ICE halts

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement halted "all movement" at a detention center in Texas for families and quarantined some migrants there after medical staff confirmed two detainees had "active measles infections," the Department of Homeland Security said Sunday.

CBS News

Themeaslescases at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center were detected Friday, Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to CBS News. The ICE facility houses parents and children taken into federal custody over alleged violations of immigration law. It is located in south Texas, roughly an hour drive from San Antonio.

"ICE Health Services Corps immediately took steps to quarantine and control further spread and infection, ceasing all movement within the facility and quarantining all individuals suspected of making contact with the infected," McLaughlin said.

McLaughlin said medical officials were monitoring detainees and taking "appropriate and active steps to prevent further infection."

"All detainees are being provided with proper medical care," she added.

Before McLaughlin's statement on Sunday, immigration lawyers hadreported concernsabout a potential measles outbreak at the Dilley center.

Neha Desai, a lawyer for the California-based National Center of Youth Law, which represents children in U.S. immigration custody, said she hopes the measles infections at Dilley are not used to "unnecessarily" prevent lawmakers and attorneys from inspecting the detention center in the near future, citing broader concerns about the facility.

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"In the meantime, we are deeply concerned for the physical and the mental health of every family detained at Dilley," Desai said. "It is important to remember that no family needs to be detained — this is a choice that the administration is making."

In 2025, the United States saw themost measles cases in decades. Overall, the nation recorded more than 2,200 measles cases, including 762 people in aWest Texasoutbreak, according to theTexas Department of State Health Services. Two young children died and 99 people were hospitalized, according to state data.

Dilley is the detention complex where ICE had been holding 5-year-oldLiam Conejo Ramosand his father, both detained in Minnesota during an operation that garnered widespread outcry, until the family was released over the weekend due to a court ruling.Liam and his father returned to Minnesotaon Sunday.

ICE's detention population has ballooned under the second Trump administration, which has vowed to stage a deportation crackdown of unprecedented proportions.

ICE is currently holding more than 70,000 individuals facing deportation in detention centers across the U.S., according to government data obtained by CBS News. The vast majority are single adults accused of being in the U.S. illegally. The number is a massive jump from a year ago, when ICE was holding around 40,000 detainees.

Rep. Michael McCaul says Gregory Bovino "crossed the line" in Minneapolis crackdown

Passage: In memoriam

Mel Robbins on "The Let Them Theory"

ICE halts "all movement" at Texas detention facility due to measles infections

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement halted "all movement" at a detention center in Texas for families and ...
A Kremlin official confirms that U.S.-brokered Russia-Ukraine talks are resuming this week

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A new round ofU.S.-brokered talkson ending Russia's war on Ukraine is set to go ahead this week after a brief postponement, a senior Kremlin official said Monday, with negotiations taking place against a backdrop of continuedfront-line fightingand deadlylong-range attackson rear areas.

The trilateral talks will take place on Wednesday and Thursday in Abu Dhabi, wherea previous meetingwas held last month, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Sunday that he would be sending a delegation to the meeting, which initially was to be held at the weekend but was delayed by what Peskov said were scheduling conflicts.

The Trump administration has over the past year pushed the two sides to find compromises. But breaking the deadlock on key issues appears no closer as the fourth anniversary ofRussia's all-out invasionof its neighbor approaches later this month.

Peskov described the talks as "very complex."

"On some issues, we have certainly come closer because there have been discussions, conversations, and on some issues it is easier to find common ground," he told reporters. "There are issues where it's more difficult to find common ground."

Russian presidential envoy Kirill Dmitriev was in Miami, Florida, at the weekend for talks with American officials, but Peskov refused to provide any details of the meeting.

A key sticking point is whether Russia gets to keep the Ukrainian territory its army has occupied, especially inUkraine's eastern industrial heartland. Moscow is also demanding possession of other Ukrainian land there that it hasn't been able to capture.

