Week In Review
- Elissa D. Hecker - Editor
- Mar 20
- 18 min read
By Christine Coleman
Edited by Elissa D. Hecker
Entertainment
The Trump Administration Is Upending the AI Race. What Does That Mean for Music?
As the administration appears to be taking a more bullish stance on AI, industry experts weigh in on the possible consequences for musicians and rights holders.
Sony Music Reveals That It has Taken Down More Than 75,000 Generative AI Fake Replica Tracks
Sony Music has revealed the scale of generative AI fake tracks that are replicating its stars. So far, it has requested more than 75,000 takedowns of AI deepfakes of tracks by its artists. The artists subject to AI fakes are generally the label’s biggest stars.
Sean Combs’s Lawyers Say Video of Hallway Assault Was Altered
Lawyers for Sean Combs argued that a leaked security video showing Combs assaulting his former girlfriend was “deceptive,” and said they would request that it not be allowed as evidence at his upcoming trial on charges of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy. The video was broadcast by CNN last year, months before Combs’s arrest. Marc Agnifilo, a lawyer for Combs, said that a forensic analysis of the security footage aired by CNN showed that the video had been sped up from its original source, that events were depicted out of sequence, and that time stamps on the original tape had been covered up.
Florida Mayor Threatens Cinema Over Israeli-Palestinian Film
Miami Beach mayor Steven Meiner is seeking to oust a nonprofit art house cinema from a city-owned property for showing “No Other Land,” the Oscar-winning documentary that chronicles the Israeli demolition of Palestinian homes in Masafer Yatta in the southern West Bank. Meiner introduced a resolution to revoke the lease under which O Cinema rents the space. Kareem Tabsch, the co-founder of O Cinema, said that the threat of losing its physical location in Miami Beach was “very grave and we take it very seriously.” The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, which is now co-counsel for the theater, criticized the mayor’s move, as did the makers of the film, which won the Academy Award for best documentary earlier this month.
Online Influencer Stabbed to Death in Tokyo While Livestreaming
Ari Sato, a young female online influencer in Japan, was stabbed to death while livestreaming on a Tokyo street by Kenji Takano, a man whom the police identified as a follower with a grudge. Sato was heard by passers-by screaming “help!” and her livestream went dark, with the sounds of emergency-vehicle sirens audible to those watching. The Tokyo police said that they had charged Takano with murder on suspicion he carried out the attack.
Arts
In Response to ACLU Lawsuit, National Endowment for the Arts Removes Certification Requirement on Funding Applications
The National Endowment for the Arts agreed to remove a certification requirement that forced artists to attest that they will not “promote gender ideology” in order to apply for funding while the outcome of the case from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the ACLU of Rhode Island is pending. The ACLU is asking for a preliminary injunction on the funding prohibition ahead of the final grant application deadline on March 24.
Enemies in Battle Over ‘LOVE’ Artist Bury the Hatchet
Most people know Robert Indiana for only one thing: LOVE. The image of that four-letter word, with its jauntily tilted “o,” has appeared on city plazas, coffee mugs, and refrigerator magnets worldwide. However, the scorched-earth battle over his legacy, complete with accusations of forgery, elder abuse, and copyright infringement, has riveted the art world since his death in 2018. Now, after the settlement of key lawsuits, two formerly warring parties in that battle, each represented by a different Manhattan gallery, have entered into an unusual truce. They are out to prove that the artist was neither a one-hit wonder nor a cautionary tale.
Five Years After Covid Closed the Theaters, Audiences Are Returning
Five years ago, the widening coronavirus pandemic forced Broadway to go dark, museums to shut their doors, concert halls and opera houses to go silent, and stadiums and arenas to remain empty. Since live performances resumed, although the recovery has been uneven, there are signs that audiences are finally coming back.
Striking Stage Crews Reach Agreement With Atlantic Theater
The prestigious Atlantic Theater Company and the labor union representing its crew members reached a tentative agreement that they anticipated would allow the theater to resume performances, ending a two-month strike. The agreement will be closely scrutinized by New York’s other Off Broadway theaters because the union, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, has undertaken a major drive to organize those stage crews. The parties said they would not describe the details of the agreement until the workers were notified, but they said the agreement featured “significant compensation increases” as well as “comprehensive benefits,” which a union official said would include both health insurance and pension contributions.
