Russia's frozen assets at center of negotiations over Ukraine peace deal

BRUSSELS (AP) — Money is as central to Europe's vital support of Ukraine asammunitionand intelligence. Yet, the bloc's most viable funding mechanism involvesseizing billions of dollars worth of Russian assetsthat U.S. President Donald Trump has proposed taking over.

The first draft of Trump's28-point peace plancalled for an investment scheme for Ukraine's reconstruction controlled by the U.S. but financed by $100 billion in frozen Russian assets matched by another $100 billion from the European Union — with 50% of profits sent back to Washington.

The plan surprised Europeans, who have spent years fiercely debating the fate of Russia's frozen fortune.

Those funds are central to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen's plan to both maintain pressure on Russia and increase support for Ukraine asmysterious drone incursionsand sabotage operations rattle European capitals.

"I cannot see any scenario in which the European taxpayers alone will pay the bill," she said Wednesday in Strasbourg, France to applause from lawmakers in the European Parliament.

The 27-nation EU has sent Ukraine almost $197 billion since Russia invaded Ukraine nearly four years ago. While there'sno consensus on how to provide more aid, there's near unanimity on seizing the Russian assets to cover the estimated $153 billion for Ukraine's budget and military needs for 2026 and 2027.

The Commission has proposed paying that bill with joint debt taken on by the EU and grants by individual nations, but its main source is the $225 billion assets frozen at Euroclear, a Brussels-based financial institution.

That is, if the Trump administration doesn't get them first.

Perks of the deal

Trump's brash negotiating style left many in Europe suspecting he wants a quick deal that forces Europeans to make it work and pay for it. All while the U.S. profits.

Analysts say the proposal was essentially a U.S. attempt to snatch these assets, coming as Brussels and Washington relaunch trade negotiations over tariffs.

Agathe Demarais, a senior fellow at the Berlin-based European Council on Foreign Relations, said the proposal was akin to a "signing bonus" for a peace deal heavily slanted towards Russia.

Fabian Zuleeg, chief executive of the Brussels-based European Policy Centre, called the U.S. takeover of the assets "outrageous," but suggested it might also be acceptable to Europeans "if that is ultimately the price to pay for a good deal."

Afterintense discussionsbetween the U.S., Germany, France, the United Kingdom and representatives from the European Commission, the investment scheme was removed from the new draft peace plan. Russia has already signaled its total rejection of the new draft.

The assets frozen in Belgium

A quick seizure of Russia's frozen assets by the EU would not only secure Ukraine's defense budget, but also empower Brussels at the negotiation table, Demarais said.

"If the EU rushes to seize Russia's central bank assets before Washington grabs them, the bloc may be able to drastically curb Trump's interest in a bad deal," she said.

The European Commission has proposed taking direct ownership of the assets. Under von der Leyen's leadership, it could then issue a loan to Ukraine, which would be repaid only if Moscow provides war reparations to Kyiv.

The bulk of these assets are held in a clearinghouse called Euroclear in Belgium. However, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever hasrefused to approvetheir use as collateral for a massive loan for Ukraine, citing fears that Russia would retaliate against Belgian interests.

"We are a small country, and retaliation could be very hard," De Wever said in October.

Yet the Belgian position on thawing the assets was influenced by an impasse in local politics over deep federal debt. After months of domestic political wrangling ended last week in a deal, politicians from Riga to Lisbon started hoping that De Wever would be able to lift his objections to seizing Russian assets.

Sweden's Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard said after the Brussels meeting on Wednesday that "the clock is ticking" and that seizing the assets was "the only realistic financing option that would make a real difference and one that would be most fair to taxpayers" in Europe.

Kaja Kallas, the EU's top diplomat said Wednesday there is now broad EU support for Belgium.

"It would send the strongest message to Moscow that it cannot wait us out, and we need to make this decision fast," said Kallas.

On Dec. 18, De Wever will join the other EU national leaders for a summit in Brussels over, among other subjects, seizing the Russian assets.

Associated Press writers Geir Moulson and Kirsten Grieshaber contributed from Berlin.