Russian drones and missiles have continued to bombard civilian areas, killing 12 minersin a bus on Sunday in the most recent mass aerial attack. The barrages have also wrecked the Ukrainian power grid, leaving peoplewithout heating, light and running waterin bitter winter cold.

Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov said Monday that authorities are taking steps to prevent Russia using Starlink satellite services to steer its drones toward their targets.

Fedorov asked Elon Musk's SpaceX to help deny Russia use of the service in Ukraine. Starlink is a global internet network that relies on around 10,000 satellites orbiting Earth.

Ukraine is requiring civilian and military Starlink users to register their terminals on a database, allowing approved devices to function while unregistered terminals would be disabled inside Ukraine, Fedorov said.

"Looks like the steps we took to stop the unauthorized use of Starlink by Russia have worked," Musk said Sunday on X. "Let us know if more needs to be done."

Litvinova contributed from Tallinn, Estonia.

Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

A Kremlin official confirms that U.S.-brokered Russia-Ukraine talks are resuming this week

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A new round ofU.S.-brokered talkson ending Russia's war on Ukraine is set to go ahead this week ...
EU's foreign policy chief says a Europe-wide army could be 'extremely dangerous'

BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas on Monday rejected calls for a Europe-wide army, warning that it could be "extremely dangerous" as the bloc considers ways to provide its own security after the United States warned that itspriorities lie elsewhere.

Associated Press

Talk of a European army has resurfaced amid tensions within NATO over President Donald Trump'sthreatsto annex Greenland, the semiautonomous territory of NATO-ally Denmark.

"Those who say that we need a European army, maybe those people haven't really thought this through practically," Kallas said. "If you are already part of NATO then you can't create a separate army."

Kallas told a security conference in Norway that the most important military asset during a crisis "is the chain of command — who gives orders to whom."

She added: "And if you have, like the European army and then you have the NATO (one), then, you know, the ball just falls between the chairs. And this is extremely, extremely dangerous."

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NATO's military operations are overseen by a Supreme Allied Commander, who is always a top U.S. officer. The role is currently held by Airforce Lt. Gen. Alexus Grynkewich.

Norway's Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre said: "NATO is there with the decision-making process among allies, which is in itself complex, but it is trained to work." He rejected calls for a European army, saying that "it is not a road we should travel." Norway is not a member of the EU.

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said last week that Europe isincapable of defending itselfwithout U.S. military support and would have to more than double current militaryspending targetsto be able to do so.

"If anyone thinks here … that the European Union or Europe as a whole can defend itself without the U.S., keep on dreaming. You can't," Rutte told EU lawmakers in Brussels.

Europe and the United States "need each other," he said.

EU's foreign policy chief says a Europe-wide army could be 'extremely dangerous'

BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas on Monday rejected calls for a Europe-wide army, warning ...
France's budget set to clear the way for Macron's military spending boost

PARIS (AP) — France's delayed budget for this year is set to pass Monday, clearing the way forhigher military spendingpromised by President Emmanuel Macron to confront threats linked to Russia's war in Ukraine and Mideast conflicts.

Associated Press French President Emmanuel Macron shakes with soldiers as he visits the Istres military air force base, southern France, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Philippe Magoni, Pool) French President Emmanuel Macron waits for the arrival of Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Greenland Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen outside the Elysee Palace in Paris, Wednesday Jan. 28. 2026. (AP Photo/Thomas Padilla)

France Macron

The expected adoption of the budget marks the final step of a monthslong,chaotic processthat exposed deep divisions in the fractured Parliament, which proved unable to reach a compromise. Prime MinisterSébastien Lecornuultimately opted to use his special constitutional power to pass the bill without a vote. He is widely expected to survive two no-confidence votes on Monday evening.

Focus on military forces

Macron has vowed to increase defense spending to counter what he describes as a widening range of threats, from Russia and nuclear proliferation to terrorism and cyberattacks.

France in December passed an emergency law to avoid a U.S.-style government shutdown, but only the full 2026 budget provides the military with the needed funding to build up forces.

