The Headlines - Why Texas Students Are Being Tackled and Tasered, and Trump’s Latest Target for Retribution
Episode Date: May 28, 2026Plus, inside the hunt for cheap gas. Here’s what we’re covering: Texas School Police Pepper-Sprayed, Tackled and Tasered Students, by Clare Amari, Kristian Hernández and Asher Lehrer-Small U.S. S...trikes Military Sites in Iran for Second Time in 3 Days, by Eric Schmitt Justice Dept. Is Said to Open Criminal Inquiry of E. Jean Carroll Over Trump Lawsuits, by Glenn Thrush and Benjamin Weiser Fired for Criticizing Charlie Kirk, They’re Now Getting Big Payouts, by Jeremy W. Peters and Sabrina Tavernise These Drivers Found Cheap Gas, by Corina Knoll 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.
Transcript
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Thursday, May 28th.
Here's what we're covering.
Let's go back to when the officers were called, when the deputies came.
I was trying to text my mom just to tell her, like, what was going on.
And so that's when the sheriff was like, okay, I'm going to, you're under arrest for theft.
A new investigation from the Times looks at what has happened as more police officers have been hired at schools to keep students safe.
They had to release my mug shot.
and other teachers started getting a hold of it.
Everyone started screenshoting it.
My colleagues, in partnership with the San Antonio Express News, looked at Texas specifically.
Back in 2022, the state was rocked by one of the deadliest school shootings in Uvali,
when a gunman opened fire at Rob Elementary in Uvalde, killing 21 people.
The next year, lawmakers passed legislation requiring one licensed police officer at every public school,
the most ambitious effort of its kind.
Now, Texas has more school district police departments than all other states put together.
The law that Texas passed was largely cast as a way to protect students from school shooters.
But we have found that the way officers use force on students raises questions about whether something that was meant to help them is actually harming some students instead.
Claire Amari is part of the team who dug through thousands of pages of police records and did hundreds of interviews with students,
parents, teachers, and law enforcement officials in Texas to see how the influx of officers has
played out. The team found that while many people welcomed the police presence on campus,
there were also many incidents where officers grabbed, tackled, or even used tasers on students,
leading to injuries in extreme instances. Some of these were captured on camera.
In these videos, we've seen police officers knee one student in the face,
slam another student into a metal lunch cart
and pin other students to the ground.
We have also seen videos of officers punching students,
of officers using pepper spray on students,
and officers handcuffing young children.
In all, the Times documented more than 2,600 individual cases
in which school police officers in Texas
used force in the last few years.
Everything kind of blurred out once I hit the ground.
I just remember that there was a lot of tugging and pushing
and I had somebody, like my head was against the ground.
And at one point, my head had hit the desk too.
In one case, a 17-year-old honor student was accused of stealing a little classroom doorbell worth
worth $13, which she says she accidentally knocked off the wall.
Still, an assistant principal called in the police.
And when she pulled away, they wrestled her to the ground.
Video footage shows her gasping for air for three minutes.
Her mugshot was later posted online, and she was so upset.
set by the whole experience that she finished the school year online and skipped her graduation
ceremony. Overall, the investigation found that the constant presence of police has transformed
how many Texas schools manage discipline. While state law says that districts should not
assign officers to handle, quote, routine student discipline, there were many incidents where
police were responding to conduct that appeared to be minor, the kind of thing that once
would have just landed kids in the principal's office.
Policing experts say that what's happened in Texas is that lawmakers went all in on school policing
without putting in place adequate safeguards to protect students.
You can find the full investigation into police and schools in the Times app or at NYTimes.com.
In the Middle East, over the past 24 hours, both Iran and the U.S. say they've carried out a fresh flurry of attacks.
Yesterday, American troops shot down four drones over the Strait of Hormuz in what a U.S.
official described as self-defense strikes. And this morning, Iran's Revolutionary Guards
Corps said it retaliated by targeting an American military base. The scattered exchanges are
threatening the fragile ceasefire between the two countries. The Navy is gone. Their Air Force is
gone. Everything's gone. And they're negotiating on fumes. At the same time, President Trump is
continuing to insist that a peace deal to end the war is just around the corner. Though yesterday,
day at the White House, he said he would not be rushed.
They thought they were going to outweigh me, you know, we'll outweigh him.
He's got the midterms. I don't care about the midterms.
