Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 yearsNew Foto - Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 years

NEW YORK (AP) — A Mexican navy tall ship'sfatal collision withthe Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday highlighted a hazard that has worried seafarers for nearly 150 years. Even before construction on the bridge was finished in the late 19th century, the topmast of a passing U.S. Navy ship hit the span's wires — and vessels continued to clip the iconic New York City structure for many years. But historians say Saturday's crash appears to be the first boat collision with the bridge to take the lives of crew members. Two Mexican naval cadets died and more were injured after the training ship Cuauhtémoc's masts crashed into the bridge as dozens of sailors stood harnessed high up in rigging as part of a public display. "That's the first and possibly only time where there's been a fatality onboard of a ship that struck the Brooklyn Bridge," said Dominique Jean-Louis, chief historian at the Center for Brooklyn History, part of the Brooklyn Public Library. Opened in 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge spans the East River, connecting its eponymous borough's downtown to Manhattan. The highest point of the bridge's underside is listed at 135 feet (41.1 meters) on average above the water, but it fluctuates with the tides. During construction, a warehouse owner sued state officials — first to stop the bridge and then for compensation — arguing that some ships still had topmasts that exceeded the height. The case made it all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, which dismissed the lawsuit, determining that the bridge did not unduly restrict ship navigation. Before that decision, however, at least one ship had already tangled with the still-under-construction crossing. According to an 1878 report in the New York Daily Tribune, the U.S. Navy wooden steam training ship USS Minnesota was headed toward the high point of the bridge after planning ahead and lowering its topmast. But at the last minute, it had to change course to avoid an oncoming ship, sending it to an area with lower clearance and striking the bridge's wires. Nobody was reported injured. By the time the bridge was complete, steam ships were transporting the lion's share of goods, and high-masted ships were waning in importance, said Richard Haw, professor of interdisciplinary studies at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the author oftwo booksabout the Brooklyn Bridge. "They go from sail ships to steam ships," Haw said. "You don't need a huge clearance." Yet mast strikes continued, including at least two reported in the 1920s — one of which was with the U.S. Navy's flagship USS Seattle, which had "a little wooden pole that was a little too high," Jean-Louis said. In 1941, the SS Nyassa was bringing hundreds of refugees to New York City when the captain miscalculated the tide and part of its mast was bent into a right angle by the bridge's underspan, according to a New York Times article at the time that described a "crunching sound." Among the refugees on board was Hedwig Ehrlich, widow of the Nobel Prize-winning Jewish German scientist Paul Ehrlich, as she headed to live with daughters in San Francisco. As the 20th century went on, ships got taller and wider. And they still required mast-like appendages for observation and communication. A shipyard just north of the bridge, now known as the Brooklyn Navy Yard, churned out larger and larger ships during and after World War II, including aircraft carriers that could barely fit beneath the bridge. One photo from 1961 shows the USS Constellation aircraft carrier leaving the navy yard and passing underneath the Brooklyn Bridge with a mast that folded down onto the ship's deck, specially designed to get out into the harbor. In the past two decades, at least three minor strikes have been reported against the bridge's underside or base, including a crane being pulled via barge in 2012, which tore into temporary scaffolding mounted underneath the bridge. A similar crane accident damaged peripheral bridge maintenance equipment in July of 2023, according to a Coast Guard incident report. None of the modern accident reports document serious injuries. But off the water, the bridge has been a site of tragedy long before Saturday's crash. More than 20 people were killed and countless crippled while building it, including workers injured by decompression sickness, a little-understood affect of working in underwater in boxes sunk to the riverbed. Twelve people died in a panic-driven stampede among crowds visiting the bridge shortly after it opened to the public in 1883.

Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 years

Ships have been hitting the Brooklyn Bridge for nearly 150 years NEW YORK (AP) — A Mexican navy tall ship'sfatal collision withthe Brook...
Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rightsNew Foto - Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rights

A video from an immigration lawyer offering advice on what rights U.S. citizens and visa holders have if stopped by customs at airports is going viral on TikTok, racking up more than 8 million views. Thepost from New York-based immigration lawyer Brad Bernsteincomes on the heels of accounts from TikTok users who say they are American citizens but were detained for hours and had their phones or luggage searched when entering the country. The videos — and the detailsTwitch streamer Hasan Piker sharedabout being stopped and questioned at Chicago O'Hare International Airport — have many wondering what to do and what rights they have if they are detained by U.S. customs officials. Bernstein said one of the biggest questions he hears is whether all constitutional rights are protected during CBP screenings. "The Supreme Court has ruled that the Constitution doesn't apply until you've entered the United States of America," Bernstein said. "And although you're physically in the United States at an airport, you're not considered to have entered the United States under immigration law until you pass through immigration and customs." NBC News legal analyst Danny Cevallos explained that the Supreme Court has held "that routine searches at the border do not require a warrant, probable cause, or even reasonable suspicion, due to the government's inherent sovereign interest in protecting its territorial integrity." Bernstein said that individual protections depend heavily on a traveler's citizenship status, and that those on visas or green card holders have less protection. "A U.S. citizen has to be allowed back into the United States. The government cannot take your U.S. passport away, they cannot take your citizenship away," Bernstein said. But he advised caution. "There is a much lower standard of constitutional authority at the airport, versus just walking around locally on our streets, where the Fourth Amendment of illegal search and seizure would apply," he said. Statistically, advanced searches are rare, but it's important to plan ahead, Bernstein said. Travelers who want to protect their privacy going through CBP should only take electronics that are absolutely necessary when traveling, log out of cloud-based services and consider taking a secondary phone when going abroad, he advised. Above all, even though these searches can be intimidating, it's best to stay calm and tell the truth. "The more you say no, the more questions you're going to have. And the longer your stay at the airport is going to be," Bernstein said. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, U.S. citizens don't need to carry proof of citizenship with them in the country. "If you have valid immigration documents and are over the age of 18, the law does require you to carry those documents on you. If you are asked by an immigration agent to produce them, it is advisable to show the documents to the agent or you risk being arrested,"the ACLU website reads. TikTok creator Savanna, who says she is an American citizen born in the U.S., said she was stopped and questioned by CBP for more than two hours at an airport in Miami. Her video about the encounter has receivedmore than 2 million viewson TikTok. In it, she describes customs officials scrolling through her socials and repeatedly questioning her about how much money she made daily on TikTok. "I've been traveling out of the country and I've never had this problem," she told NBC News. "But the one thing that did change between February and now, or February and April, was that I created 'Trump for the Dump.'" Savanna said the line is a satirical clothing brand she created with the intention of donating the profits to humanitarian causes. The Department of Homeland Securityreposted Savanna's video on Xand said that she was not stopped because of political reasons. "Lawful travellers have nothing to fear from these measures, which are designed to protect our nation's security," DHS said in a statement, adding "allegations that political beliefs trigger inspections or removals are baseless and irresponsible." DHS saidits datashows that overall border searches have increased since last year but advanced screenings have slightly declined. Cevallos pointed to a recent federal case that determined "basic" electronic device searches at the border are constitutional. "This has been criticized as an 'interpretation of the Fourth Amendment that threatens individuals' privacy interests at the border,'" Cevallos said. Piker, the streamer and American political pundit known on Twitch as HasanAbi, said he believes he was stopped by CBP on his return trip from France on May 11 because of his political views,a reasoning that DHS also disputes. "I was invited to the back room to be questioned on my opinions on a multitude of different things from Donald Trump to Israel, Palestine," he told NBC News. Piker said he wasn't surprised when he was asked to step aside by agents. "I knew that it was most likely going to happen because I'd heard so many reports of this happening to immigration attorneys and even TikTokers and stuff that have said negative things about Donald Trump," he said. DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said ina post on Xthat Piker was "Lying for 'likes.'" "I thought it was really funny cause they admitted that it happened," Piker said in response to McLaughlin's post. "The parts that they omitted that I think is very nefarious is that like, is this an admission that asking people about their loyalty to the current administration or their opinion on Israel-Palestine is a part of a routine investigation? Because there's nothing routine about that at all. It's not pertinent to my entry into the country as an American citizen."

Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rights

Unsure of what to do if you're detained at customs? Social videos are walking people through their rights A video from an immigration la...
Netanyahu says even his allies can't take "images of mass famine" in Gaza

A soaring death toll in theGaza Stripand an increasingly vocal outcry over near-famine conditions in the Palestinian territory are piling pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to accept a negotiated ceasefire with Hamas and drop his country's near-total blockade of the enclave. Gaza's Hamas-run Health Ministry said Tuesday that at least 87 people were killed by Israeli military strikes over the last 24 hours alone.The Israel Defense Forces haveramped up operations in Gazaover the last week, killing hundreds of people, many of them women and children, in what Netanyahu's government insists is legitimate self-defense and aimed entirely at securing the return of58 hostagesstill held by Hamas and its allies in Gaza, and destroying the group. Israel blames Hamas — long designated a terrorist organization by the U.S., Israel and the European Union — for all casualties in Gaza, accusing the group of operating in and around civilian infrastructure.On Monday, for the first time in two and a half months, Netanyahu permitted a handful of trucks carrying aid to enter Gaza. He said he had been pressured into easing the total blockade by allies who could not tolerate "images of mass famine." There were unconfirmed reports on Tuesday that as many as 100 trucks had been allowed to cross the Gaza border. But the United Nations' World Food Program said this week that a few trucks would be just a drop in the bucket given the vast and urgent need for food in Gaza, where more than 2 million Palestinians have been trapped for more than two years of blistering war. Thousands of trucks have been lined up for weeks just across the Gaza border, waiting to cross in. No food, fresh water or medicine had entered the territory for nearly 80 days under the Israeli blockade. Hunger is so rife that full-blown famine is once again stalking Gaza's population, according to the WFP's director for the Palestinian territories, Antoine Renard, who's just returned from the enclave. "You have around an estimated 14,000 children that I know are facing what we call severe acute malnutrition," he told CBS News on Monday, meaning those children could die without rapid intervention. "We always wait for when 'famine' is on. But when famine is on, it's already too late. That will be a failure of all the international community." Until this week, Israel's government had insisted there were no food shortages in Gaza. But for the first time, in a messageposted Monday on social media, Netanyahu acknowledged that Gaza is nearing a hunger crisis."Our best friends in the world, senators that I know as enthusiastic Israel supporters, who I know for many years, are come to me and telling me, 'we give you all the support for a final victory — arms, support on your maneuvers to destroy Hamas, support at the U.N. Security Council. There is one thing we cannot endure — pictures of mass famine. This is something we are unable to witness. We will not be able to support you.'" As a result of that pressure, he's allowing the limited amount of aid into Gaza. Renard said the WFP had sufficient food on standby, ready to enter, to feed the entire population of Gaza for a month. "It must stop," he said of the Israeli blockade. "The civilian population shouldn't be trapped. There's no reason, actually, to hold them accountable for what they are not part of." Netanyahu did not name any of the nations exerting pressure on his government to ease the blockade, and while Israel's closest and most vital ally the U.S. was almost certainly the country he referred to when mentioning long-friendly senators, it's not just the U.S. calling for a resolution to the crisis — and other countries have been doing so more assertively. In a strongly worded statement published Monday, the leaders of the U.K., France and Canada called the level of human suffering in Gaza intolerable, and they threatened to take action. "The Israeli Government's denial of essential humanitarian assistance to the civilian population is unacceptable and risks breaching International Humanitarian Law," the countries said in a joint statement. "We oppose any attempt to expand settlements in the West Bank ... We will not hesitate to take further action, including targeted sanctions." Netanyahu decried the threat, saying in a statement that by "asking Israel to end a defensive war for our survival before Hamas terrorists on our border are destroyed and by demanding a Palestinian state, the leaders in London, Ottowa and Paris are offering a huge prize for the genocidal attack on Israel on October 7 while inviting more such atrocities." "The war can end tomorrow if the remaining hostages are released, Hamas lays down its arms, its murderous leaders are exiled and Gaza is demilitarized," said the Israeli leader. "No nation can be expected to accept anything less and Israel certainly won't. This is a war of civilization over barbarism. Israel will continue to defend itself by just means until total victory is achieved." Israel has escalated its war with a new offensive that has killed nearly 600 people over the last week, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health. Doctors are running out of supplies — barely able to treat malnourished children, let alone the hundreds of people injured by the Israeli strikes who stream in day after day. The war in Gaza was sparked by the Hamas-led terrorist attack on Oct. 7, 2023, which killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and left 251 others as hostages in Gaza. Israel's retaliatory war has destroyed large swaths of Gaza, displaced 90% of its population — most of them multiple times — and killed more than 53,500 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Hamas-run Health Ministry. Watch: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem asked what habeas corpus is in Senate hearing Rubio interrupted at Senate hearing during remarks on changes at State Department Car bomb outside Palm Springs fertility clinic was act of terrorism, officials say