Sports
High School Runner Who Struck Rival With Baton Faces Charge
High school runner Alaila Everett is facing a criminal charge after striking and injuring Kaelen Tucker, another runner, with a baton earlier this month. During a 4x200-meter indoor relay race at the Virginia state championships, Tucker passed Everett, who then swung her arm, striking Tucker in the head with the baton. Tucker’s family said that she had sustained a concussion. Everett now faces a misdemeanor charge of assault and battery.
How is College Football Trying to Rein in 'Wild West' of Transfers? Make Players Pay to Leave
For four years, college coaches and administrators have lamented the “wild, wild West” nature of the transfer portal, with athletes hopping from school to school in search of more money, more playing time or a better fit. Now, some universities are invoking a new threat to keep their players: Leave, and you’ll owe us money. Programs are chasing that kind of leverage under the assumption that they will soon be in a position to directly sign athletes to name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals without having to depend on outside collectives or individual donors to make arrangements. They would gain that ability with the landmark House v. NCAA settlement, which would permit schools to share as much as $20.5 million in revenue with their athletes in the next school year if the settlement is approved by a federal judge in California. A hearing is scheduled for April 7.
Mark Gastineau Sues ESPN, NFL for $25 Million Over Viral Brett Favre Clip
A viral moment featured in ESPN’s 30 for 30 documentary “The New York Sack Exchange” has resulted in a $25 million lawsuit. Former New York Jets defensive end Mark Gastineau is suing ESPN, NFL, NFL Films, and “30 for 30” co-directors James Weiner and Ken Rodgers regarding the promotion and publication of an exchange between him and Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre on Nov. 18, 2023. The lawsuit claims that the encounter was aired without Gastineau’s consent or permission and displays him “in a manner which was maliciously false,” causing Gastineau to be “attacked on social media with ridicule, scorn and contempt.”
Can a Billionaire Buy St. John’s a Basketball Championship?
Mike Repole, who loved the homegrown team of his youth, the St. John’s University basketball team, has helped assemble a juggernaut enabled by compensation rules that one critic says created “the wild West.”
Technology/Media
Trump Administration Opens Leak Investigations
The Trump administration has opened its first known investigations into what it called “politically motivated leaks,” fulfilling promises to pursue the sources of stories involving national security revelations. Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, announced the investigations. Among the accusations, she said The Washington Post had published leaked information on Iran and Israel, and NBC had published leaked information on the state of U.S.-Russia relations. It was not clear that any published information was classified, or that the news organizations had received classified materials. There are tight restrictions on the circumstances under which intelligence officials can provide information to the news media.
Federal Judge Allows Authors’ AI Copyright Case Against Meta to Move Forward After Dismissing a Portion of the Lawsuit
A group of authors filed a lawsuit against Meta with allegations that the company violated copyright by training its AI models using their books. Meta has argued that training its large language models (LLMs) qualifies as fair use, asking the judge to dismiss the lawsuit outright. In his ruling, U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria determined that the authors’ allegation of copyright infringement is “obviously a concrete injury sufficient for standing.” The judge also ruled that the authors “adequately alleged that Meta intentionally removed copyright management information to conceal copyright infringement.”
Meta Seeks to Block Further Sales of Ex-Employee’s Scathing Memoir
Meta won a legal victory against former employee Sarah Wynn-Williams, who published an explosive, tell-all memoir, as an arbitrator temporarily prohibited the author from promoting or further distributing copies. Her book describes a series of incendiary allegations of sexual harassment and other inappropriate behavior by senior executives during her tenure at the company. Meta pursued arbitration, arguing that the book is prohibited under a nondisparagement contract that she signed as a global affairs employee.
TikTok Has Not Negotiated With Prospective Buyers as Deadline Looms
TikTok has less than one month until its U.S. lifeline expires, but sources say there still haven't been negotiations between its Chinese owner and prospective buyers.
