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| | An American family slain in Mexico | Mothers and children die in a gunfire ambush, and a Trump ally throws a major curveball at the impeachment inquiry. It's Tuesday's news. | | |
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Impeachment testimony takes a turn. Keanu Reeves might be off the market. And an act of "incomprehensible" evil in Mexico. |
It's Ashley. Here's the news you need to know. |
But first, does wine pair well with space? A European startup sent a dozen bottles of Bordeaux to the International Space Station to see how it affects wine's aging. 🍷 |
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Nine Americans killed in a suspected drug cartel ambush |
At least nine members of an American family – three mothers and their young children – were killed in a shooting that relatives suspect might have been a case of mistaken identity by Mexican drug cartel gunman. The victims – all U.S. citizens – were driving to a wedding in LaBaron, a Mormon community in the state of Chihuahua, when their vehicles were hit by gunfire, which caused one to explode in flames. The attack happened in a remote area where the Sinaloa cartel has been engaged in a turf war with another gang. Authorities said eight children were found alive after escaping from the vehicles and hiding in the brush; several had bullet wounds or other injuries. |
Impeachment inquiry: We weren't expecting this |
A close Trump ally threw a major curveball at the impeachment inquiry of President Donald Trump. The House committees overseeing the inquiry released transcripts of testimony by Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, and Kurt Volker, the former U.S. special envoy for Ukraine, on Tuesday. Both are witnesses in the investigation and were asked whether military aid to Ukraine was held up for political favors. Both addressed quid pro quo, but their testimonies were quite different: |
• | Sondland pretty much admitted quid pro quo: He made a big-time amendment to his original testimony Monday. In the update, he said he had indeed communicated a quid pro quo to a Ukrainian official, linking U.S. aid to Ukrainian investigations. | • | Volker, on the other hand, saw no proof of quid pro quo: Volker said he had never seen any proof that the president withheld a meeting with Ukraine's president until the country launched investigations into his political rival Joe Biden. | |
More: A visual timeline of the text messages in the Trump-Ukraine affair. |
Pathway of the impeachment process: How it works, where we are. |
| Gordon Sondland, the United States Ambassador to the European Union, adresses the media during a press conference at the US Embassy to Romania in Bucharest September 5, 2019. | DANIEL MIHAILESCU, AFP/Getty Images | |
What everyone's talking about |
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The key to this woman's survival at sea? Hard candy |
For nearly two days lost at sea, a New Zealand woman survived in an inflatable dinghy off southeastern Greece by eating hard candy. Kushila Stein, 47, was adrift in the Aegean Sea when the Hellenic Coast Guard rescued her Sunday. "She has been trained in sea survival so is quite competent. I think that might have saved her life," Stein's mother told New Zealand news outlet Stuff. After the rescue, Stein told her mother, "I still have one lolly left, Mum," according to the New Zealand Herald. |
| A handout photo made available by the Hellenic Coast Guard shows Kushila Stein from New Zealand in her rubber dinghy after being rescued by the Hellenic Coast Guard, north of Crete Island, Greece. | HELLENIC COAST GUARD HANDOUT, EPA-EFE | |
It's Election Day for millions, aka a rehearsal for 2020 |
People around the country voted today in a series of state and municipal elections that could provide some insight into the nation's political mood heading into the 2020 election. Here's a look at what to watch for when the results come in. |
Real quick |
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We've got an important message from space |
NASA's intrepid spacecraft Voyager 2 has officially left the building. And by building, I mean the heliosphere. And by heliosphere, I mean the massive bubble of magnetic fields created by our sun. One year ago today, Voyager 2 became the second spacecraft in history to reach interstellar space, the region between the stars. Monday, several research papers described what scientists observed throughout Voyager 2's historic crossing. The findings help paint a picture of the "cosmic shoreline" where the environment created by our sun ends and the vast ocean of interstellar space begins. I wish we could say it left the solar system, but that isn't really the case (yet!). |
| Voyager 2 reached interstellar space on Nov. 5, 2018. | NASA, Getty Images | |
A break from the news |
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This is a compilation of stories from across the USA TODAY Network. |
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