The Defense Ministry will get this year an additional 6.7 billion euros ($7,9 billion) compared to 2025 — a notable exception as the state seeks to curb spending across most other sectors. This year, the armed forces are set to receive a new nuclear-powered attack submarine, 362 armored vehicles to modernize the army, and new Aster surface-to-air missiles.

France is also launching itsnew voluntary military servicethis year aiming at training thousands of volunteers, mostly aged 18 and 19.

Limiting the deficit

The government is targeting a budget deficit of 5% of gross domestic product, down from 5.4% in 2025. Public spending is expected to edge down slightly, from 56.8% to 56.6% of GDP as authorities try to rein in debt in the European Union's second-largest economy.

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France has come under pressure from the EU and credit rating agencies to reduce its debt, prompting the center-right government to seek spending cuts.

However, with no majority in Parliament, Lecornu also granted costly concessions to Socialists to keep them from backing efforts to topple his government. The most symbolic is thesuspension of Macron's unpopular pension changesto raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.

The state deficit is projected at 131.9 billion euros ($156,5 billion), almost stable compared with the previous year.

Businesses will bear several tax increases, including an extra tax on large companies' profits that's expected to raise 7.3 billion euros ($8,7 billion) in 2026.

What it means for Macron

Macron, 48, is soon entering the last year of his presidency in spring 2027.

He has largely stepped back from domestic politics since his 2024 decision to call early legislative elections plunged Parliament into turmoil and led to thecollapse of successive governmentsover budget disputes.

Lecornu, the fourth prime minister in two years, has already survived six no-confidence votes initiated by the hard left and the far right. Macron, meanwhile, has focused on foreign policy, European affairs and defense.

In recent weeks, he has pushed forsecurity guarantees for Ukrainein the event of a peace deal with Russia, joined European leaders in ashow of solidarity with Greenland, and supported the inclusion of Iran's Revolutionary Guard onthe EU's list of terrorist organization.

As hissunglasses became a sensationat the Davos gathering of world leaders, Macron's remarks that France prefers "respect to bullies," seen as a rebuke to President Donald Trump's tariffs threats, drew worldwide attention.

France's budget set to clear the way for Macron's military spending boost

PARIS (AP) — France's delayed budget for this year is set to pass Monday, clearing the way forhigher military spendin...
British serial killer 'Suffolk Strangler' pleads guilty to 1999 murder

LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuters) - A British serial killer, dubbed the "Suffolk Strangler" by the media after he killed five young women, pleaded guilty on Monday to ​an earlier murder of a teenager committed more than 25 years ago.

Steve Wright, ‌who is already serving a life sentence with no prospect of parole for a 2006 killing spree, appeared at ‌London's Old Bailey court where he admitted kidnapping and murdering 17-year-old Victoria Hall in 1999.

Wright, 67, also pleaded guilty to the attempted kidnap of a 22-year-old woman the day before Hall's murder. He will be sentenced on Friday.

"Victoria's family have waited over 26 years for this ⁠day and I am so very ‌pleased that we have been able to deliver justice for Victoria and they now know who is responsible for Victoria's murder," said Assistant ‍Chief Constable Alice Scott, of Suffolk Constabulary.

Hall disappeared from the coastal town of Felixstowe in eastern England while walking home in the early hours from a nightclub. Her naked body was found in ​a stream 25 miles (40 km) away five days later.

Wright was convicted in 2008 of ‌the murder of five women who worked as prostitutes in the town of Ipswich, northeast of London in Suffolk.

The naked bodies of Gemma Adams, Tania Nicol, Anneli Alderton, Paula Clennell and Annette Nicholls were discovered scattered around Ipswich over a 10-day period in late 2006, causing panic in the town and the surrounding area.

Wright's killing spree was compared with that ⁠of the 19th-century serial killer "Jack the Ripper", who targeted ​prostitutes in the east end of London.

He asphyxiated ​the women and left two of their bodies in a crucifix position with arms outstretched.