Russia's frozen assets at center of negotiations over Ukraine peace deal

BRUSSELS (AP) — Money is as central to Europe's vital support of Ukraine asammunitionand intelligence. Yet, the bloc...
Higher fees for foreigners visiting US national parks stokes tourism concerns

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — A$100-per-person chargefor foreigners entering Yellowstone, Grand Canyon and other popularnational parksis stoking apprehension among some tourist-oriented businesses that it could discourage travelers, but supporters say the change will generate money for cash-strapped parks.

The new fee was announced Tuesday byInterior Secretary Doug Burgumand takes effects Jan. 1. Foreign tourists also will see a sharp price increase for an annual parks pass, to $250 per vehicle. U.S. residents will continue to be charged $80 for an annual pass.

The change in policy puts the U.S. in line with other countries that charge foreigners more to see popular attractions.

At the Whistling Swan Motel just outside Glacier National Park in northwestern Montana, owner Mark Howser estimates that about 15% of his customers are foreigners. They come from Canada, China, India, Spain, France, Germany and elsewhere, said Howser, who also runs a bakery and general store.

Those visitors already pay up to $35 per vehicle to enter the park. Adding the $100-per-person charge for foreigners, Howser said, "is a sure-fire way of discouraging people from visiting Glacier."

"It's going to hurt local businesses that cater to foreign travelers, like myself," he said. "You're discouraging them from seeing something in the country by attaching a fee to that experience."

A Yellowstone tour operator, Bryan Batchelder with Let's Go Adventure Tours and Transportation, said the charge represents "a pretty big hike" for the roughly 30% of his clientele that are foreigners. That percentage has been going up in recent years after Batchelder switched to a new booking service.

Next summer, he said, will reveal how the new charge plays out among foreign visitors. "They'll probably still come to the country, but will they visit national parks?" Batchelder asked.

The charge also will apply at Acadia, Bryce Canyon, Everglades, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain, Sequoia & Kings Canyon, Yosemite and Zion national parks.

Interior officials described the new fee structure as "America-first pricing" that will ensure international visitors contribute to maintaining parks.

For Yellowstone park alone, the $100 charge could generate $55 million annually to help fix deteriorating trails and aging bridges, said Brian Yablonski with the Property and Environment Research Center, a free market research group based in Bozeman, Montana. A recent analysis by the group said visitor numbers would drop only about 1% in response to the higher price.

If the charges for foreigners were extended to park sites nationwide, Yablonski said it could generate more than $1 billion from an estimated 14 million international visitors annually.

"Americans are already paying more than international visitors because they are paying taxes," Yablonski said. "For international visitors, this is kind of a no-brainer, common sense approach."

Many other countries charge international visitors an extra fee to visit public sites, said Melissa Weddell, director of the University of Montana's Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research. Foreign visitors to Ecuador's Galapagos Islands, for example, pay $200 per adult, while Ecuadorian nationals pay only $30, according to tourist websites for the islands.

A coalition of current and former employees park service denounced the new charge.

"In a year where national park staff have already been cut by nearly 25%, we worry this will be yet another burden for already overworked employees,″ said Emily Thompson, executive director of the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks.

"National parks should be available and accessible to all, or America's best idea will become America's greatest shakedown,″ she said.

Gerry Seavo James, deputy campaign director for Sierra Club's Outdoors for All campaign, said Trump and his administration have worked for nearly a year toundermine the park service, slashing its budget and firing thousands of staff.

"Gouging foreign tourists at the entrance gate won't provide the financial support these crown jewels of our public lands need,'' he said. "Without that support, we run the risk of our true common grounds becoming nothing more than playgrounds for the super-rich."

Interior Department spokesperson Elizabeth Peace said the agency previously did not collect data on international visitors but will start doing so in January.

Republican lawmakers in July introduced a bill in Congress that would codify the surcharge for foreign visitors to national parks. It's sponsored by West Virginia Rep. Riley Moore and MontanaRep. Ryan Zinke,who served as interior secretary during Trump's firs term.

