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Month: November 2022

¿Qué está pasando con las redes sociales de Jennifer Lopez? No hay publicaciones en su Instagram

Rocío Muñoz-Ledo (CNN) — ¿Qué trama Jennifer Lopez? Las redes sociales de la actriz y cantante se apagaron este martes y sus seguidores tratan de averiguar qué significa. Todas las publicaciones previas en su cuenta verificada de Instagram se eliminaron y no ha hecho publicaciones nuevas en sus cuentas de Facebook, TikTok ni Twitter. Jennifer

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An employee had a gun to her forehead; others ran for their lives: Witnesses describe the Chesapeake Walmart shooting

By Eliott C. McLaughlin, Brian Todd, Paradise Afshar and Christina Maxouris, CNN Though Jessie Wilczewski had been working at the Chesapeake, Virginia, Walmart for only a few days, her Tuesday night shift started like all the rest, with a routine team meeting in the break room. Moments after the meeting began, Wilczewski found herself face

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DOJ prosecutors seek testimony from former Vice President Pence in January 6 criminal probe

By Evan Perez, Katelyn Polantz and Zachary Cohen, CNN Justice Department prosecutors have reached out to representatives of former Vice President Mike Pence to seek his testimony in the criminal investigation into efforts by former President Donald Trump and allies to impede the transfer of power after the 2020 election, according to people familiar with

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‘I’m waiting for someone to wake me up,’ says Saudi sports minister after remarkable win over Argentina

By Zeena Saifi, CNN A day after Saudi Arabia’s historic win against Argentina at the Qatar World Cup, the Kingdom’s sports minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al-Faisal says he’s “waiting for someone to wake me up.” “It’s been an unbelievable result. The team played really well, they prepared for three years for this day, the

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Colorado Springs police said they made an effort not to misgender Club Q victims. Here’s why that matters

By Scottie Andrew, CNN Police chief Adrian Vasquez took a basic but still relatively uncommon step when announcing the names of the five victims killed at Club Q, the beloved LGBTQ nightclub in Colorado Springs. Instead of relying on IDs or legal identifiers, Vasquez and the police department communicated with victims’ families through victim advocates,

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