The DOJ Still Wants Google to Sell Off Chrome
In its final proposed remedy filing in the Google antitrust case, the Department of Justice reiterated that Google should stop paying partners for search placement—and divest its dominant Chrome browser. The proposal says that Google must “promptly and fully divest Chrome, along with any assets or services necessary to successfully complete the divestiture, to a buyer approved by the Plaintiffs in their sole discretion, subject to terms that the Court and Plaintiffs approve.”
Justice Dept. Doubles Down on Request to Break Up Google
In a sign that President Trump is following the Biden administration’s lead in reining in Google, the Justice Department reiterated its demand that a court break up the search giant. The request followed a landmark ruling last year by Judge Amit P. Mehta of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia that found Google had illegally maintained a monopoly in online search by paying web browsers and smartphone manufacturers to feature its search engine. The judge is scheduled to hear arguments on proposed solutions from both the government and Google in April. Google, which says it intends to ultimately appeal the judge’s ruling in the case, also filed its own final proposal maintaining its position that the company shouldn’t need to change much to address the judge’s concerns.
At Crypto Summit, Trump Says U.S. Will Be ‘the Bitcoin Superpower’
Trump held a “crypto summit” at the White House, meeting face to face with the leaders of virtually all of the top crypto companies in the United States. Only a small portion of the gathering that was scheduled to last four hours was broadcast to the public. It offered a vivid illustration of Trump’s recent embrace of crypto, a renegade industry that has spent years battling with U.S. regulators.
Washington Post Columnist Resigns After Paper Spiked Criticism of Jeff Bezos
Ruth Marcus, a columnist and editor for The Washington Post’s opinion section, said she was leaving the newspaper after Will Lewis, the paper’s publisher, killed a column she wrote that was critical of the editorial pages’ new direction. Marcus announced her resignation in an email to her colleagues, saying that she had arrived at the decision to resign “with immense sadness.” Marcus is the most prominent writer to leave The Post’s opinion section since Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon who owns the paper, changed its focus to “personal liberties and free markets.”
AI Copyright Shake-up Could Breach International Law
A shake-up of copyright rules planned by the British government is likely to breach the Berne Convention and be vulnerable to a judicial review, Nicholas Caddick, a leading Kings Counsel, has said. Caddick said that proposals from ministers to make copyright laws more attractive to tech companies will conflict with Britain’s obligations under an international treaty. Ministers want to create an exception to the law that would allow AI companies to take copyrighted works for developing their software unless the owner opts out.
Trial Set for Men Accused of Targeting Iranian Dissident in New York
Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarov will stand trial in Federal District Court in for with murder for hire and conspiracy for attempted kidnap and murder of Iranian journalist Masih Alinejad.The trial is expected to illustrate the lengths to which Iranian officials will go to retaliate against expatriates, even those living in Western countries, who speak up against the government in Tehran.
General News
Supreme Court to Hear Challenge to Law Banning Conversion Therapy
The Supreme Court said that it will hear a First Amendment challenge to a Colorado law banning professional counseling services engaged in conversion therapy intended to change a minor’s gender identity or sexual orientation. More than 20 states have similar laws, which are supported by leading medical groups. Kaley Chiles, a licensed professional counselor, challenged the constitutionality of the Colorado law in federal court, saying that it violated her rights to free speech and the free exercise of religion.
Justices to Consider Request to Lift Nationwide Pause on Birthright Citizenship Order
The Supreme Court afternoon requested responses from states and groups that have challenged the constitutionality of the president’s order ending birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants and foreign residents. The move is a signal that the justices will consider a request by the Trump administration asking the Court to lift a nationwide pause on the policy as the underlying court challenges proceed.
Trump Signs Spending Bill to Fund Government
Trump signed the government funding bill passed by the Senate. The bill was passed just hours before a midnight deadline to avoid a lapse in funding, which would have shut down the government.
Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order Reaches the Supreme Court
Lawyers for Trump asked the Supreme Court to lift a nationwide pause imposed on the president’s order ending birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants and foreign residents. The move represents the first time the legal wrangling over the president’s order to end birthright citizenship has reached the Supreme Court.
Trump Administration Must Rehire Thousands of Fired Workers, Judges Rule
Two judges ordered federal agencies to reinstate tens of thousands of workers with probationary status who had been fired across 19 agencies. Together, the rulings formed a wide, if perhaps temporary, reprieve for employees across much of the government, including major agencies like the Defense, Treasury, Veterans Affairs, and Interior Departments.