"President Trump and Secretary Burgum are putting Americans first by asking foreign visitors to pay their fair share while holding entrance fees steady for the American people," Zinke and Moore said in a statement Wednesday.

Daly reported from Washington, D.C.

Higher fees for foreigners visiting US national parks stokes tourism concerns

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — A$100-per-person chargefor foreigners entering Yellowstone, Grand Canyon and other popularnational...
Associated Press

Rose Dexter was just a month old in August when she developed constipation, gas and tummy discomfort, symptoms that her pediatrician chalked up to normal baby development.

"Looking back at the photos, she was losing weight. She looked sick," said her dad, Stephen Dexter. "And the entire time during the decline, Mom had been saying something was wrong."

That something turned out to be infant botulism, a condition caused by the spores of a bacteria that was growing in her gut, producing a toxin considered to be the most powerful in the world. It was poisoning her nerves and gradually paralyzing her.

Rose is one of at least 37 infants who have developed botulism after consuming powdered formula from the company ByHeart.

The California Department of Health conducted tests of an opened can of formula that had been fed to an infant, and those tests found Clostridium botulinum, the bacteria that makes the toxin, spurring a nationwide recall of certain batches. Days later,the recall expandedto all ByHeart Whole Nutrition Infant Formula cans and Anywhere Pack products.

Last week, an independent company hired by the manufacturer alsofound the bacteriain five of 36 samples across three lots of unopened cans of formula.

"Based on these results, we cannot rule out the risk that all ByHeart formula across all product lots may have been contaminated," the company said Monday.

The number of illnesses in this outbreak may rise as officials reopen investigations into cases of infant botulism from earlier in the year.

Already, it is "certainly the largest foodborne illness outbreak that I've heard of in 32 years due to infant formula," said attorney Bill Marler, who specializes in litigating food poisoning cases and is representing the Dexters and two other families in lawsuits against ByHeart. "This outbreak has me very worried."

Dr. Steve Abrams, a neonatologist and expert on pediatric nutrition at the University of Texas at Austin, says he also doesn't remember ever seeing this many patients sickened by baby formula.

"This is an insane level of patients, babies affected. I think you'd have to go back very far to find this many babies affected by a disease state from contaminated formula," he said.

Despite growing numbers of illnesses, he's worried that people aren't aware of the recall or the severity of the outbreak.

"We have these disturbing reports of 10 days after the recall, people are going into stores and still find cans of ByHeart," Abrams said last week. "This recall is testing some real untested waters that we haven't seen before."

ByHeart would not comment on pending litigation, but the company saidin a statementthat it is "doing everything we can to ensure this investigation reveals solutions and aids in understanding cases of infant botulism broadly. That's what parents, the medical community, and you deserve."

Although ByHeart said November 11 that it had recalled all its infant formula, the FDAsaid last weekthat it has received reports that some of the product is still on store shelves in multiple states, including at major chain stores like Wal-Mart, Target, Kroger and Sprouts. It has also been sold through online marketplaces, including to some customers overseas.

"Consumers worldwide should not use any ByHeart brand infant formula as all ByHeart products are included in this recall," the FDA said.

Marler said that it's a retailer's responsibility to remove recalled product from the shelves and that it's not clear why the word hasn't gotten out to all stores.

Rose Dexter's parents thought she was doing well on formula until they couldn't wake her one day for a feeding. - Courtesy Steve Dexter

Searching for the source

It's also not clear how the formula – which is made with organic whole milk from grass-fed cows and advertises itself to health-conscious consumers as a "patented protein blend that's as close to human breast milk as possible" – became contaminated.

OnMonday, ByHeart said it's working to find a root source of the cases "through a rigorous audit of every step of our product development chain, from suppliers and raw ingredients, through to packaging and transportation. This includes testing more product samples."

Botulinum is a unique problem in food poisoning. Adults get sick from ingesting the toxin that's made by the bacteria, often by eating improperly canned food. Babies, whose guts aren't yet fully developed, fall ill after ingesting the spores of the bacteria, which then colonize their guts and begin producing the toxin.

