Three firefighters die responding to Knowles, Gore fires
Three wildland firefighters died on Saturday battling fires near the Colorado-Utah border, the U.S. Wildland Fire Service announced Sunday morning.

Pakistan’s security forces have foiled a militant attack on a camp in Karachi Saturday night, killing three assailants and capturing one injured attacker, according to government statements.
Three wildland firefighters died on Saturday battling fires near the Colorado-Utah border, the U.S. Wildland Fire Service announced Sunday morning.
The deaths occurred as crews battled multiple fires across a parched region. Two other firefighters were injured.
With “little fanfare,” the Supreme Court is quietly working to double its own police force, Politico’s Josh Gerstein reported on Sunday, a push that justices and court officials apparently “loathe” discussing.“The push for a rapid security buildout stems from the substantial threats to the justices at a moment of growing political violence in the U.S. and the sense that the system has just not been up to the task of keeping them safe,” Gerstein wrote. “That’s a belief that appears to be shared by at least some of the justices themselves.”While a Supreme Court spokesperson declined to respond to Gerstein’s request for comment, an “in-depth review” of budget documents and interviews with “court insiders” revealed that the Supreme Court Police Department, which for years had less than 200 officers, may soon double its ranks amid the court’s plummeting favorability among Americans.“It’s often said that the Supreme Court has no army,” Gerstein wrote. “Yet, with little fanfare, the size of the Supreme Court’s police force has begun mushrooming.”The growing taxpayer expense from the Supreme Court’s ballooning security budget has even roiled some lawmakers, including Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT), the leading Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee.“We provide money for the Supreme Court,” DeLauro said back in April. “I’ve been here a long time – they’ve never come up and tell us what they’re doing with the money that we appropriate. I want to give them all the security they need, but the court has to come up here [and] tell us what [they’re] doing.”
Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance praised Justice Elena Kagan's dissent in the Supreme Court's recent ruling on Temporary Protected Status as a devastating rebuke of the conservative majority — one that forced into print the very comments her colleagues "cannot even bear to repeat."Writing in her newsletter, Civil Discourse, Vance broke down the 6-3 decision, authored by Justice Samuel Alito, which held that courts cannot review a president's decisions about TPS. The ruling cleared the way for the Trump administration to end protections for roughly 336,000 people legally present in the U.S. due to natural disasters and armed conflict in their home countries, including Haitians and Syrians.Vance noted the decision's striking detail that Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who has two adopted children from Haiti, joined the majority.The heart of Vance's analysis centered on the majority's handling of a claim that the administration's decision was impermissibly based on race. Vance argued the Court's willingness to disregard the evidence was "so transparently in contravention of the facts" that it suggests the exception for constitutional claims "exists on paper" but will never carry weight with this Court.It was Kagan's dissent, joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, that Vance singled out as essential reading. She highlighted Kagan's pointed observation that the evidence of racial motivation was "plain to see, in the President's statements, which the majority (and for that matter, his own lawyers) cannot even bear to repeat.""Ouch," Vance wrote.Vance walked through the legal standard at issue, drawn from the 1977 case Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp., under which plaintiffs need only show that a discriminatory purpose was "a motivating factor" in the decision. She emphasized Kagan's accounting of the remarks the majority declined to reproduce — including President Donald Trump's claims about Haitians eating pets, his description of Haiti as a "s---hole country," and his assertion that Haitian immigration was "like a death wish for our country" and "poisoning the blood" of the nation.Vance underscored Kagan's blunt conclusion that the references "of filth, disease, and primitiveness — are shot through with racial stereotypes and tropes," and that it was "hard to imagine the statements being made today of any White community."Quoting Kagan's assessment that the statements "fairly shout, in their racial undertones and overtones alike, that race entered into the President's resolve to remove Haitians from this country," Vance argued the majority chose to ignore them in order to hand still more power to a president willing to abuse it.Vance also drew attention to the human stakes Kagan foregrounded, recounting the case of plaintiff Fritz Emmanuel Lesly Miot, a Haitian national who has held TPS for 15 years and works in a California laboratory researching Alzheimer's. Miot, who suffers from Type 1 diabetes, would face what Vance described as potentially fatal consequences if forced to return to Haiti's collapsed healthcare system.Looking ahead, Vance cautioned readers not to celebrate if the Court rules against Trump in the separate birthright citizenship case expected this week, arguing that rejecting such a "boldly illegal" effort to rewrite the Constitution is "a low bar for the Supreme Court to clear."She closed by placing the TPS ruling in grim historical company, predicting it would join decisions like Dred Scott and Korematsu in what she called "a Supreme Court walk of shame."
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) on Sunday knocked Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth after an outbreak of influenza infected several service members at an Air Force base in Texas. Cassidy, a licensed gastroenterologist and the first physician to chair the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, told CBS News’s Margaret Brennan on “Face the Nation”…
Three firefighters died Saturday in a blaze in western Colorado, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said Sunday. “Last night, we learned that three wildland firefighters—serving with the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Wildland Fire Service—lost their lives on Saturday, June 27, while responding jointly to the Knowles and Gore fires along the Colorado-Utah border,” Burgum…
A number of blazes have been raging across Utah and Colorado, leading both governors to declare states of emergency.