Judge Orders Musk and His Team to Turn Over Records and Answer Questions
Judge Tanya S. Chutkan of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia has ordered Elon Musk and operatives involved with his Department of Government Efficiency to hand over documents and answer questions about its role in directing mass firings and dismantling government programs. The judge said that the plaintiffs in the case, a coalition of 14 Democratic state attorneys general challenging Musk’s authority, had demonstrated a clear need to shed light on the inner workings of Musk’s team. It was the first time a judge has ordered that Musk’s division be subject to discovery.
In Speech to Justice Dept., Trump Airs Grievances Against His Enemies
Trump’s speech to the Justice Department, held in the Great Hall of the Justice Department, was billed as a major policy address to reposition the department from the purported political “weaponization” of the Biden era to a renewed focus on crime, punishment, and fighting drugs. However, in an hourlong speech, Trump veered from his prepared remarks to lash out at lawyers and former prosecutors by name in a venue dedicated to the impartial administration of justice.
Judges Are Pushing Back on Trump’s Actions. Here’s a Look at Key Rulings.
In response to Trump’s blizzard of executive orders and his all-out assault on government bureaucracy, federal judges around the country have issued rulings at a blistering rate for the past two months. While some rulings have gone the president’s way, taken as a whole, they represent an effort to push back at Trump’s serial attempts to increase his authority and the executive branch’s dominion over the government. They reflect a fraught and chaotic moment where so much seems uncertain and the federal government itself is under siege.
Judge Pushes Back on Justice Dept.’s Broad View of Jan. 6 Pardons
In the past few weeks, the Justice Department has taken an expansive view of the pardons Trump issued to all of the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. Judge Dabney L. Friedrich, a federal judge in Washington, issued an order strongly pushing back on the Justice Department’s broader interpretation of Trump’s clemency decree. The judge said the pardons should cover only crimes that were directly related to the Capitol attack and chided the department for the way it had “abruptly reversed its position” on the issue “with virtually no explanation.
Trump Firings Gut Education Department’s Civil Rights Division, Democratic Attorneys General Sue
The Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights was slashed in half as part of Trump’s aggressive push to dismantle the agency, which he has called a “con job.” The firings eliminated the entire investigative staff in seven of the office’s 12 regional branches, including in Boston, Cleveland, Dallas, and San Francisco, and left thousands of pending cases in limbo.
In response, a coalition of 21 Democratic attorneys general sued the Trump administration after more than 1,300 workers were fired, including those who administer grants and track student achievement across the country. The group, led by New York’s Letitia James, sued the administration in a Massachusetts federal court, saying that the dismissals were “illegal and unconstitutional.”
Justice Dept. Moving to Downsize Units Investigating Fraud and Corruption
Justice Department officials are drafting plans to broadly restructure and significantly downsize several key units in Washington responsible for investigating cases of fraud and public corruption. The plans, which have not been finalized, could be announced within the next few days. If enacted, they would be the latest initiative by the Trump administration aimed at limiting the ability of prosecutors in Washington to bring sensitive and politically fraught cases against business figures and elected officials.
NASA Eliminates Chief Scientist and Other Jobs at Its Headquarters
NASA is eliminating its chief scientist and other roles as part of efforts by the Trump administration to pare back staff at the agency’s Washington headquarters. This could be a harbinger of deeper cuts to NASA’s science missions and a greater emphasis on human spaceflight, especially to Mars.
U.S.A.I.D. Official Orders Employees to Shred or Burn Classified and Personnel Records
Erica Y. Carr, the acting executive secretary of the U.S. Agency for International Development, which is being dismantled by the Trump administration, told employees to clear safes holding classified documents and personnel files by shredding the papers or putting them into bags for burning, according to an email sent to the staff. The agency has fired thousands of employees, put some on paid leave, and asked a few to work from home, so its headquarters have been mostly empty for weeks. It is unclear if Carr or any other official at U.S.A.I.D. had permission from the National Archives and Records Administration to destroy the documents.