"If you think about seeds, like plant seeds, spores are like the same version, only produced by bacteria," said Dr. Kristin Schill, a food microbiologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Food Research Institute. "They package their DNA and kind of like a protein shell, like a seed, that prevents them from being killed in harsh environments."

Spores can survive pasteurization, the heat treatment that destroys other types of pathogens in milk.

ByHeart formula uses whole milk powder as an ingredient, as well as whey and other dairy ingredients.

"Any of those ingredients really could be a source of spores. There could be an accumulation of spores on the equipment, I don't know," said Schill, who previously worked as a research microbiologist for the US Food and Drug Administration.

Schill said botulinum spores have been found in milk powder in the past, though at very low concentrations.A caseof infant botulism linked to powdered infant formula was published in a medical journal in 2005.

It will be critical to find out how high the concentrations of spores are in the formula that's been tested, Schill said, and those levels may help point investigators in the right direction.

The only treatment for infant botulism

Stephen Dexter said he bought the first can of ByHeart formula for Rose after they got home from the hospital and his wife, Yurany, had trouble making enough breast milk.

"It was kind of a desperate move," he said. He wasn't sure what to get and went to a natural grocery chain, "assuming they would have some alternative selections."

He looked for the most expensive formula, figuring that would be higher quality. ByHeart sells for about $40 a can. "It said all the things I was looking for. It said all the things that I thought I would not want, as it had a bunch of 'no's' on there, which seemed good to me, and so I purchased that," he said.

Rose did well on the formula, Dexter said, until she didn't.

After a few weeks of subtle changes, he tried to wake Rose one day for a normal feeding, but she wouldn't wake up. It was "the moment of 'Oh, we gotta go.' … That's when we took her to the to the emergency room."

"She couldn't move her arms or her legs," Yurany Dexter said. The doctors tried to gently lift Rose's head and shoulders to see whether she could hold them up, and she couldn't.

They did blood tests and then used a needle to collect the clear fluid that surrounds the spinal cord and the brain. Doctors told the baby's parents that they suspected muscular dystrophy or botulism.

Infant botulism "happens a little bit from the top of your head down. So you first might notice droopy eyelids or some parents notice, like, their infant's expressions are not as expressive," said Dr. Erica Pan, a pediatrician who is the state public health officer with the California Department of Health. "It's a slow progression."

That makes the early symptoms hard to spot. Each year in the United States, fewer than 200 infants develop this type of botulism, and as long as they are diagnosed in time — the condition can be fatal if it paralyzes their lungs — the cases all eventually come to the California Department of Public Health, which has an Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program.

The program is the legacy of Dr. Stephen Arnon, chief of the Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program at the California health department, who dedicated his life to finding a treatment for infantile botulism.

That treatment is called BabyBIG, for botulism immune globulin. It's made from the plasma – the clear part of the blood – of donors who've been vaccinated against botulism. It's the only treatment available in the world for the condition.

Rose Dexter got a dose of the BabyBIG botulism treatment even before her diagnosis was confirmed, but her condition began to improve soon after. - Courtesy Steve Dexter

It's also an orphan drug, meaning it's not profitable for pharmaceutical companies to make. The process is expensive and there's not a large market for it. So the California Department of Public Health makes it.

It's still very expensive, costing nearly $70,000 per treatment. But it's so effective that it cuts the time a baby may have to spend in the hospital by an average of three and a half weeks, meaning it easily saves more money than it costs.

The California health department says it has treated nearly 2,200 infants with BabyBIG since it was approved by the FDA in 2003. From August 1 through November 19, it said 107 infants nationwide have received BabyBIG treatment.

The doctors gave Rose a dose of BabyBIG partly on faith: They didn't have confirmation that she had botulism when they treated her. But soon after she got it, her condition began to improve. Stool testing finally confirmed botulism just a few weeks ago.

'I feel like it was a nightmare'

The California infant botulism program does a thorough case investigation for each patient. They ask about exposure to dust or honey, which can be another source of the spores. They also ask about what formula the child uses.

"Often, we just don't find a source," Pan said.

