The Headlines - Prosecutors Resign Over ICE Investigation, and Israel Is Still Demolishing Gaza
Episode Date: January 14, 2026Plus, the battle over taxing billionaires. Here’s what we’re covering:Six Prosecutors Quit Over Push to Investigate ICE Shooting Victim’s Widow, by Ernesto LondoñoICE Arrested Dozens of Refuge...es in Minnesota and Sent Them to Texas, Lawyers Say, by Miriam JordanTensions Are High as Vance and Rubio Prepare to Meet Danish and Greenlandic Officials, by Amelia NierenbergU.S. to Name Palestinian Committee to Run Gaza, by Adam Rasgon and Aaron BoxermanChina Announces Record Trade Surplus as Its Exports Flood World Markets, by Keith BradsherNewsom Vows to Stop Proposed Billionaire Tax in California, by Laurel RosenhallClaudette Colvin, Who Refused to Give Her Bus Seat to a White Woman, Dies at 86, by Clay RisenIsrael Is Still Demolishing Gaza,Building by Building, by Samuel Granados, Adam Rasgon, Iyad Abuheweila and Sanjana VargheseTune 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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From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Wednesday, January 14th. Here's what we're covering.
In Minnesota, six federal prosecutors have resigned over how the Justice Department is handling the investigation into the deadly ice shooting there last week.
Sources tell the times that after Renee Good was killed in her car by a federal agent, the head of the DOJ's Civil Rights Division, who was appointed by President Trump, told her staff that she was not considering opening an investigation until.
whether the agent had violated federal law. Instead, the department pressed for a criminal
investigation into the actions of goods widow and her potential connections to local activist groups
opposed to Trump's immigration crackdown. The most senior figure to resign was the second in
command at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Minnesota, Joseph Thompson. People familiar with his decision
say he had also objected to the fact that the DOJ blocked his efforts to work with state officials
to investigate the killing.
Before the shooting, Thompson had been overseeing
the complex investigation into welfare fraud
in the Somali community there.
The Trump administration has pointed to that fraud
as the reason for its surge of federal agents to the state.
The Minneapolis police chief said Thompson's resignation
will deal a major blow to that fraud investigation.
Meanwhile.
Tensions are still high.
on the streets in Minneapolis where federal immigration agents have continued to carry out aggressive
operations. Videos verified by the Times show them smashing car windows, deploying tear gas, and detaining
U.S. citizens. Residents say they've been profiling people based on their race or ethnicity.
We're doing an immigration check. We're doing a citizen check. And we're asking you where you are born.
This is where I belong. As part of the crackdown, agents have arrested dozens of refugees who entered the
country lawfully, according to lawyers and immigration rights advocates. The group is mainly from
Somalia and includes children. They had previously passed extensive security screenings and
background checks. Most of the detainees have now been flown from Minnesota to facilities in Texas.
Federal officials did not respond to a request for comment, but the Trump administration
previously vowed to re-examine the status of thousands of refugees.
Now, three quick updates on the Trump administration's foreign policy.
Today at the White House, Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio will sit down with the foreign ministers of Greenland and Denmark, as the administration has ramped up its threats to take over the territory.
Greenland does not want to be owned by the USA. Greenland does not want to be governed by the USA. Greenland will not be part of the USA.
Ahead of the meeting, Greenland's prime minister reiterated that the island is not for sale
and said his people want to stick with the European Union and Denmark, which currently oversees the territory.
Also, in Gaza, as soon as today, the U.S. could announce a committee of Palestinians who will be put in
charge of running daily life there. Under the U.S. plan for Gaza, that committee would be
apolitical and mostly focused on providing public services. U.S. officials hope that setting up
the new panel will weaken the grip that Hamas still has on the territory, though experts say they
will face enormous challenges in rebuilding Gaza. Many of the territory's 2 million residents
are still living in tents or half-destroyed houses, and the Times has found that despite the
ongoing ceasefire, Israeli forces have continued to demolish structures there. Satellite imagery
shows Israel has destroyed more than 2,500 buildings in the last few months, along with greenhouses and
swaths of farmland. Israel says it's destroying underground tunnels and demilitarizing the areas,
though one former Israeli military commander questioned the scope, saying, quote,
it's not selective destruction, it's everything. And trade data released by the Chinese government
yesterday offers a new look at the impact of Trump's tariffs. For years, China has sold way more
to the U.S. than it has bought from American companies. Now, that difference called a
trade surplus has shrunk significantly by more than 20%.
But China has found other customers.
It still managed to have the largest global trade surplus in world history.
It exported a trillion-plus more dollars of goods and services than it imported overall.
There are several factors at play there, including that Beijing has pushed for more domestic
production, and that Chinese companies have been shipping more and more of the goods they make
overseas because Chinese customers at home have been struggling to afford them amid the country's
economic woes.
In California, there's a major push underway to get a new billionaire tax on the ballot,
but the state's governor, Gavin Newsom, is already vowing to stop it.
The proposed initiative would require Californians with a net worth of over a billion dollars
to pay a one-time tax equal to 5% of their assets.
It would apply retroactively to anyone who was living in the state as of January 1st.
It's being pushed by a large union of health care workers who say the tax is necessary to make up for the deep funding cuts President Trump signed into law, like reductions in Medicaid.
Supporters are working to gather the nearly 900,000 signatures they will need to put it to a vote in November.
Newsom, however, told the Times, he's working relentlessly behind the scenes to keep that from happening.
He has long been opposed to a wealth tax because of concerns that it would stifle innovation in his state.
He's also worried that billionaires will simply leave, leading to longer-term tax losses.
He said it would be one thing if the tax was national, but, quote,
it's another when you're competing against 49 other states.
The founders of Google have started cutting ties to California.
So has the venture capitalist Peter Thiel.
But at least one billionaire says he's not bothered by it.
I haven't thought about it even once.
Jensen Wong, the chief executive of NVIDIA and one of the world's wealthiest people,
was asked about the potential wealth tax on Bloomberg television this month.
We chose to live in Silicon Valley, and whatever taxes, I guess, they would like to apply, so be it.
He said he was perfectly fine with the proposal.
And finally,
This traffic patrolman came on the bus to the back door and asked me to get up
and give this one white lady a seat.
And I said, no.
Claudette Colvin, who refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery,
Alabama, months before Rosa Parks did the same,
galvanizing the civil rights movement, has died at 86.
Colvin was just 15 years old in 1955 when she defied repeated orders to move on the segregated bus.
People asked me, say, why didn't you get up?
I say, you know what?
history had me glued to the seat.
She described the moment a few years ago in an interview with Michelle Norris.
I said, well, it felt as though.
Harry a Tubman hand will push me down on one shoulder.
And so John a truth hand will push me down on another shoulder.
Colvin was arrested, quickly convicted in juvenile court, and given a fine and probation.
While her case made headlines, local civil rights leaders decided not to make Colvin their
symbol of discrimination. Instead, they waited and rallied around parks when she was arrested for taking
a similar stand. Colvin later said it was because she was too dark-skinned and too poor to win the
support of Montgomery's black middle class. Colvin went on to become a star witness in a crucial
court case that paved the way for the end of segregation on public transit across the entire U.S.
She kept relatively quiet about her own story until years after it happened.
She told the Times she changed her mind after she realized she could potentially help kids better understand the civil rights movement.
Quote, young people think Rosa Parks just sat down on a bus and ended segregation.
But that wasn't the case at all.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, Times reporter Farnas Fasizi, who has covered protests in Iran for decades,
on why the new wave of massive demonstrations could be a turning point.
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.