Trump rejected any suggestion that the looming midterm elections and soaring gas prices
were putting political pressure on him to end the conflict.
This morning, amid reports of the new wave of U.S. and Iranian strikes, oil prices surged.
At the Justice Department, President Trump's retribution campaign now seeing a new wave of the U.S. and Iranian strikes, oil prices surged.
At the Justice Department, President Trump's retribution campaign now seeing
seems to have reached E. Jean Carroll, the former magazine writer who accused him of sexual assault.
According to two people with direct knowledge of the situation, the DOJ has opened a criminal
investigation into Carol that centers on whether she committed perjury in her civil lawsuits
against Trump. In one suit, a federal jury found Trump liable for sexually abusing Carol in a
department store dressing room in the mid-1990s. Anne said he defamed her by calling the case a hoax and a
on social media. In another related defamation case, a jury ordered Trump to pay Carol more
than $80 million in damages. Trump has since asked the Supreme Court to step in, and for the
moment he hasn't been forced to pay anything. While Trump has tried to demean and discredit Carol
for years, the DOJ's move now comes as the president has tried to use the full power of the
federal government to target his adversaries. The department, which has traditionally tried to stay
independent of the White House, appears to be increasingly controlled by Trump, who has faced
little pushback as he pursues his campaign of revenge.
The fallout from Charlie Kirk's killing has spread to the workplace. People are getting
fired for comments that seem to celebrate or glorify the assassination. Last September, after
Charlie Kirk was assassinated, many people found themselves facing heat for comments they made about him
online. So when you see someone celebrating Charlie's murder, call them out.
in hell, call their employer.
Vice President J.D. Vance, along with other supporters of Kirk,
encouraged people to name and shame anyone seen as criticizing the divisive conservative activist.
Lucas from Wisconsin, you're fired.
Shelby, from North Dakota, you've been fired.
Scores of people were fired or faced other repercussions, including health care workers, lawyers,
restaurant workers.
Now, some people who lost their jobs are getting big payouts.
This week, Ball State University in Indiana agreed to pay $225,000 to a former administrator who was fired after she made a private Facebook post saying, quote,
If you think Charlie Kirk was a wonderful person, we can't be friends. Someone took a screenshot of it, and it spread everywhere. In trying to justify her firing, the university's president said the flood of angry calls and emails they got about her post were disrupting campus operations.
It's only the latest case like this.
Last week, Florida officials agreed to pay almost half a million dollars to a state biologist
who'd been fired over a meme about Kirk that she posted on Instagram.
And in Tennessee, a professor got another half a million dollar settlement from his university.
There could be more payouts coming.
One free speech advocacy group says it's tracking more than a dozen federal lawsuits from other workers
who also say they were disciplined or fired for their cost.
comments about Kirk.
And finally, I got there just before 8 a.m. on a Wednesday.
There's still just so much traffic coming in, coming out, just a constant line of customers.
My colleague Karina Noll joined in on a quest recently in California for cheap gas.
With prices ticking up and up, people are looking for any break they can get.
And that has turned a rural gas station, 40 miles outside San Diego, into a hopping destination.
When you get to Horizon, it's sort of this bright, beautiful, open, clean place where there's like 25 gas pumps.
Karina visited Horizon Fuel Center, which has consistently been undercutting its competitors by nearly a dollar a gallon.
It's on tribal land, which means it's exempt from state taxes and fees, hence the deal.
A lot of people Karina talked to rolling through the station were using an app, GasBuddy, that compares prices and helps them find Horizon.
A lot of people talked about driving out of their way just to come to this place.
Like they would pass a few gas stations just to get here or drive, you know, several more miles just to come here to save.
They had diesel pumps there too.
So you see the people with the big rigs there who really are probably saving hundreds of dollars just by coming there.
Karina said she talked to one big rig driver who haul sand and gravel around.
And he was expecting to have to spend $1,000 that day on diesel.
He told her his last deletive.
delivery route had brought his tank to almost empty, and all he could do was cross his fingers
and just hope he had enough fuel to make it all the way to horizon.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily.
Suddenly there was this machine sitting next to her on the table.
It would shift toward her and say, hi, Jan.
How are you this morning?
Jan, do you want to hear a joke?
Jan, do you want to have a conversation?
A look at the push to have AI-powered robots.
keep older Americans company as they age.
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.