Starting in August, Pan said, the agency began to get more calls than usual to the infant botulism hotline. In taking the case histories, they learned that about half the babies were formula-fed, and about half of those had consumed ByHeart. That was a red flag since ByHeart accounts for only about 1% of all formula sales nationwide.

"It's a much, much higher proportion than you would expect, and that's what raised the alert," she added.

The state contacted the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to its findingsand issued a nationwide alertNovember 8, when just two specific lots of the formula were recalled.

The Dexters had no idea that the formula they were feeding their daughter might have been the source of her illness. They continued to give it to her even after she got home from the hospital.

Then they got a call asking whether they'd fed Rose from either of two specific lots of the ByHeart formula. Stephen, who repairs pianos for a living, had kept all the cans to store the parts he uses. "None of my numbers match the recalled numbers," he said, but they stopped giving the formula to Rose. Additional products were recalled on November 11.

After weeks of panic and worry about their daughter, they were relieved she was back home and getting better. But the recall has stirred all those emotions up again.

"I feel like it was a nightmare, all the things that happened for us," said Yurany, who still regrets that she wasn't able to breastfeed.

"You just keep getting more and more angry, just kind of reflecting and going, how did this happen?" Stephen said.

Rose is recovering. She continues to see a gastroenterologist every few months to make sure her gut is healing.

For now, investigators are racing to find the exact cause of the infections before more babies get sick.

"I hope we can find the source of the outbreak to prevent future infant botulism outbreaks," Schill said. "It is heartbreaking that such a vulnerable population can be subjected to a horrible disease."

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Investigators race to find the cause of botulism contamination in ByHeart infant formula

Rose Dexter was just a month old in August when she developed constipation, gas and tummy discomfort, symptoms that her pediatrician chalke...
Eric Charbonneau for The Archewell Foundation (L to R): Meghan Markle, Princess Lilibet, Prince Archie, Prince Harry

Eric Charbonneau for The Archewell Foundation

NEED TO KNOW

  • Meghan Markle and Prince Harry traveled to Los Angeles for a day of service ahead of Thanksgiving

  • The Duke and Duchess of Sussex had two guests for their recent visit to Our Big Kitchen Los Angeles: their children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet

  • The kids joined their parents in helping to prepare and package meals for food-insecure Angelenos

Meghan MarkleandPrince Harryare teaching their children to "show up, do good."

Prince Archie, 6, andPrincess Lilibet, 4, joined their parents as Harry and Meghan's Archewell Foundation teamed up withOur Big Kitchen Los Angeles (OBKLA)to prepare meals for the local community.

OBKLA is a community-run nonprofit kitchen that provides more than 70,000 nourishing meals each year for food-insecure Angelenos. During their time volunteering, the Archewell team helped package meals for Los Angeles Mercy Housing, Pico Union Project and PATH, according to a Nov. 26post on the Archewell Foundation website.

Photos from the event show Archie and Lili joining their parents on the packaging line as they rolled up balls of dough. Meghan, 44, showed off the finished product on herInstagram Storiesalong with the caption, "Show up, do good."

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex/Instagram Prince Archie and Prince Harry at Our Big Kitchen Los Angeles

In other pics, dozens of bell peppers were cut for Harry, 41, to dish out over containers of meat and rice while Meghan looked on, holding Lili's hand. Both donned Archewell hats for the occasion, and Meghan had a matching apron while Harry sported an OBKLA smock.

Earlier this year, Meghan sharedhow she and Harry are raising Archie and Liliwith a sense of community and an understanding of the value of food, using their vegetable garden and a kid-sized farmer's market stand at their Montecito, Calif., home as a teaching tool.

"We grow a lot of veggies, and part of what I want them to learn is- and gardening is really so great for children, 'cause it teaches them patience, teaches them to value and appreciate their food," Meghan said on a June 17 episode of theAspire with Emma Gredepodcast.

Eric Charbonneau for The Archewell Foundation Prince Harry and Meghan Markle dish out meals for food insecure members of the community at Our Big Kitchen Los Angeles (OBKLA)

Eric Charbonneau for The Archewell Foundation

"So you start from seed, and you watch it grow, and they wait. But with that, it's like, now do you want to sell your harvest? And do you want to share it with our community?" she continued.

