The Headlines - A Breakthrough Hostage Deal, and an Arrest in Deadly L.A. Wildfire
Episode Date: October 9, 2025Plus, Dolly Parton wants you to know she "ain't dead yet."Here’s what we’re covering:What We Know About the Hostage Deal Between Israel and Hamas by Francesca RegaladoG.O.P. Blocks Bid to Halt Tru...mp’s Attacks in the Caribbean Sea by Robert JimisonBefore Trump Ordered in Troops, Federal Officers Called Portland Protests ‘Low Energy’ by Hamed Aleaziz, Adam Goldman and Anna GriffinAppeals Court to Weigh Legality of Deploying Troops to Portland by Mattathias SchwartzJudge to Hear Arguments on Whether Guard Troops Near Chicago Can Stay by Mitch SmithMan Fascinated With Fire Imagery Is Arrested in Palisades Blaze, Officials Say by Shawn Hubler and Jill Cowan‘I’m Not Dying’: Dolly Parton Assures Fans Amid Concerns About Her Health by Neil VigdorTune in every weekend morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Thursday, October 9th.
Here's what we're covering.
Joining us now, live on the phone, is the president of the United States.
Donald J. Trump, Mr. President.
Wow.
Congratulations, sir.
Last night in an interview on Fox News.
Well, thank you very much, John.
It's a great honor to be involved in it.
President Trump.
said that Israel and Hamas have agreed to the first phase of a peace plan, a breakthrough that
comes just days after the war in Gaza passed the two-year mark.
The whole world came together, to be honest, so many countries that you wouldn't have even
thought of it, and they came together. The world has come together around this deal.
Under the agreement, which was pushed by Trump and negotiated via Qatari mediators in Egypt,
Hamas will release all of the remaining living hostages as soon as this weekend.
They're believed to still be holding about 20 people.
In exchange, Israel will release nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees
and will pull back its troops in Gaza to an agreed-upon line.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he'll convene his cabinet today to sign off on the deal.
But some of the most contentious issues between Israel and Hamas seem to have been left up to future negotiations,
including whether Israeli forces will eventually leave the territory entirely,
whether Hamas will give up its weapons, and who will rule a post-war Gaza?
Still, the initial breakthrough, after months of deadlocked negotiations, sparked hope across the region.
What do you guys have to say to President Trump?
In a brief phone call, some of the family members of the Israeli hostages thanked President Trump personally for his involvement in the negotiations.
And in Gaza, Palestinians told the times that they were eagerly awaiting a possible
end to the fighting. One English teacher there said he was feeling a mix of joy and sadness,
with optimism that the war might soon be over, but, quote, sorrow for everything we've lost.
On Capitol Hill yesterday, these strikes were not authorized by Congress. Congress has not
and showed the evidence of who exactly was on board these ships.
Such strikes are not legal.
Senate Democrats tried to block President Trump from using military force against boats in the Caribbean.
But on this vote, the yeas are 48, the nays are 51, and the motion is not agreed to.
Their effort failed, as nearly all Republican senators voted against the measure.
Since early September, the Trump administration says it's blown up four boats and killed over 20 people,
who it claims were smuggling drugs into the U.S. from Venezuela.
Trump recently said he determined that the U.S. is in a formal armed conflict
with drug cartels that he's deemed terrorists.
But the strikes on boats have largely been seen by experts in military law as illegal,
and the attacks have drawn intense criticism from democratic lawmakers
who've said the White House has offered no credible evidence or intelligence
backing up their justification for the strikes.
Ahead of the failed boat yesterday, Senator Adam Schiff warned that the ongoing attacks could
escalate into a larger conflict, saying, quote, this is the kind of thing that leads the country
unexpectedly and unintentionally into war. Meanwhile, the president of Columbia yesterday said one of the
boats the U.S. bombed was from his country, not Venezuela. He said Colombian citizens had been
killed. Two American officials also told the times that Colombians were on board at least one of
the boats the U.S. destroyed. The White House dismissed the Colombian president's comments as,
quote, baseless and reprehensible. Today, federal judges will hear arguments in two separate
legal cases over President Trump's plans to deploy troops in U.S. cities. First up, Portland. Trump has
tried to send in National Guardsmen, saying the city is burning to the ground.