He was given a whole-life order, meaning he could never be ‍released from prison, for ⁠what the sentencing judge described as "a targeted campaign of murder".

Wright had consistently denied the earlier allegations, even though his DNA was found on three of the victims ⁠and bloodstains from two of them were found on his jacket at his home.

His guilty pleas on Monday ‌mark the first time he has ever admitted any offences.

(Reporting by Sam ‌Tobin; editing by Michael Holden and Sharon Singleton)

British serial killer 'Suffolk Strangler' pleads guilty to 1999 murder

LONDON, Feb 2 (Reuters) - A British serial killer, dubbed the "Suffolk Strangler" by the media after he killed ...
Two dead amid winter storm that brought record snowfall and freezing to the South

At least two people have died in a weekend snowstorm that unleashed record-setting snowfall on North Carolina and freezing temperatures on Florida.

NBC Universal Winter storm Gianna in Charlotte (Peter Zay / Anadolu via Getty Images)

North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein reported over 1,000 collisions resulting in two fatalities across the state over the weekend. Stein did not share any details about the victims.

State officials advised residents to stay off the roads if they can.

"Please be patient and please stay off the roads unless it's absolutely necessary," North Carolina Transportation Secretary Daniel Johnson said. "If you do have to drive, slow down and give other cars, our teams and other first responders lots of distance."

Residents of North Carolina woke up Sunday to record-setting snowfall, with some areas reporting over 20 inches of accumulation. Snowfall totals across the state include 22.5 inches in Faust, 16 inches in Lexington, 12 inches in Jacksonville and 11 inches in Charlotte, marking the fourth-largest single-day snowfall and biggest snow event since 2004. Northeastern and coastal communities were hit particularly hard, according to the NCDOT.

A house along the coast in Buxton was washed away by surging waters Sunday morning, generating more concern about coastal properties amid this weekend's storm. The National Park Service said that dozens of houses in the area sustained damage as a result of the storm.

Fresh, powdery snow measuring up to 10 inches could be seen in Newport, North Carolina, and on the runways of Raleigh-Durham International Airport overnight.

Two people walk in the snow outside (Peter Zay / Anadolu via Getty Images)

Stein warned that in addition to snow, black ice will also be a risk throughout the week due to below-freezing overnight temperatures.

"Today is a special day for North Carolina because we just don't get snow like this very often. So, have fun, stay off the roads and stay safe," Stein said.

Meanwhile, in South Carolina, about 0.7 inch of snow fell at Charleston International Airport on Saturday, breaking the daily snow record of 0.6 inch that was set in 1977, according to the National Weather Service field office in Charleston.

The state's Department of Public Safety asked residents to stay home to avoid dangerous road conditions.

"We're seeing an increase of service calls for cars losing control and in ditches across a large portion of the Upstate, northern Midlands and Pee Dee," DPS said.

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Rare light snow flurries were seen early Sunday morning in Tampa Bay, Florida, near the city's National Weather Service field office.

This weather system is currently located off the East Coast, strengthening as it moves north.

A snow plow on the road outside (Peter Zay / Anadolu via Getty Images)

Light snow continued to fall over parts of eastern Massachusetts Sunday afternoon. A dusting of up to 2 inches will be possible along Cape Cod through early Monday morning.

The main issue from this system for the rest of the day will be intense wind gusts that will linger until Monday. Gusts of 50-60 mph will be possible, especially along the coast. These strong wind gusts could lead to 2 to 4 feet of inundation along the Outer Banks of North Carolina and 1 to 2 feet near Nantucket, Massachusetts.

Over 160,000 utility customers across the South were without power Sunday afternoon, including 56,600 in Mississippi, 44,100 in Tennessee and 25,990 in Florida.

February chill

Numerous record lows were set this weekend across the Southeast, specifically in Florida, where Sanford, Melbourne and Daytona Beach set both daily and February record lows.

On Saturday, a record low temperature of minus 9 degrees was reported in Columbus, Ohio, beating the 2004 record of minus 6 degrees, according to the weather service field office in Wilmington. Islip, New York, reported a record low of 0, breaking the 2019 record of 3 degrees.

