
FBI Director: 13 explosive mail bombs 'were not hoax devices'FBI Director Chris Wray says it's too early to determine what the suspect's motives may have been, but made clear that the devices mailed to prominent Democrats "were not hoax devices."
NBC News
Arrested pipe bomb suspect named as Cesar Sayoc of Aventura, FloridaNBC News’ Tom Winter shares details learned from several law enforcement officials on the man arrested in connection with mail bombs.
MSNBC
Trump confirms arrest of package suspectU.S. President Donald Trump on Friday said authorities found "a needle in a haystack" after a suspect was taken into custody in relation to the recent spate of suspicious packages sent to prominent Democrats and others. Trump also said the U.S. is no place for "political violence." Rough Cut (no reporter narration).
Reuters

FBI Director: 13 explosive mail bombs 'were not hoax devices'
NBC News1:24

Arrested pipe bomb suspect named as Cesar Sayoc of Aventura, Florida
MSNBC2:08

Trump confirms arrest of package suspect
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Matthew Shepard remembered at National Cathedral
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See van owned by suspect in mail bombs case
CNN1:01

Children attacked at Chinese kindergarten
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'Holy Grail of paper money' sells at auction for $2M
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Biden: 'Words matter' after pipe bomb scare
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Police: Kroger shooter tried entering black church
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Lemon: This is how Presidents used to respond
CNN8:47

Two dead after falling from Yosemite National Park cliff
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Is the unemployment rate low because Americans are working multiple jobs? | Fact Checker
The Washington Post1:27

Exclusive border wall tour with DHS Secretary Nielsen
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Trump announces 'revolutionary' plan to lower prescription drug costs
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A caravan of migrants is now crossing Mexico
Associated Press1:10

‘Whose business is it who someone loves?’: Matthew Shephard’s parents reflect 20 years later
The Washington Post3:40
Thousands of motorists found themselves stranded on Tuesday in what looks from above like a 50-lane parking lot on the G4 Beijing-Hong Kong-Macau Expressway, one of the country’s busiest roads. Some are dubbing the traffic jam a “carpocalypse,” while others are calling it “carmageddon.”
Though foggy weather may have played a role, the real culprit is a new checkpoint that forces traffic to merge from 50 lanes down to just 20, according to The People’s Daily. Traffic was reportedly backed up for hours.
China is no stranger to these ridiculous traffic jams, especially on national highways. In 2010, gridlock spanning more than 74 miles on the stretch between the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and Beijing left drivers with nowhere to go for a staggering 12 days. That time blame fell on everything from road construction to broken down cars and fender-benders.
People played cards to pass the time while nearby vendors took the opportunity to sell food and water at premium prices. “If you said ‘no’ or complained about the price they threaten to break your [wind]shields,” one driver told the Inner Mongolia Morning Post.
In 2012, the government’s decision to grant free road travel during the same national holiday turned 24 motorways in 16 provinces into a massive parking lot with more than 85 million people stuck in their cars.