"I think that's key for children to understand that, especially children who are very lucky to have a home that has privilege. You need to know that, just like manners, and taking care of the things around you, there is a value on things."

Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex/Instagram Princess Lilibet and Meghan Markle make cookies at Our Big Kitchen Los Angeles (OBKLA)

The family's day of service comes just ahead oftheir Thanksgiving festivities, which Meghan has said they like to keep fairly "low-key" at home. Her mother, Doria Ragland, lives nearby and is always welcomed for the feast, as are any friends who may not have other plans.

"I think you always make sure there's room at the table for your friends who don't have family, which is really key," she toldMarie Clairein November 2024.

With each year that passes, Meghan said, she loves making new memories with her kids as they grow and appreciate the magic of the holidays.

"Now we're at the age where I just can't wait to see it through their lens every year," she said. "We're always making sure we have something fun to do."

Read the original article onPeople

Princess Lilibet and Prince Archie Make Surprise Outing with Meghan Markle and Prince Harry Ahead of Thanksgiving

Eric Charbonneau for The Archewell Foundation NEED TO KNOW Meghan Markle and Prince Harry traveled to Los Angeles for a day of service ah...
Robert Irwin on winning 'Dancing With the Stars' 10 years after sister Bindi: 'This was everything I dreamed it would be and so much more'

Robert Irwin was crownedthe Season 34 champion ofDancing With the Starson Tuesday night.The win didn't come easy for the 21-year-old wildlife conservationist — it's been three months of constant work.

Less than a day after the live three-hour-long finale, Irwin took to Instagram to reflect on hisDancing With the Starsjourney. Irwin first thanked his dance partner, Witney Carson, for her support and guidance throughout the competition.

"This was everything I dreamed it would be and so much more, and Witney, you are the reason I could take this leap of faith and create memories that will last a lifetime," he wrote.

View this post on Instagram

Carson commented on Irwin's Instagram post, writing, "You embody what Dancing With The Stars is ALL ABOUT. The passion, the courage, the strength to try something out of your comfort zone in front of millions … I hope you know how much you deserve this moment and all the praise that comes with it. I'm beyond proud my buddy. Love you always."

Irwin, the son ofthe late "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin, isn't the first from his family to win the coveted mirror ball trophy: His older sister, Bindi, won Season 21 ofDancing With the Starsin 2015 with her dance partner, Derek Hough.

"10 years ago my sister won the mirrorball, and 11 years ago Witney won — this feels like the most special, full circle moment," Irwin wrote. "Bindi, you inspired me to embark on this adventure, and I have you to thank for setting me on the course to take this remarkable journey."

The Wildlife Warriors founder went on to thank his fellow contestants as well as the Season 34 roster of professional dancers, which includes Mark Ballas, Emma Slater, Daniella Karagach and Alan Bersten, before spotlighting his fans for their continued support. The reality TV dance competition revolves around votes from at-home viewers, mixed with scores from judges.

"The love I felt from everyone around America and the world was everything to me, it kept us going week after week," he wrote. "Thank you for letting us tell stories through our dances and allowing us to bring you on this journey, I hope it could help you find inspiration and a sense of positivity and passion. It certainly was a healing experience for me."

Bindi Irwin, Robert Irwin and Terri Irwin holding trophies.

Early in the competition, Irwin emerged asa fan favorite. Consistently at the top of the leaderboard, Irwin nabbed his first perfect score in the show's ninth week and pushed through a rib injury ahead of the finale. Crowning the Season 34 winner, according to cohost Julianne Hough, was no easy feat — Irwin and fellow finalist Alix Earle received more votes than anyone had ever received on the show, and it was the tightest call inDancing With the Starshistory.

"I lift this mirrorball trophy with a sense of gratitude that my message and everything I stand for was recognised in that ballroom," Irwin wrote on Instagram. "The lessons I learned and friendships that I have formed will be part of me forever."

