The Headlines - Police Track C.E.O.’s Killer, and Biden Aides Consider Blanket Pardons
Episode Date: December 6, 2024Plus, the spectacular rebirth of Notre-Dame. Tune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available to T...imes news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. On Today’s Episode:Images of Unmasked Suspect Emerge as the Police Track C.E.O.’s Killer, by Ed Shanahan and Andy NewmanThe ‘Chilling’ Fatal Shooting of a C.E.O. Has Business Leaders on Edge, by Emma GoldbergBiden Team Considers Blanket Pardons Before Trump’s Promised ‘Retribution’, by Peter Baker and Erica L. GreenBitcoin Hits a Milestone: $100,000, by David Yaffe-BellanyTrump Names Top Silicon Valley Conservative to Oversee Crypto and A.I., by Theodore SchleiferHow Notre-Dame Was Reborn, by Aurelien Breeden
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Friday, December 6th.
Here's what we're covering.
The hunt for the man who gunned down the CEO of United Healthcare in Midtown Manhattan
is now in its third day.
He managed to disappear into Central Park shortly after the shooting, and investigators
still don't know his identity. But details about his movements before the attack are
coming into focus. He appears to have arrived in New York by bus 10 days before the shooting.
He stayed in a hostel using a fake New Jersey ID, and he shared a room there with two strangers.
Police have released photos that appear to be from surveillance footage at the hostel,
showing the clearest view yet of the man they say is the shooter.
He's got a hood on, but nearly his whole face is visible.
As for his motive, that's still unknown.
The law enforcement officials say bullet casings collected at the scene had the words delay
and deny written on them.
It's not clear what that signals, but it could be a reference to the strategies insurance
companies use to avoid paying claims.
As one of the nation's largest insurers, UnitedHealthcare has battled a barrage of
complaints over the years, including accusations that it used an algorithm to deny some patients'
requests for treatment. [♪MUSIC PLAYING》
Meanwhile, the brazen killing of Brian Thompson
has other business leaders on edge.
In the past few years, we have seen S&P 500 companies
spend more and more on executive security.
But just since the shooting this week,
security firms told me that their phones have been
ringing off the hook.
Emma Goldberg is a business reporter for the Times.
She says companies are asking about everything from stationing security outside their offices
to getting personal bodyguards for executives and their families.
A Harvard Business School professor I spoke with pointed out that people are angry at corporate America for all sorts of reasons, including Purdue Pharma's role in the opioid
crisis, BP's oil spill, but social media is making some of this really targeted toward
the people who lead these companies.
I think what struck a lot of people about the shooting this week is that Brian Thompson
was not someone who is really a household name or super well known. So it's put even less prominent CEOs kind of on hyper alert
about what they could do to protect themselves. The Times has learned that President Biden's aides are debating if he should issue a wave
of pardons to people they fear could be targeted by Donald Trump. Trump has repeatedly vowed
to seek retribution against people he sees as his enemies. His pick to lead the FBI has
also vowed to come after Trump's critics. To head that off, some Biden staffers think the president
should preemptively issue blanket pardons
to a range of people to shield them from what they think
could be unwarranted investigations
or even prosecution under Trump.
Some of the names that have been floated include Liz Cheney,
who helped lead the House committee investigating
Trump's role in January 6th,
Dr. Anthony Fauci, who
became a target of the far right during the pandemic, and Jack Smith, the special prosecutor
who brought charges against Trump. But as the White House debates the idea, some are
concerned that the plan would give the impression that the people who get pardons have actually
done something wrong. One potential name on the list, Senator Adam Schiff,
who played a central role in Trump's first impeachment trial,
said he doesn't want a pardon, telling NPR, quote,
I think it would seem defensive and unnecessary.
The discussions are happening as the administration
finalizes its broader list of pardons,
which traditionally get issued in the final days
of a president's
term.
The price of a single Bitcoin surged to a record high this week, reaching a value of
over $100,000 for the first time.