Over the weekend, New Yorkers were seen playing ice hockey on a lake in Central Park, while someone was spotted ice skating on a Jersey Shore beach.

Around 52 million remain under cold weather alerts through Sunday afternoon as high temperatures stay 10 to 25 degrees below average. Current wind chills are in the 30s to 40s across Florida, and the teens and 20s in Georgia and the Carolinas.

Windy conditions due to the strong coastal low will bring significantly cold wind chills throughout the eastern half of the country. It will feel like the temperatures are in the teens across much of the Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and East Coast, with single digits to below zero in the interior Northeast.

On Sunday night, lows will dip to the single digits and below zero for much of the Midwest and Northeast and to the teens and 20s as far south as the Gulf Coast. Dozens of record lows are possible again Monday morning, including in Daytona Beach, Key West, Gainesville and Miami, Florida; Wilmington and Charlotte, North Carolina; and Columbia and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

Although the extreme cold will ease by the start of the week, temperatures will generally stay 5 to 15 degrees below average for the eastern half of the country into next weekend.

Two dead amid winter storm that brought record snowfall and freezing to the South

At least two people have died in a weekend snowstorm that unleashed record-setting snowfall on North Carolina and freezin...
Tyler Robinson, the suspect in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk, sits beside defense attorney Kathryn Nester during a hearing in Provo, Utah, on January 16, 2026. - Bethany Baker/Pool/Reuters

Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old man charged with the murder of conservative political activistCharlie Kirk, will appear in a Provo, Utah, courtroom Tuesday as his attorneys resume their questioning of Utah County Attorney Jeffrey Gray, whose office is prosecuting the case.

This hearing is the second in the defense team's bid to get the county attorney's office tossed from the case, citing a conflict of interest.

Robinson's defense is arguingbecause the 18-year-old child of one of the prosecutors was present when Kirk was killed during a speaking engagement at Utah Valley University in September, a conflict of interest exists. The defense says the entire office should be removed because "no effort was made to shield their prosecution of this case from his conflict," according to the motion to disqualify filed in December.

The county attorney's office has repeatedly denied having a conflict of interest because the 18-year-old, a student at UVU, "did not see Charlie get shot," and "did not see anyone (in the crowd or elsewhere) with a gun," court documents show.

The office contends the 18-year-old will not be called as a witness in the case because their knowledge of the incident, despite being present, "is based entirely on hearsay."

Does the 18-year-old's presence qualify as a conflict of interest? Here's what legal experts say.

What constitutes a conflict of interest?

Robinson's defense citedUtah's Code of Judicial Administrationin their filing, which states attorneys can't be involved in cases with "a concurrent conflict of interest," which may include "a personal interest of the lawyer."

But conflict of interest arguments are rarely accepted by the courts, according to Paul Cassell, a criminal law professor with the University of Utah's S.J. Quinney College of Law.

"There's a presumption of good faith for prosecutors, and more broadly the government, and without some clear showing that there is reason to doubt the fairness of the proceedings, generally the proceedings will move forward," Cassell said. "The chances of this prevailing based on other similar claims that have been presented are very, very low."

Still, CNN Legal Analyst Joey Jackson says the court will weigh whether the parties "are making decisions predicated upon the merits, the facts, the law, and the circumstances only, and that there are no outside influences that are going to impact the judgments that are being made."

The defense estimated some 3,000 people were present at the event in their filing and attached declarations from five witnesses, some of whom described the scene as "pure panic" and "chaotic" in their accounts, with one disclosing, "I thought I was about to die."

The county attorney's office, in its opposition to the disqualification motion, said comparing the defense's witness statements to that of the prosecutor's child shows "just how unnecessary (the child's potential testimony) is in the case."

"It's ultimately going to turn on, how did the (adult child) witnessing that impact, impair, affect the decision, if at all," Jackson said. "The issue before the court is whether an actual conflict – not a perceived conflict – has been presented and can be established based upon the chain of events."