Netanyahu says even his allies can't take "images of mass famine" in Gaza

Netanyahu says even his allies can't take "images of mass famine" in Gaza A soaring death toll in theGaza Stripand an increasi...
Exclusive: Civil suit against Sean 'Diddy' Combs had fabricated rape kit evidenceNew Foto - Exclusive: Civil suit against Sean 'Diddy' Combs had fabricated rape kit evidence

Claims of a sexual assault and a backlogged rape kit that resulted ina $100 million default judgmentagainstSean "Diddy" Combsare not true, USA TODAY has confirmed. And as the rap mogul's criminal trial unfolds in New York, his lawyers have succeeded in having the civil award thrown out. The civil suit against Combs, who is standing trial on criminal charges of racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution, was filed by a Michigan prison inmate who alleged Combs sexually assaulted him in 1997. The inmate, Derrick Lee Cardello-Smith, claimed hisrape kit– like hundreds of thousands of others around the country – had sat untested for years. Cardello-Smith alleged Combs assaulted him in Detroit, whereWayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthywas at the forefront of the national movement to clear the rape kit backlog. He claimed that when his kit was finally tested in 2024, the DNA evidence in it matched Combs. But a spokeswoman for Worthy confirmed exclusively to USA TODAY that Cardello-Smith's allegations were false. "Derek Lee Cardello-Smith did not have a rape kit that was part of the Detroit Sexual Assault Kit Project," Maria Miller told USA TODAY in an email. "We do not know of a SAK (sexual assault kit) being tested in 2024 related to him." A few days after Lenawee County Circuit Court Judge Anna Marie Anzalone awarded the $100 million default judgment in a Michigan courtroom in September 2024, she reversed it. Default judgments are entered when someone fails to respond to a lawsuit. But Combs was never served with the suit and didn't know it had been filed until he read about the judgment in the media, according to court records. Shortly thereafter, Combs, 55, retained Michigan law firm Fink Bressack, which argued successfully that the award to Cardello-Smith should be nullified. The suit itself remained pending, however. Combs' attorneys had the suit moved from state court to federal court, and in January 2025, U.S. District Judge Judith E. Levy dismissed it with prejudice, meaning it cannot be re-filed. Since then, Cardello-Smith has made numerous attempts to keep the case alive. So far, he has been unsuccessful. Cardello-Smith is serving up to 75 years in prison after being convicted of criminal sexual conduct and kidnapping. He filed the suit against Combs without a lawyer. When the default judgment was handed down, Marc Agnifilo, one of the attorneys representing Combs at his criminal trial, said Combs had never heard of Cardello-Smith. Diddy on trial newsletter:Step inside the courtroom as music mogul faces sex-crimes charges "This man is a convicted felon and sexual predator, who has been sentenced on 14 counts of sexual assault and kidnapping over the last 26 years," Agnifilo wrote in a statement to USA TODAY. "His resumė now includes committing a fraud on the court from prison." Cardello-Smith's suit, originally filed in June 2024, is among dozens of civil lawsuits alleging sexual assaults and other misdeeds by Combs dating back to the 1990s. One of them was filed by his former girlfriend, Casandra Ventura Fine, who can be seen being physically assaulted by Combs on surveillance video from a Los Angeles hotel in 2016. Combs' legal team has said the video, first made public by CNN in 2024, had been altered.CNN has denied the allegation. Ventura Fine, better known by her stage name, Cassie, testified for four days during Combs' criminal trial in the Southern District of New York, which began May 5 with jury selection and is expected to last at least through the end of June. Combs' attorneys have said they believe her suit, which Combs settled for $20 million the day after it was filed, prompted the criminal investigation against him. Gina Barton is an investigative reporter at USA TODAY. She can be reached at (262) 757-8640 orgbarton@gannett.com. Follow her on X@writerbartonor on Bluesky@writerbarton.bsky.social. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Exclusive: Michigan man's rape allegation against Diddy was fabricated

