 Hours” reported, the marriage was rocky. There were tensions between Ashley Benefield and Doug Benefield’s teenage daughter, and an attempt to start a ballet company together failed. Ashley Benefield accused her husband of poisoning his first wife, and left him when she was pregnant with their child to stay with her mother, alleging that he was now poisoning her. The claims were investigated by police, and no charges were filed. 

Once their child was born in 2018, Ashley Benefield allegedly kept the baby from her husband for six months, until a judge intervened. After this, the pair largely reconciled, and in 2020, they planned to move to Maryland together on Ashley Benefield’s suggestion. 

On Sept. 27, 2020, the Benefields were packing a U-Haul truck for the move. Ashley Benefield’s mother, Alicia Byers, took her granddaughter to a park, leaving the couple alone in the house. A neighbor reported hearing sudden screaming and called 911. 

Moments later, Ashley Benefield arrived at the home of another neighbor, gun in hand. She reportedly told the neighbor that she had shot her husband in self-defense. The neighbor called 911. 

When police and emergency services responded, Doug Benefield was still alive but unable to speak. He died at an area hospital about an hour later.

Investigators determined that Doug Benefield had been shot twice, once in the leg and once in the arm. That second bullet traveled into his chest cavity. The shots had been fired when he was turning away from his wife, investigators determined. 

Ashley Benefield’s lawyer, Faith Brown, told police at the time that her client had been planning to leave her husband and had an escape plan, including a safe place to stay, a burner phone and a rental car rented under a different name. Brown told police that Benefield feared her husband “had gotten wind of” the plan. 

Ashley Benefield was arrested five weeks after the shooting. 



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