When the cryptocurrency launched, it was mostly popular with a fringe group of hackers and political
radicals. But it's turned out to be maybe the most successful investment product of
the last two decades. Back in 2010, for example, it took about 5,000 bitcoins to buy a $20
pizza. Now that same amount of Bitcoin would be worth half a billion dollars.
It's really a moment of validation for people who have believed in this technology for years
and years, even as the establishment dismissed it as kind of a passing fad.
You know, the hundred thousand mark shows that it's really a part of the mainstream
economy now.
It's sort of undeniable that Bitcoin has arrived.
David Yaffebellany covers the cryptocurrency industry for the Times. He says
the value of Bitcoin was already rising this year, then skyrocketed in the past month after Trump was
elected. He used to be a kind of Bitcoin denier. He said it was a scam. He said it would undermine
the US dollar. But he changed his tune on the campaign trail this year as contributions started flowing in from the crypto industry.
He said that he would end the federal government's crackdown on the crypto industry, that he
would create a strategic US stockpile of Bitcoin.
And it's those promises and his ultimate victory that has propelled the price of Bitcoin and
the price of so many other cryptocurrencies to new heights.
Last night on social media, Trump even announced that he's creating a new role, a crypto and AI czar. And he named David Sachs, one of Silicon Valley's most prominent
conservative investors and a donor to his campaign to fill the role. Sachs has called for both the
crypto and AI industries to be less regulated. He'll be taking on the new position part time so that he's not required to leave
the venture capital fund that he runs.
And finally, on April 15th, 2019, the city of Paris watched in disbelief as a fire tore through Notre-Dame.
Oh no!
The cathedral is the heart of the city.
14 million tourists a year came to see it, more than the Eiffel Tower.
And suddenly, it was in flames.
Smoke poured from the building, and the fire, whose exact cause is still unknown,
spread to the structure's iconic spire
before it toppled and crashed down through the ceiling.
— Like, I saw a lot of people crying on the streets,
and it's all because it's the symbol.
It's the symbol of France.
It's the symbol of generations.
— French President Emmanuel Macron immediately vowed to rebuild.
Macron immediately vowed to rebuild. We will rebuild Notre Dame because that's what the French are waiting for.
It really was a remarkable effort over the past five years and the first thing they had
to do was secure the cathedral, stabilize it, because right after the fire it was dangerously
close to collapsing.
My colleague Aureliean Breeden will be at Notre Dame this weekend when it reopens to
the public. Visitors will get to see the meticulous reconstruction where artists and
craftsmen work to rebuild the cathedral exactly as it was.
They had to find the right limestone in the right quarries. They had to find the
right trees and so they sourced over 2,000 oak trees from around the country
and the attention to detail I would say was immense. So for example the the carpenters who hand-hewed some of their beams in Normandy
were using axes that were specifically forged for the project,
which just kind of shows you how every single part of this project
was thought out with extraordinary care.
—Auralian says they also had to clean the whole cathedral.
The roof was made of lead, so toxic dust settled onto everything
after the fire, including the massive organ, which is one of the oldest in the world. Cleaning
it meant dismantling and then reassembling about 8,000 organ pipes. And Aurelian says
tomorrow the organ will be played for the first time since the fire, as part of an elaborate
ceremony marking Notre Dame's reopening.
The cathedral is obviously a very special place for Catholics, for religious pilgrims.
It's also one of the most heavily visited tourist monuments in the world.
But I think even just for ordinary Parisians, even those who complain about all the tourists
that invade the city, it was a very central monument where people could stop, go in, take time to reflect.
And this reopening is really an opportunity to do that again.
There's a lot of excitement building around that.
Those are the headlines. Today on The Daily, how one businessman in Austin, Texas is spending
millions of dollars on a social experiment to try and tackle homelessness. That's next
in the New York Times audio app, or you can listen wherever you get your podcasts.
This show is made by Robert Jemison, Jessica Metzger, Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford,
with help from Isabella Anderson.
Original theme by Dan Powell.
Special thanks to Larissa Anderson, Michael Levinson, Jake Lucas, Zoe Murphy, and Paula
Schumann.
The headlines will be back on Monday with my colleague, Megan Specia.