New York State Bar Association Condemns Executive Orders Punishing Lawyers for Representing Causes the Trump Administration Doesn’t Like
Domenick Napoletano, president of the New York State Bar Association, issued a statement condemning the Trump administration’s retaliation against lawyers who represent causes the president does not like.
New York State Bar Association Files Amicus Brief To Preserve the Integrity of Attorney Disciplinary Process
The New York State Bar Association filed a motion to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit urging the court to keep unproven allegations against New York attorneys confidential as they have been for 80 years. The association seeks to submit an amicus curiae brief in the appeal of Civil Rights Corps v. Hector D. LaSalle. In the brief, the association contends that a U.S. District Court judge in the Southern District of New York erred when he ruled that attorney disciplinary records sought by six law school professors should be made public.
Top Law Firms Defend Overhaul of America’s Business Court
Twenty-one top law firms will publish a letter strongly supporting legislation that would override a series of decisions by the Delaware Court of Chancery. These rulings have prompted backlash from companies and led many, including Meta, to contemplate moving their incorporation outside the state. According to the law firms, the bill is “an important step in maintaining Delaware’s status as the jurisdiction of choice for sophisticated clients when they create companies.”
China’s Tariffs on U.S. Agricultural Products Take Effect
Beijing began imposing tariffs on many farm products from the United States, for which China is the largest overseas market. It is the latest escalation of a trade fight between the world’s two largest economies. The Chinese government announced the tariffs shortly after Trump raised tariffs on Chinese products for the second time since he took office in January. The Chinese tariffs will include a levy of 15% on U.S. products like chicken, wheat, and corn, as well as 10% on products like soybeans, pork, beef, and fruit.
These Words Are Disappearing in the New Trump Administration
Agencies have flagged hundreds of words to limit or avoid, according to a compilation of government documents, as Trump seeks to purge the federal government of “woke” initiatives. The listed terms appeared in government memos, official and unofficial agency guidance, and other documents. Some ordered the removal of these words from public-facing websites, or ordered the elimination of other materials in which they might be included. In other cases, federal agency managers advised caution in the terms’ usage without instituting an outright ban. Additionally, the presence of some terms was used to automatically flag for review some grant proposals and contracts that could conflict with Trump’s executive orders.
U.S. Energy Secretary Pledges to Reverse Focus on Climate Change
Chris Wright, the new U.S. energy secretary, delivered a scathing critique of the Biden administration’s energy policies and efforts to fight climate change and promised a “180 degree pivot.” Wright, a former fracking executive, has emerged as the most forceful promoter of Trump’s plans to expand American oil and gas production and dismantle virtually every federal policy aimed at curbing global warming.
Kennedy Links Measles Outbreak to Poor Diet and Health, Citing Fringe Theories
In a sweeping interview, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health and human services secretary, outlined a strategy for containing the measles outbreak in West Texas that strayed far from mainstream science, relying heavily on fringe theories about prevention and treatments. He issued a muffled call for vaccinations in the affected community, but said the choice was a personal one. He suggested that measles vaccine injuries were more common than known, contrary to extensive research. He asserted that natural immunity to measles, gained through infection, somehow also protected against cancer and heart disease, a claim not supported by research. He cheered on questionable treatments like cod liver oil, and said that local doctors had achieved “almost miraculous and instantaneous” recoveries with steroids or antibiotics. The worsening measles outbreak has infected nearly 200 people and killed a child, the first such death in the United States in 10 years.
E.P.A. Plans to Close All Environmental Justice Offices
The Trump administration intends to eliminate Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) offices responsible for addressing the disproportionately high levels of pollution facing poor communities, according to a memo from Lee Zeldin, the agency administrator. In the internal memo, Zeldin informed agency leaders that he was directing “the reorganization and elimination” of the offices of environmental justice at all 10 EPA regional offices as well as the one in Washington. This effectively ends three decades of work at the EPA to try to ease the pollution that burdens poor and minority communities, which are frequently located near highways, power plants, industrial plants, and other polluting facilities. Studies have shown that residents of those communities have higher rates of asthma, heart disease, and other health problems, compared with the national average.
