The Headlines - The Missing Records From the Epstein Files, and a Gun Battle Off the Coast of Cuba
Episode Date: February 26, 2026Plus, a big shift in the housing market. Here’s what we’re covering: Epstein Files Are Missing Records About Woman Who Made Claim Against Trump, by Mike Baker and Michael Gold A Deal or War? Cru...cial Talks to Begin Between U.S. and Iran., by Farnaz Fassihi Surgeon General Nominee Sidesteps Questions on Vaccines at Senate Hearing, by Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Dani Blum Patel Ousts F.B.I. Personnel Tied to Inquiry Into Trump’s Retained Classified Records, by Glenn Thrush, Alan Feuer and Devlin Barrett Florida Boat in Gunfight Had Cuban Nationals Intent on ‘Infiltration,’ Cuba Says, by Patricia Mazzei, Frances Robles, Jack Nicas and Eric Schmitt The Housing Market Is Tilting Back Toward Buyers, by Rukmini Callimachi Tune 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. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Thursday, February 26th.
Here's what we're covering.
A new review by the Times of documents from the Epstein files
shows that the Justice Department left out key materials
related to a woman who said Epstein and President Trump sexually assaulted her when she was a minor.
An index in the files revealed that the FBI had conducted four interviews in connection with her claims
and wrote summaries about each one.
But only one of those summaries,
which describes her accusations against Epstein, was released.
The other memos, more than 50 pages of material, are missing.
The public files do contain one description of her account about Trump,
in which federal officials wrote that she claimed Trump assaulted her
in a violent and lurid encounter in the mid-1980s
when she was roughly 14 years old.
The files don't include any of,
assessment about the credibility of her accusation. The DOJ had previously said there were unfounded
and false claims about Trump in the files, and a White House spokeswoman said this week that the
president has been, quote, totally exonerated on anything relating to Epstein. In response to
questions from the times about why the files related to the woman were not released, the Justice
Department has given various responses over the past few days. It first said that the only
materials it withheld were either duplicates or privileged information. It now says it's reviewing
the files and that it will publish any documents it should have made public. Under a law passed by
Congress last year, the DOJ can only redact material from the Epstein files in limited scenarios,
like if it could be used to identify victims or would jeopardize an ongoing investigation. The law
specifically forbids federal officials from withholding materials to protect public figures,
quote, on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity.
The top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, Representative Robert Garcia of California,
said the Justice Department had not provided a proper explanation for why the materials related to Trump are missing.
Democrats plan to open an investigation into the matter.
Today, the U.S. and Iran will meet for a high-stakes round of nuclear negotiations, and the outcome
could determine whether or not President Trump attacks the country. Trump has demanded Iran
give up its nuclear ambitions entirely, and he's moved a massive array of firepower to the region
to back that up. Iran has refused, but it's now coming to the table with a compromise.
Iranian officials tell the times, the country planning.
to make an offer that would allow Trump to declare victory while still letting Iran maintain
some level of nuclear enrichment. The country's leaders insist it's not trying to develop a nuclear
weapon, but they want to be able to use nuclear material for medical purposes like cancer treatment
studies. Iran's also trying to sweeten the deal with a pledge to buy American goods, like airplanes,
and an invitation for American companies to invest in Iran's oil and gas industry.
Their hope is that the U.S. could also lift the economic sanctions that have pushed Iran's economy to near collapse.
One expert on U.S. Middle East relations told the times that today will be the day for both sides to lay all their cards out on the table.
And quote, if Iran doesn't show enough willingness to compromise and the U.S. doesn't show willingness to provide enough sanctions relief, things are going to explode.
Now, two other quick updates on the Trump administration.
Do you believe that there's no evidence that the flu vaccine has efficacy in reducing serious injury or hospitalization?
This is an easy one, doctor.
This is an easy one.
On Capitol Hill yesterday, the Senate Health Committee held a confirmation hearing for Casey Means,
President Trump's nominee for U.S. Surgeon General.
Means, an author and wellness influencer, has been a key figure in health.
Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s
Make America Healthy Again movement.
Over the course of the hearing,
means largely deflected specific questions
about hot-button ma-ha issues,
like pesticides, birth control, and vaccines.
