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Man shot inside West Philly convenience store on Tuesday night, police say
A person entered a convenience store in the Kingsessing section of Philadelphia on Tuesday and opened fire, shooting one man, a police source told NBC10. The shooting occurred at around 9 p.m. at the Chester Ave Convenience Store, Inc 24/7 at the 5500 block of Chester Avenue, police said. There were around four other people inside the convenience store at the time along with the man shot, police said. There are additional resources for people or communities that have endured gun violence in Philadelphia. Further information can be found here. The man shot, who has not yet been identified, has been taken to the hospital and is in stable condition, police said. No arrests or motives have been announced at this time. This is a developing story; check back for more updates.

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Trump administration says DOGE may have misused Social Security data
The Justice Department alerted a federal judge in Maryland that members of the Department of Government Efficiency working with the Social Security Administration may have misused data it obtained from that agency. In a court filing Friday, Justice Department officials said SSA representatives told them a recent review found that in March, after a temporary restraining order by the Maryland judge blocking DOGE’s access to SSA went into effect, an unnamed political advocacy group contacted two members of the agency’s DOGE team “with a request to analyze state voter rolls that the advocacy group had acquired.” The advocacy group’s stated aim, the Justice Department writes, “was to find evidence of voter fraud and to overturn election results in certain States.” Politico first reported on the Justice Department court filing. Trump administration 15 hours ago Trump expresses frustration and says his team has made ‘some mistakes' after one year in office Trump administration 21 hours ago Trump's pardons forgive financial crimes that came with hundreds of millions in punishments Trump administration 19 hours ago Trump's ICE force is sweeping America. Billions in his tax and spending cuts bill are paying for it The Justice Department said one of the two DOGE team members signed a “Voter Data Agreement” with the advocacy group. That person sent an executed agreement to the advocacy group on March 24 — four days after the temporary restraining order was issued. “At this time, there is no evidence that SSA employees outside of the involved members of the DOGE Team were aware of the communications with the advocacy group. Nor were they aware of the ‘Voter Data Agreement.’ This agreement was not reviewed or approved through the agency’s data exchange procedures,” the filing said. The Justice Department said it was unclear whether any personal information was given to the political group. SSA representatives told the Justice Department they first learned about the situation during an unrelated review in November, the month DOGE ended its operations, and the Trump administration made two Hatch Act referrals to the Office of Special Counsel in late December. U.S. District Judge Ellen Hollander in Maryland signed a temporary restraining order in March blocking DOGE from accessing “sensitive, confidential, and personally identifiable information.” The order came after a government employees union filed a lawsuit in February seeking to block billionaire Elon Musk’s DOGE from accessing Social Security, arguing it violated privacy laws. “The DOGE Team is essentially engaged in a fishing expedition at SSA, in search of a fraud epidemic, based on little more than suspicion,” Hollander wrote. “It has launched a search for the proverbial needle in the haystack, without any concrete knowledge that the needle is actually in the haystack,” while potentially putting millions of people’s private information at risk, she added. The Supreme Court in June reversed the restraining order and allowed members of DOGE to access Social Security data. The DOGE team argued last year that it had a need to access Social Security Administration records “to modernize technology” and “to maximize efficiency and productivity.” A whistleblower report filed in August accused DOGE staffers of mishandling Social Security data by putting millions of people’s data “in a cloud environment that circumvents oversight.” In Friday’s filing, the Justice Department acknowledged that some data was not handled properly. “SSA has learned that, beginning March 7, 2025, and continuing until March 17 (approximately one week before the [temporary restraining order] was entered), members of SSA’s DOGE Team were using links to share data through the third-party server ‘Cloudflare.’ Cloudflare is not approved for storing SSA data and when used in this manner is outside SSA’s security protocols,” the filing said.…

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Charles Barkley not a fan of ‘punk-ass reporters and clowns’ who dissed Lynn Jones
Charles Barkley shares his opinion on literally everything, so it was a bit surprising that we never heard from him during the brouhaha surrounding Jacksonville Free Press reporter Lynn Jones’s affirming words at the season-ending press conference for Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Liam Coen. Turns out, he was just waiting for the right opportunity. Barkley Read more... The post Charles Barkley not a fan of ‘punk-ass reporters and clowns’ who dissed Lynn Jones appeared first on Awful Announcing.

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« Ce n’est pas une question de possession, mais de mission » : pourquoi Thomas Kaplan met en vente un dessin de Rembrandt
ENCHÈRES - Estimé entre 15 et 20 millions de dollars, un lion du maître hollandais est vendu chez Sotheby’s à New York, le 4 février, par le philanthrope américain. Il reversera le bénéfice à son ONG Panthera.