DOGE Makes Its Latest Errors Harder to Find
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has repeatedly posted error-filled data that inflated its success at saving taxpayer money. However, after a series of news reports called out those mistakes, the group changed its tactics. It began making its new mistakes harder to find, leaving its already secretive activities even less transparent than before.
Kash Patel Pushes Command Changes at FBI
FBI Director Kash Patel is pushing ahead with a plan to decentralize the agency’s command structure and divide the bureau into three regions. The move will mean that in effect, the top agents in 52 field offices around the country will no longer answer to the deputy director, a significant departure from the way the bureau has done business. Instead, those field offices will report to three branch directors at headquarters who will be in charge of the East, West, and Central regions. The remaining three FBI offices and the largest in the country — New York, Washington, and Los Angeles — will answer to the deputy director.
Republican Refers to Transgender Member as a Man, Cutting Short a House Hearing
Republican Representative Keith Self of Texas abruptly adjourned a congressional hearing after being challenged by Representative William Keating, Democrat of Massachusetts, for referring to Representative Sarah McBride, Democrat of Delaware and the first openly transgender lawmaker in Congress, as a man.
Justice Dept. Official Says She Was Fired After Opposing Restoring Mel Gibson’s Gun Rights
Elizabeth G. Oyer, the Justice Department’s pardon attorney, was dismissed a day after she refused to recommend that the actor Mel Gibson, a prominent Trump supporter, should have his gun rights restored, according to Oyer and others familiar with the situation. Oyer described the sequence of events as an alarming departure from longstanding practice, one that put public safety and the department’s integrity at risk. Gibson had lost his gun rights as a result of a 2011 domestic violence misdemeanor conviction.
Khalil Sues Columbia and Lawmakers to Keep Activists’ Names Secret
Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University graduate detained by the Trump administration last weekend, and seven current students asked a federal court to block the school from producing student disciplinary records to a House committee that demanded them last month. The lawsuit said that the committee’s request and the school’s compliance with it would violate Khalil’s and the students’ First Amendment rights and the university’s obligation to protect student privacy.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/13/nyregion/mahmoud-khalil-sues-columbia.html?searchResultPosition=1
Arlington Cemetery Website Loses Pages on Black Veterans, Women, and Civil War
Materials on the Arlington National Cemetery website highlighting the graves of Black and female service members have vanished as the Trump administration purges government websites of references to diversity and inclusion. Among the obscured pages are cemetery guides focused on Black soldiers, women’s military service, and Civil War veterans. The cemetery, which is operated by the Army, said in a statement that it remained committed to “sharing the stories of military service and sacrifice to the nation with transparency and professionalism” and that it was working to restore links to the content.
Wary Markets Rebound as Europe and Canada Retaliate Against Trump Tariffs
After Trump’s global tariffs on steel and aluminum took effect, the European Union and Canada announced billions of dollars in levies on American goods.
For Duterte, Signs of a Reckoning Years After He Ordered a Deadly Drug War
Rodrigo Duterte, the former Philippine president, was arrested in Manila and flown to The Hague to face International Criminal Court (ICC) charges of crimes against humanity.
Syria Has a New Temporary Constitution. Here Are the Highlights.
Syria’s new government has adopted a temporary constitution that concentrates much power in the hands of the interim president and retains Islamic law as the foundation of the legal system. The interim president, Ahmed al-Shara, signed the constitutional declaration following the dissolution in January of the previous constitution under the authoritarian president, Bashar al-Assad. Al-Shara, who led the overthrow of Al-Assad in December, had promised to form an inclusive government and he heralded this as the beginning of what he called “a new history” for the nation after decades of dictatorship and a long civil war. The declaration guarantees “freedom of opinion, expression, information, publication and press.” If upheld, this would be a dramatic departure from the draconian surveillance state under Al-Assad.
Emboldened by Trump, Serbia’s Leader Cracks Down on Activist Groups
Serbia’s leadership has been roiled by months of nationwide protests it blames on foreign meddling. Encouraged by the Trump administration’s assault on U.S.A.I.D., Serbian authorities sent dozens of police officers, many of them armed, to raid the offices of four nongovernmental organizations. The government justified the action by referring to the Trump administration’s dismantling of the American aid agency and its denunciation by Elon Musk as a “criminal organization.”
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