Robert Irwin on winning 'Dancing With the Stars' 10 years after sister Bindi: 'This was everything I dreamed it would be and so much more'

Robert Irwin was crownedthe Season 34 champion ofDancing With the Starson Tuesday night.The win didn't come easy for ...
Getty / Instagram @thehughjackman Composite

Hugh JackmanandSutton Fostertook the next step in their relatively new relationship Wednesday ... they're now Instagram official!

Instagram / @thehughjackman

Hugh posted a pic of his new flame getting up in front of a crowd at a jazz club in New York, writing ... "@suttonlenore performing during the holidays at @cafecarlyle ... now that's an iconic NYC night! And, truly magical."

This comes after the couple wentred carpet officiallast month, holding hands and posing together at the AFI FEST screening of "Song Sung Blue."

The 'Music Man' alums and longtime friends went public with their relationship in January,showing PDAduring a dinner date in Santa Monica.

Getty

As you know, Hugh and ex-wifeDeborra-Lee Furnessannounced theend of their 27-year marriagein September 2023. Sutton called it quits with her ex,Ted Griffin, in October 2024 after 10 years of matrimony.

Sure looks like it'll be a happy holiday indeed for the good-looking couple. Congrats, you two!

Hugh Jackman Goes Instagram Official With Sutton Foster

Hugh JackmanandSutton Fostertook the next step in their relatively new relationship Wednesday ... they're now Instagram official! Hug...
Immigrant with family ties to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt is detained by ICE

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A Massachusetts woman who was once engaged to the brother of White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt remains in ICE custody two weeks after being arrested on her way to pick up the son she shares with her former fiance.

Bruna Ferreira, 33, was driving to her son's school in New Hampshire on Nov. 12 when she was pulled over in Revere, Massachusetts, her attorney, Todd Pomerleau, said Wednesday.

"She wasn't told why she was detained," he said. "She was bounced from Massachusetts, to New Hampshire, to Vermont, to Louisiana on this unconstitutional merry-go-round."

Pomerleau said Ferreira's 11-year-old son lives with her former fiance, Michael Leavitt, in New Hampshire, but they have shared custody and maintained a co-parenting relationship for many years since their engagement broke off. He said the boy lived with both parents at one point and later split his time between them, spending numerous nights and weekends with his mother.

"She was detained for no reason at all. She's not dangerous. She's not a flight risk. She's not a criminal illegal alien," he said. "She's a business owner who pays taxes and has a child who was wondering where mommy was after school two weeks ago."

Michael Leavitt did not respond to a message sent to his workplace. The White House press secretary declined comment. Karoline Leavitt grew up in New Hampshire, and made an unsuccessfulrun for Congressfrom the state in 2022 before becoming Trump's spokesperson for his 2024 campaign and later joining him at the White House.

Pomerleau said his client was 2 or 3 when she and her family came to the U.S. from Brazil, and she later enrolled in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, the Obama-era policy that shields immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children. He said she was in the process of applying for a green card.

The Department of Homeland Security said Ferreira entered the U.S. on a tourist visa that required her to leave in 1999. A department spokesperson said Ferreira had a previous arrest for battery, an allegation her attorney denied.

An online search of court cases in several Massachusetts locations where she has lived found no record of such a charge. In New Hampshire, court records show, she had two motor vehicle violations in 2020: speeding and driving an unregistered vehicle. The charges were placed on file without a finding on the condition that she enroll in a safe driving course and remain on good behavior for one year.

"They're claiming she has some type of criminal record we've seen nowhere. Show us the proof," Pomerleau said. "She would've been deported years ago if that was true. And yet, here she is in the middle of this immigration imbroglio."

A DHS spokesperson confirmed Ferreira is being held in Louisiana.

President Donald Trump's efforts to broadly reshape immigration policy have includedchanging the approach to DACA recipients. Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin recently issued a statement saying that people "who claim to be recipients of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) are not automatically protected from deportations. DACA does not confer any form of legal status in this country."

Immigrant with family ties to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt is detained by ICE

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A Massachusetts woman who was once engaged to the brother of White House press secretary Karoline Le...

 

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