Here is the biggest news you have missed this weekend

Vice-president JD Vance remains confident that the United States can make an end of war Between Russia and Ukraine, despite the potential huts that have emerged from President Donald Trump’s meeting this month with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“We believe that we have already seen important concessions on both sides, just in recent weeks,” said Vance in an exclusive interview on “Meet the Press” by NBC News. “”
“We will possibly succeed, or we will hit a brick wall. And if we hit a brick wall, we will continue this negotiation process, to apply a lever effect,” added the vice-president. “It is energetic diplomacy that will end this war.”
Meanwhile, Russia’s best diplomat, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sergey Lavrov, Put a shock absorber on the hopes That Trump will propel a rapid end to war in Ukraine.
He told the “Meet The Press” moderator Kristen Welker that Ukraine had hampered the process, saying that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders “do not want peace”.
“Zelenskyy said no to everything,” said Lavrov. “How can we meet a person who claims to be a leader?”
Lavrov said Putin was ready to meet Zelenskyy “when the agenda is ready.” But he suggested that Putin would not sign a peace agreement with Zelenskyy, whose Moscow legitimacy interviewed since the Ukrainian elections were postponed last year in the middle of martial law.
“When we arrive at a stage where you have to sign documents, we would need a very clear understanding of everyone that the person who signs is legitimate,” he said. “And according to the Ukrainian constitution, Mr. Zelenskyy is not for the moment.”
The Ministry of Justice has given Ghislaine Maxwell ‘a platform to rewrite history’ ‘, says the family of Virginia Giuffre
The family members of Virginia Giuffre, an eminent accuser of Jeffrey Epstein, said that they were “indignant” by the decision of the Ministry of Justice to publish the transcriptions of the testimony of Ghislaine Maxwell last month, arguing interviews provided Maxwell with a “platform to rewrite history”.
“The content of these transcriptions is in direct contradiction with the condemnation of Felon Ghislaine Maxwell for children’s sex traffic,” said Virginia Roberts Giuffre family in a statement. The family added: “This parody of justice completely invalidates the experiences of the many courageous survivors who put their security, their security and their life at stake to ensure their condemnation, including our sister.”
The Ministry of Justice Friday published audio and transcriptions From the two -day interview, during which Maxwell challenged several allegations of reprehensible acts against her and Epstein, including Giuffre, died by suicide in April.
Maxwell said that she had never witnessed an inappropriate conduct of every man, including Trump, and denied the existence of an incriminating “customer list” of those who benefited from Epstein crimes.
On “Meet The Press”, Senator Adam Schiff echoes the opinion of the Giuffre family, saying that Maxwell has the motivation to say everything that could potentially make her forgive.
“She says exactly that what her lawyers tell her will be necessary to get a forgiveness. No one should be surprised here,” said Schiff.
Brief policy
- Passage of padding: The Texas Senate in the State of Texas controlled by the Republican adopted the new cards of the party congress – Designed to fill the majority of the GOP at the US Congress – ending a legislative odyssey which sparked a national wheelbarrow on redistribution.
- Not delivered: Postal services around the world are Interrupt parcel deliveries to the United States In the midst of the growing confusion on the new import rights imposed on small expeditions under the new Trump pricing regime.
- Baltimore then? Trump on social truth threatened with sending the soldiers to Baltimore To “quickly clean up” the crime, the last of the threats to reproduce the deployment of the national guard troops in Washington.
Washington’s federal takeover has sparked a fierce debate on the state of crime in the city. What is beyond the dispute is that developments exploded during the pandemic And have not yet returned to pre-pale levels. It is a particularly brutal crime, say the experts, which often causes sustainable psychological damage.
“It has become the crime of the pandemic,” said Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Executive Research Forum, an organization based in Washington of current and former officials of the application of laws focused on the improvement of police services. “And the reason you still have it is because minors have learned to do so. This presents many challenges for the justice system. ”
The branding number of young people who have embarked on the diversion of a car is indeed one of the key factors that has led to the wave in the Washington region and beyond, according to interviews with more than half a dozen police, criminologists and young people.
Some of these authors have stolen vehicles to use them to commit more crimes. Many others commit car car just for the thrill or to gain respect and attention on social networks, according to police investigators and the defenders who spoke to young delinquents.
In the past 18 months, car numbers have fallen into the region. Sgt. Josh Fhor The supervisor of the car unit in the county of Prince George Voisin, Maryland, said that he was proud of progress, but even carjacking is one more than he wanted to see in his county.
“We can challenge that we are not at 573,” added Scall, referring to the record number of cars recorded in Prince George in 2023. “But it is always unacceptable in our books.”
The sending of a first -year student to university is almost always an expensive company, but the latest viral trend is to make back to school to school to the next level.
Extreme dormitory makers become more and more popular, some parents depict tens of thousands of dollars and the hiring of professional interior designers to transform the humble home of their children into dormitories of their dreams.
Far from being withdrawn from mini-frills and twisted posters from the past, dramatic transformations are not necessary, according to some, and reflect the extended line between wealthy and demons in the United States.
“The disparity of wealth becomes evident on a university campus, because suddenly, your lifestyle is funded by you, that is not the case,” said Mya Mendola, graduate of The University of Minnesota Last year.
Notable quote
I did not expect it to last so long. I thought it would be a few months.
Frank Ilett, who has not cut her hair for almost a year because of the difficulties of Manchester United
Frank Ilett announced last October that he would not cut his locks before his beloved Manchester United won five football games in a row. More than 320 days later, He is still waiting.
In case you missed it
- Kilmar Abrego Garcia, wrongly expelled towards a notorious prison in Salvador, now Faced with removal in Uganda After being released from the federal guard.
- Police identified the police on Saturday Five people killed In a tourist bus accident in western New York.
- Jerry Adler, better known for Playing the confidant of a gangster on “The sopranos”, dies at 96.
- A judge in Mexico said Boxer Julio César Chávez Jr. On alleged cartel ties and weapon trafficking, but could wait for this trial outside of detention, said boxer’s lawyer.
- The son of the star of “Walking Dead” Norman Reedus was Order and accused Following an alleged assault in a New York apartment.
- More than 20 hospitals and health systems have Temporarily or indefinitely the transgender care for minors And some young adults this year in the midst of threats of federal surveys and reductions in government financing.
- Domestic deposits have become Main locations for the application of immigration Because federal agents target the workers of the day in search of work.
- A trial against Delbarton, a Catholic school Elite All-Boys where several former students presented allegations of sexual abuse, should be the first civilian trial involving the Catholic Church in New Jersey.