Exclusive: Civil suit against Sean 'Diddy' Combs had fabricated rape kit evidence

Exclusive: Civil suit against Sean 'Diddy' Combs had fabricated rape kit evidence Claims of a sexual assault and a backlogged rape k...
Taylor Swift Returns to Social Media to Support Kobe Bryant's Daughter Natalia as She Graduates from USCNew Foto - Taylor Swift Returns to Social Media to Support Kobe Bryant's Daughter Natalia as She Graduates from USC

Gilbert Flores/Billboard via Getty; Natalia Bryant/TikTok Taylor Swift showed her support for the late Kobe Bryant's daughter Natalia as she recently graduated cum laude from USC Natalia and three friends shared a clip wearing their commencement stoles alongside Swift's song, "Nothing New" The track is particularly appropriate for 22-year-old Natalia as it features the lyric, "How can a person know everything at 18 but nothing at 22?" Taylor Swiftis showing her support forKobe Bryant's daughter,Natalia. On Sunday, May 18, Kobe's eldest daughter, Natalia, shared aTikTok videoof her lip-syncing to Swift's song "Nothing New (Taylor's Version)" alongside three friends. And who should have liked the video, but Swift herself! The clip shows the four recent University of Southern California graduates wearing matching white minidresses with their red-and-gold commencement stoles. The quartet is smiling widely and throwing their hands in the air as they celebrate their achievement in the 15-second clip. The lyrics of 35-year-old Swift's tune are particularly appropriate for 22-year-old Natalia as they include the line, "How can a person know everything at 18 but nothing at 22? And will you still want me when I'm nothing new?" touching on the uncertainty new college graduates often feel. Natalia Bryant/TikTok Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Nataliaincluded a fewspecial nods to her late father Kobewhile accepting her diploma from USC on Friday, May 16. After she graduated cum laude her mother Vanessa shared the sweet ways in which she honored the basketball legend,who died in 2020, via avideoshared to Instagram. The clip showed that Natalia's graduation sash had "Thank you Mom & Dad," embroidered inside in USC's signature yellow and red colors. The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! The sash also featured her father's sheath logo, which, in a 2014Esquireinterview, Kobe explained was inspired by a samurai sword and meant "raw talent." Mat Hayward/TAS23/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! ​​And while her late father, who tragicallydiedalong with her sisterGianna Bryantand seven others in a helicopter crash in 2020, couldn't be there in person, the Bryants had the support of their Lakers family in ownerJeanie Bussat the ceremony. Buss, 63, personally Natalia her diploma on stage. "Thank you@jeaniebussfor making this milestone even more special.#LakersFamily," Vanessa wrote in her caption on Instagram, with Natalia adding, "Thank you@jeaniebuss❤️." Swifties were excited to see her presence on social media in liking Natalia's post, as Swfit has been taking some time away from the spotlight sincewrapping her record-breaking Eras tourat the end of last year. And with her boyfriend, Kansas City Chiefs tight endTravis Kelce, 35, also enjoying the off-season, the pair aremaking the most of some time off together. "They have been traveling nonstop and very much enjoy it," a source told PEOPLE exclusively back in April. "They are hanging out with friends, too. It's a special time for them." Read the original article onPeople

Taylor Swift Returns to Social Media to Support Kobe Bryant's Daughter Natalia as She Graduates from USC

Taylor Swift Returns to Social Media to Support Kobe Bryant's Daughter Natalia as She Graduates from USC Gilbert Flores/Billboard via Ge...

 

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