The Headlines - Brown University Shooting Suspect Found Dead, and Trump Eases Marijuana Restrictions

Episode Date: December 19, 2025

Plus, your Friday news quiz.Here’s what we’re covering:What We Know About the Shootings at Brown and M.I.T. by Francesca RegaladoTrump Moves to End Gender-Related Care for Minors, Threatening Hosp...itals That Offer It by Azeen Ghorayshi, Amy Harmon and Reed AbelsonTrump Signs Order to Ease Restrictions on Marijuana by Luke Broadwater and Ashley SouthallTrump’s ‘Warrior Dividend’ for Troops Will Be Paid for by Pentagon Housing Funds by John Ismay and Ali WatkinsThe D.N.C. Is Scrapping Its Report on What Went Wrong in 2024 by Shane GoldmacherEurope to Lend $105 Billion to Ukraine, Without Touching Russian Funds by Jeanna SmialekLemon-Shaped World Is the Most Stretched-Out Planet Ever Seen by Jonathan O’CallaghanTune in every weekday 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Friday, December 19th. Here's what we're covering. Good evening, everybody. Tonight, our Providence neighbors can finally breathe a little easier. Late last night, officials announced that the suspect in the shooting at Brown University has been found dead. Nearly a week after they say he opened fire in a lecture hall, killing.
Starting point is 00:00:30 to students. An individual was identified as Claudio Nevis Valenti, and he was a 48-year-old man. He was a Portuguese national, and his last known address was in Miami, Florida. In a press conference, authorities laid out how a post on Reddit helped lead them to the suspect and ultimately connect him to a separate shooting of an MIT professor. The poster described a suspicious car he'd seen on Brown's campus. And the man later came in to give police more details about what he'd seen, including a description of the suspect. He blew this case right open. He blew it open. And that's how
Starting point is 00:01:11 these cases sometimes go. Looking at surveillance footage, authorities found the vehicle had also been near the Massachusetts home of a professor at MIT who was killed just days after the attack at Brown. Initially, the FBI had said the cases weren't connected. They then tracked the car to a storage facility in New Hampshire, where the suspect was found dead last night of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Officials say the motive remains unclear. Both the suspect and the MIT professor attended the same physics program in Portugal in the 90s. The suspect then came to the U.S. on a student visa in 2000 and enrolled briefly in a graduate program at Brown. The university's president said he likely spent considerable time in the campus building where the shooting happened.
Starting point is 00:01:58 Now, three quick updates on the Trump administration. We want our hospitals returning to healing, not harming, the patients entrusted with their care. They're going to pay a very steep price. The administration is moving to end gender-related care for minors by threatening to pull federal funding from any hospital that offers those treatments. The proposed rules would effectively shut down hospitals that don't comply. since they rely on that money to operate. Gender-related treatments for minors can include puberty-blocking drugs, hormone therapies, and in rare cases, surgeries.
Starting point is 00:02:39 Those treatments have been endorsed by most medical groups in the U.S., but have been the subject of fierce debate, and Trump's been targeting them since he returned to office, calling the treatments dangerous and a, quote, stain on our nation's history. The president of the American Academy of Pediatrics called the new proposals a dangerous intrusion of the federal government into private medical decisions. Also, in a separate move...
Starting point is 00:03:05 This reclassification order will make it far easier to conduct marijuana-related medical research allowing us to study benefits, potential dangers, and future treatments. President Trump signed an executive order to downgrade cannabis from a Schedule 1 drug, the most restrictive category, to a Schedule 3. The change does not legalize the drug. which many states have done, but is instead an acknowledgement that it has some medicinal value
Starting point is 00:03:33 and that there's a lower potential for abuse. Trump's order follows steps taken by the Biden administration to reclassify the drug, signaling a shift across the political spectrum in attitudes toward cannabis. And lastly, a quick follow-up to the news from yesterday about warrior-dividend checks going out to soldiers.
Starting point is 00:03:53 Trump promised that over a million members of the military would be getting 1770, $106 each, saying we made a lot more money than anybody thought because of tariffs. In fact, the checks are coming out of a pot of money Congress allocated earlier this year for military housing stipends. On the other side of the aisle, the Democratic National Committee has decided not to release the report it compiled about what went wrong in the last election when Vice President Kamala Harris lost to President Trump.
Starting point is 00:04:27 The DNC chairman ordered the report months ago, and party officials did more than 300 interviews with Democrats in all 50 states. The goal was to create a document the chairman said would be crucial in charting a path forward. Now, the Times has learned that he thinks releasing the document would be counterproductive. That decision has some in the party split. There's the how can we address problems if we don't name them camp, and the haven't we rehashed 2024 and enough camp. A national poll this week found that Democrats are facing a tough political reality. Just 18 percent of voters approve of how Democrats in Congress are doing their jobs, a record low. But there's also rising dissatisfaction with Trump and the GOP. The same poll showed more voters
Starting point is 00:05:16 would prefer Democrats to control Congress instead of Republicans. Either money today or blood tomorrow. And I am not talking about Ukraine only. I am talking about Europe. Early today, European leaders hashed out a high-stakes plan for how to keep supporting Ukraine in the face of Russia's onslaught. We have to find a solution today. We'll not leave the European Council without a solution for the funding for Ukraine for the next two years. Many countries had wanted to use Russia's own money to do that by redirecting billions of dollars in frozen assets. The whole idea is a stupid one.
Starting point is 00:06:04 To take away the money of somebody, there are two countries which are involved. But not everyone was on board with that idea, including the Prime Minister of Hungary, who has remained close to Russian leader Vladimir Putin. So they moved on to Plan B. They've announced they're going to funnel over $100 billion to Ukraine with a loan, backed by the EU budget. The timing is going to go.