A federal judge blocked that effort over the weekend, calling Trump's assessment, quote,
simply untethered to the facts.
But the government appealed and now a panel of judges will hear more arguments today.
The president's assessment of Portland is at odds with descriptions from federal officers
on the ground there.
On the same day, Trump called the city under siege from mobs protesting ice.
Officers at an ice facility describe the protests as low energy
in internal reports seen by the Times.
Local officials said this week, though,
that the small demonstrations have grown more intense
since the president posted about Portland on social media.
And in Illinois, a federal judge will hear arguments
about whether to stop the deployments of National Guard troops there
after several hundred were sent to the state from Texas this week.
The Trump administration has said the troops,
troops are necessary for safety, citing crime rates and rising tensions around immigration
enforcement operations. But state officials have objected, and Governor J.B. Pritzker described it
as an invasion. Yesterday, Trump doubled down, claiming Pritzker, who is a Democrat, should be in
jail for what Trump described as failing to protect ICE officers. He said he was going to jail
Gavin Newsom. He says he's going to jail me. He says he's going to jail the mayor of the city of Chicago.
dismissed Trump's threat.
Come and get me. Come and get me.
This week, the governor claimed Trump's ultimate goal is to normalize military patrols
in American cities, potentially to even intimidate voters in future elections, saying,
quote, he wants us all in big cities to get used to the idea that it's okay to have military on the streets.
You're going to see soldiers outside your polling place.
That's going to intimidate a lot of people.
After more than eight months of tireless, meticulous work, I stand here with our partners proud to announce an arrest and connection to the devastating palisade fires that claimed lives, destroyed homes, and shook this community to its core.
In Los Angeles yesterday, officials announced they've arrested a 29-year-old man, saying he was responsible for the wildfire in January that killed 12 people and burned thousands of buildings.
The location data showed that he was standing above the fire in a clearing merely 30 feet from
the blaze as it rapidly grew.
The authority said that about a week before the Palisades blaze, the man, who was an Uber
driver and former resident of the neighborhood, intentionally set a small fire on a hiking
trail nearby.
Within hours, that fire was extinguished, but smoldering embers were left over that eventually
roared back to life.
The allegations are supported by digital evidence, including.
including the defendant's chat GPT prompt of a dystopian painting showing in part a burning forest and a crowd fleeing from it.
Officials said that the suspect appeared to have been obsessed with fire,
and that before lighting it, he was listening to a song on YouTube featuring a character setting things on fire.
Hours after his arrest was announced, the L.A. Fire Department released an internal review,
calling the blaze a perfect storm, fueled by dry conditions and hurricane force winds, and made
worse by staffing shortages. Many survivors of the fire have since sued, saying that emergency
responders were negligent and hadn't properly prepared for the extreme conditions.
One Palisades resident who lost his home told the times, quote,
I'm angry that an individual could be so depraved. It doesn't take away from my sense of frustration
and anger with the government.
And finally.
I wanted to say, I know lately, everybody thinks that I am sicker than I am.
Do I look sick to you?
I'm working hard here.
Dolly Parton wants to let people know she's not dead yet.
Fans of the 79-year-old country legend have been in a frenzy since Parton postponed her Las Vegas residency last month, citing
medical issues. Add in some AI-created videos that made the rounds on social media, and
rumors about her health have been running rampant. Things hit a whole new level this week
when her younger sister asked people to pray for Dolly. But I figured if you heard it from me,
you'd know that I was okay. Parton released a video to assure her fans saying she's still working
hard, a little reminder of how hard Parton can work. She is credited with writing the hits
Jolene and I Will Always Love You on the same day.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, the Supreme Court is kicking off its term this week with a case about
conversion therapy and the question of whether mental health professionals are legally
allowed to try and change a child's sexual orientation or gender identity.
You can listen to that in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow with the latest and the Friday News Quiz.