Instead, she focused on how, in her view,
Americans are suffering from an epidemic of chronic diseases
linked to ultra-processed foods, chemicals,
stress, and lack of exercise.
I think what's really striking is that part of why
RFK said that he wanted her to be Surgeon General is because she has rejected the traditional
medical system.
Danny Bloom is a health reporter at the Times.
She says that Means is a highly unconventional pick for the role as the nation's doctor,
as the Surgeon General is called.
That's in large part because while she graduated from medical school, she doesn't have an active
medical license.
A lot of her supporters say that that is precisely the kind of person we need in charge,
someone who has been inside the medical system, and so in theory knows a bit about how to dismantle it.
But a lot of critics also think that that level of distrust and that sort of condemnation of the medical system is exactly why she shouldn't have this role.
The Republican-controlled health committee is expected to Greenlight Means his nomination, sending it to the full Senate for a final confirmation vote.
Also, the Times has learned that Cash Patel, the director of the FBI, has fired about 10,000.
employees who worked on the investigation into President Trump's handling of classified documents.
Back in 2022, the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago as part of an inquiry into whether Trump broke the law
by keeping sensitive national security records after his first term ended, and whether he
obstructed the government's repeated efforts to get them back. Roiders revealed this week that
Patel's own phone records were subpoenaed as part of that investigation. He was a close. He was a
close Trump advisor at the time. Now, in his position as head of the FBI, Patel has carried out a rolling
barrage of retribution against people who investigated Trump. In some cases, agents who've been
fired and their lawyers say that Patel has violated safeguards that were supposed to protect FBI
employees from politically motivated dismissals. Suffice it to say, it is highly unusual to see
shootouts in open sea like that. It's not something that happens every day. It's something,
frankly, that hasn't happened with Cuba in a very long time. Secretary of State Marco Rubio says
the U.S. is trying to gather more information about what Cuba is calling a deadly gunfight just
off the coast of the island. The majority of the facts being publicly reported are those provided
by the Cubans. We will verify that independently. According to Cuban state media, a speedboat
registered in Florida, neared Cuba yesterday, and the people on board fired at Cuban border guards.
The guards shot back. Four people on the speedboat were killed and six were wounded.
Cuban authorities say the people on the boat were armed Cuban nationals living in the U.S.
They had bulletproof jackets and Maltau cocktails.
The Cuban government claims they were attempting, quote, in infiltration with terrorist ends.
When asked whether it was a U.S.
government operation or whether any American personnel were involved, Rubio said no.
Carlos Jimenez, a House Republican from Florida, called it a massacre.
Tensions between the U.S. and Cuba have been escalating recently as the Trump administration has
taken steps to squeeze the communist regime. The U.S. has cut off foreign oil shipments
and cut off sources of income that had kept Cuba's economy afloat. Conditions are now deteriorating,
with rampant inflation, gas shortages, lengthy blackouts, and soaring food prices,
all of which is threatening to destabilize the government there.
And finally, for a couple years there, the real estate market in the U.S. was solidly a seller's market,
almost absurdly so.
Buyers weren't just making offers.
They were having to desperately woo the sellers.
They'd write long love notes to the house.
They offered way above asking price.
They waived inspections.
One realtor said she even saw a buyer offer the seller a puppy.
But things are swinging back.
According to one estimate, for every three people trying to sell a house,
there's now only two people looking to buy.
So buyers are getting to be pickier.
Houses are sitting for longer.
Sellers are the ones feeling desperate,
wondering if new paint, fresh photos,
staged furniture will finally get them an offer. In terms of why it shifted, basically some
sellers who didn't want to move because they had such low interest rates have now finally been
forced to put their homes on the market due to big life events. It's what realtors call one of the
four D's, diamonds as in a wedding, diapers, divorce, and death. Notably, while the shift has helped
bring housing prices down a little, it's not enough for many Americans. According to Zillow,
buyers now need almost twice the yearly income than they did before the pandemic to afford a typical home.
Essentially, it is a buyer's market, but only if you have the resources to buy.
Those are the headlines. Today on the Daily, an inside look at the operation to take down Mexico's most notorious drug lord.
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.