If the judge does agree there is a conflict of interest, Cassell said the response would more likely be "disqualifying a person who has been tainted by a particular conflict," rather than an entire office.

To disqualify the full office would be a serious step, according to Cassell, because the Utah County Attorney is an elected official.

"If you disqualify an entire office, you're essentially invalidating the results of the election," he said.

If the judge did take that step, the case would likely be reassigned either to another prosecutor's office in a neighboring county or to the state Attorney General's office – all options which come with their own drawbacks.

Utah County Attorney Jeffrey Gray announces formal charges brought against Tyler Robinson, the alleged shooter of Charlie Kirk, on September 16, 2025, in Provo, Utah. - Francisco Kjolseth/The Salt Lake Tribune/Getty Images

Salt Lake County has similar resources to Utah County, but unlike Gray, its district attorney is a Democrat, which could impact the approach to the case. The counties to the south are smaller and may not have the resources necessary to prosecute a case of this magnitude, and reassigning it to the Attorney General's office would remove it from the hands of an elected county official, according to Cassell.

Did a conflict of interest play into death penalty pursuit?

The defense further implied in its filing the alleged conflict of interest may have influenced the prosecution's decision to pursue the death penalty so quickly in the case.

In Utah, prosecutors have 60 days after an arraignment to file notice of intent to pursue the death penalty against a defendant.

Robinson will not be arraigned until after his preliminary hearing, which is scheduled to begin on May 18 and last three days. As such, he has not yet entered pleas to charges including aggravated murder, felony use of a firearm, obstruction of justice and witness tampering.

"The rush to seek death in this case evidences strong emotional reactions" by the county attorney's office, the motion says.

The county attorney's office pushed back on that assertion in their response, saying, "There is nothing unusual or untoward about filing a death penalty notice before a preliminary hearing."

The evidence and circumstances of the case "justify the death penalty," and a delay "would have been unnecessarily unsettling and painful to Charlie Kirk's loved ones and does not promote justice for anyone," the court filing said.

"There's going to be all kinds of information, of facts, that are going to come out in the hearing to determine if there was an … actual conflict," Jackson said. "You want, at the end of the day, fairness in a system that doesn't take anything into account but the case."

Other high-profile conflict of interest claims

Though conflict of interest claims can be infrequent in a courtroom, they're not unprecedented.

Attorneys forLuigi Mangione, the 27-year-old man accused of gunning down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on a Manhattan sidewalk in 2024, filed a motion to bar the death penalty in his case over a conflict of interest with US Attorney General Pam Bondi.

Mangione's attorneys argued Bondi should have recused herself from decision making in the case because she had previously worked for Ballard Partners, a lobbying firm that represents UnitedHealth Group, before she joined the Trump administration.

The judge in that case ruled Friday thatMangione won't face the death penalty– but not because of the conflict of interest claim.

She dismissed the federal murder charge he was facing, which was his only charge carrying the death penalty, because it hinged on his stalking charges being classified as "crimes of violence," which the judge disagreed with based on Supreme Court precedent.

Brian Kohberger, who pleaded guilty in July to the gruesome stabbing deaths of four University of Idaho students, faced a conflict of interest issue with his own attorney during the course of his case.

His appointed public defender, Anne Taylor, had previously represented the parent of one of the victims, a2023 court recordshows.

Taylor told the court though she represented the former client for roughly three months, she had never met them nor provided any legal advice. The record shows the judge, with Kohberger's agreement, allowed Taylor to continue representing him.

When Robinson's case resumes Tuesday, Gray will finish his testimony before the defense calls three more witnesses: the prosecutor in question, his adult child and an investigator with the county attorney's office.

CNN's Nicki Brown contributed to this report.

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A prosecutor’s 18-year-old child was there when Charlie Kirk was shot. Is that a conflict of interest?

Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old man charged with the murder of conservative political activistCharlie Kirk, will appear in a Provo, Utah, c...

 

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