1 Suspect On The Run After Shooting Six With One Fatality At Texas Bar Yesterday
A manhunt was underway in Texas after a gunman opened fire early yesterday at the Alas Locas sports bar in Cleveland, about 45 miles northeast of Houston, killing one person and wounding five others. The shooting happened around 2:30 a.m. when the suspect, who had been quietly drinking alone at the bar for about an hour, walked outside and then returned to the outdoor patio where he opened fire without warning on people eating and drinking. According to Captain David Myers of the Liberty County Sheriff's Office, witnesses said the gunman arrived between midnight and 2 a.m., ordered a beer, but wasn't talking to anyone before the attack. Security video captured the shooting, and investigators found at least 20 shell casings from a .40 or .45-caliber handgun. The shooter fled in a white full-size van with no side windows. One victim, who was at the bar with his wife, was airlifted to Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center where he died. Five other people were shot, with two in critical condition.
2 Workers Detained In Georgia Hyundai Plant Raid To Be Flown Back To South Korea
South Korean workers detained during a massive immigration raid at a Hyundai facility in Georgia will be freed and flown home on a chartered flight, according to President Lee Jae-myung's office. Federal and immigration agents arrested 475 people on Thursday, mostly South Korean nationals, while executing a search warrant as part of a criminal investigation into alleged unlawful employment at the facility in Ellabell, Georgia. The raid was the largest single-site enforcement operation in Department of Homeland Security history and part of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. Agents from Homeland Security Investigations, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and other federal agencies targeted the site where Hyundai and LG Energy Solution are building an electric vehicle plant. LG Energy Solution said 47 of its employees were detained, with 46 being Korean, along with another 250 personnel from "equipment partner companies," most of them also Korean. The incident strained relations with South Korea, a key U.S. ally and the world's 10th-largest economy. A South Korean presidential spokesperson announced that negotiations for the workers' release had been concluded and that South Korea would review and improve its visa system for personnel traveling to the U.S. The raid came just 11 days after a White House summit between President Trump and Lee, where South Korean firms pledged $150 billion in U.S. investments. Previously, Seoul had pledged $350 billion in U.S. projects to reduce Trump's threatened tariffs, which he later set at 15%.
3 President Trump Issues "Last Warning" To Hamas
President Trump issued what he called a “last warning” to Hamas yesterday, urging them to accept a proposed deal to release Gaza hostages in a Truth Social post. He said Israel had already signed on to the terms and indicated no further negotiations would follow. Hamas responded by expressing willingness to consider peace talks, but emphasized that any deal must include a clear end to the conflict and Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. The proposal reportedly includes a ceasefire and immediate release of 48 hostages in exchange for thousands of Palestinian prisoners, and leaves room for further negotiations during the truce.