Starting point is 00:06:24 key. Ukraine is expected to begin running out of money in early 2026. The hope is that this will not only head that off, but strengthen the country's position in the ongoing peace negotiations that the U.S. has been leading. European leaders also hope it will demonstrate that the EU is a powerful force in its own right that should have a say in those negotiations, even as President Trump and the Kremlin have often left Europe out of the talks. And finally, the James Webb Space Telescope recently gathered data on a planet that's kind of stretching the idea of what a planet can be. It is way wider around the equator than anywhere else. Basically, it's kind of the shape of a lemon.
Starting point is 00:07:11 The lead author of a new paper describing it said, quote, It's the stretchiest planet that we've confirmed the stretchiness of. It orbits a pulsar. That's what's left of a star after it goes supernova. And that's what's giving it the unusual shape, the star's gravity pulling on it. It is such a strange phenomenon and has such a strange atmosphere. Researchers think it might not even be a planet at all. It could be the remnants of a star in its own right, basically being eaten alive by the first.
Starting point is 00:07:42 Or it could be, quote, an entirely new type of object that we don't have a name for. For now, it's just PSR J2322-2-2650, be. Catchy. Those are the headlines. If you'd like to play the Friday news quiz, it's just after these credits. This show is made by Will Jarvis, Kate Lopresti, Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford. Original theme by Dan Powell. Special thanks to Isabella Anderson, Larissa Anderson, Zoe Murphy, and Paula Schumann. Now time for the quiz. We have a few questions about stories the Times has been covering this
Starting point is 00:08:24 week, can you get them all? First up. We just had traffic paths directly in front of us within five miles of us, maybe two, three miles. And he was at our else dude. This week, the Times reported on a recent close call for a jet blue flight that was going from Curacao in the Caribbean to New York City. Just 20 minutes after takeoff, the plane suddenly leveled off, stopping its climb.
Starting point is 00:08:50 The pilot told air traffic control, we almost had a mid-air air air. collision up here. What did the flight narrowly avoid colliding with? The answer? The pilot said he almost hit a U.S. military aircraft. They passed directly in our flight path. They don't have their transponder turned on. It's outrageous. He told the controller that the refueling tanker was flying without broadcasting its position, and he didn't notice it until it was only two or three miles away. That might sound far, but it's less than 20 seconds flying time at its speed. The skies over the Caribbean have become increasingly crowded lately, as the U.S. has built up more of a military presence against Venezuela.
Starting point is 00:09:44 Okay, next question. These are great guys. They look like male models with a brain, you know? They're male models with a big, beautiful brain. Since returning to office, President Trump has become a fan of a pair of brothers who've made a splash in cryptocurrency. The men have forged close ties to the Trump administration, donating to the planned East Wing ballroom, for example, and making multiple trips to the White House. And since that relationships developed, the Securities and Exchange Commission has said it's reached a deal to resolve a lawsuit against the brothers' company over a crypto program that imploded. Your question, who are the brothers? A hint?
Starting point is 00:10:30 I'm 6'5-220 and there's two of me. One actor played both of them in an Oscar-winning movie. The answer? The Winklevoss twins. They famously claimed that Facebook was originally their idea, not Mark Zuckerberg's, a feud that was captured in the film. the social network. They went on to become early investors in Bitcoin, became billionaires as crypto took off, and have benefited from the Trump administration's more lax stance toward
Starting point is 00:11:05 crypto regulation. And final question. This week, we lost Rob Reiner and his wife, Michelle Singer-Riner. And many people have been taking the time to re-watch their favorite films of his. He may have been best known for directing, including classics like The Princess Bride and Stand By Me, but he also had a lot of acting credits over the years, TV and film. We are going to play you a few clips of Reiner's on-screen roles. Can you name the show or movie? First one.
Starting point is 00:11:38 Priscilla, come here, come here. I want you to meet my daughter, Jessica. Remember I told you about her? She's the one that doesn't play tennis. Oh, the teacher. From Hollywood. Next up. Tell them about the sides.
Starting point is 00:11:50 I ordered the sides, son. Side, size. $26,000 worth the sides? What are these sides? They cure cancer? The sides did cure cancer. That's the problem. That's why they were expensive.
Starting point is 00:12:01 And last one. The good news is you just put the check. I don't think I could let a woman pay for dinner. Great. They'll throw a parade in your honor. You'll be man in the year in Seattle magazine. One more time. Come here, come here.
Starting point is 00:12:14 I want you to meet my daughter, Jessica. $26,000 worth the sides? They'll throw a parade in your honor. You'll be man in the year. here in Seattle Magazine. That was, in order, new girl, where Reiner played the very protective father of Zoe Deschanel's character, The Wolf of Wall Street, another father role this time for Leonardo DiCaprio's hard-partying stockbroker, and sleepless in Seattle, in which he gives dating
Starting point is 00:12:41 advice to a new widower played by Tom Hanks. One bonus question, Reiner's wife, Michelle Singer-Riner, is credited with changing the course of movie history, because meeting her inspired Rob Reiner to change the end of one of his most beloved films. What was it? The answer? When Harry met Sally. Originally, Harry and Sally were not going to end up together, but as Reiner later remembered, then I met Michelle and I thought, okay, I see how this works. That is it for the news quiz, the last one of 2025. We have loved trying to stump you.
Starting point is 00:13:28 And now we'd love to hear your quiz questions from the news this year. You can send them to us at the headlines at nyTimes.com. I'm Tracy Mumford. The show will be back on Monday.

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