Boxer Anthony Joshua released from hospital after fatal crash

Boxer Anthony Joshua was released from a hospital in Nigeria on Wednesday, Dec. 31 two days aftersurviving a fatal car accidentthat killed two of his close friends, according to the Associated Press.

Joshua, a former two-time world heavyweight champion whose parents are from Nigeria, had been recovering from minor injuries during the two-vehicle crash near Lagos, according to Matchroom Boxing, which promotes Joshua.

Ina video posted on social mediaafter the crash, Joshua looked to be in pain as he exited the vehicle. That vehicle, in which Joshua and his friends were traveling, hit a stationary truck on a major road near Lagos, according to the Associated Press.

Gbenga Omotoso, the Lagos state commissioner for information and strategy, issued a statement on X saying Joshua was discharged late Wednesday afternoon after being "deemed clinically fit to recuperate from home."

"Anthony and his mother were at the funeral home in Lagos this afternoon to pay their final respects to his two departed friends as they were being prepared for repatriation scheduled for later this evening," Omotoso also said.

Jake Paul, Logan Paul, and 6ix9ine walk to the ring before Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua at Kaseya Center on Dec. 19, 2025 in Miami, Florida. Jake Paul, Logan Paul, and 6ix9ine walk to the ring before Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua at Kaseya Center on Dec. 19, 2025 in Miami, Florida. Jake Paul, Logan Paul, and 6ix9ine enter before Jake Paul v Anthony Joshua at Kaseya Center on Dec. 19, 2025 in Miami, Florida. Jake Paul prepares before walking to the ring during Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua at Kaseya Center on Dec. 19, 2025 in Miami, Florida. Anthony Joshua walks to the ring before Jake Paul vs. Anthony Joshua at Kaseya Center on Dec. 19, 2025 in Miami, Florida.

Highlights from Jake Paul vs Anthony Joshua fight

Sina Ghami and Latif "Latz" Ayodele, who worked for Joshua and were close friends with the boxer,were killed in the crash.

Ghami was Joshua's strength and conditioning coach while Ayodele was a trainer, according to the Associated Press. Hours before the accident, Joshua posted on social media video of his playing table tennis with Ayodele.

Ten days before the accident, Joshua knocked out Jake Paul in the sixth round of their highly anticipated heavyweight fight livestreamed by Netflix.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Boxer Anthony Joshua released from hospital after fatal crash

Boxer Anthony Joshua released from hospital after fatal crash

Boxer Anthony Joshua was released from a hospital in Nigeria on Wednesday, Dec. 31 two days aftersurviving a fatal car ac...
Has NBA fought off NFL's Christmas Day invasion? Viewership up for hoops

For the NBA, Christmas Day in 2025 was a resounding success — at least in terms of viewership.

Across the five-game slate on the Disney networks, 47.19 million unique viewers tuned in, making it the most-watched Christmas Day since 2010 and representing a 45% year-over-year increase, according to Nielsen Big Data + Panel. These data exclude 2011, when a lockout prompted the start of the regular season to fall on Dec. 25.

Interestingly, Christmas Day viewership may also be hinting at a general changing of the guard. The first two games of the slate — Knicks vs.Cavaliersand Thunder vs. Spurs — were the ones with the highest viewership.

Oct. 26: The Dallas Mavericks' Cooper Flagg dunks the ball past the Toronto Raptors' Sandro Mamukelashvili at the American Airlines Center. Oct. 26: The Washington Wizards' Cam Whitmore dunks the ball against the Charlotte Hornets at Capital One Arena. <p style=Oct. 26: The Brooklyn Nets' Michael Porter Jr. dunks in front of the San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama at Frost Bank Center.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Oct. 25: The Denver Nuggets' Christian Braun dunks the ball against the Phoenix Suns' Grayson Allen at Ball Arena. Oct. 24: The Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. dunks against the Miami Heat at FedExForum. Oct. 24: The Miami Heat's Bam Adebayo dunks over the Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. at FedExForum. Oct. 22: The New York Knicks' OG Anunoby goes up for a reverse dunk against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden. Oct. 22: The Utah Jazz's Lauri Markkanen dunks against the Los Angeles Clippers at Delta Center.

Dribble into this collection of dunk photos as NBA stars posterize opponents

Knicks-Cavs averaged 6.37 million viewers, making it the most-watched 12 p.m. ET Christmas game in history. Thunder-Spurs averaged 6.71 million, making that the most-viewed second game since 2017.

The league made an impact on social media, as well. According to Videocites, the NBA generated more than 1.6 billion views across social platforms, making it the brand with most views on Christmas.

This is notable, given that the NFL has also laid claim to the holiday, broadcasting Christmas games over the past two years. NFL remains king in broadcast viewership, but this year's games proved to besignificantly inconsequential, with injuries marring the matchups, which mostly featured teams already eliminated or in danger of elimination from playoff contention.

The Knicks-Cavaliers game featured a late flurry from New York, whichrallied back from a 17-point fourth quarterdeficit to beat Cleveland, 126-124.

Dec. 25: The San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama dunks against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Paycom Center.

TheThunder-Spurs gamefeatured the latest iteration ofan emerging rivalry in the NBA, one that features a pair of the game's most dynamic young stars in Spurs phenom Victor Wembanyama and reigning NBA MVP, Shai Gilegous-Alexander.

The other games on the 2025 Christmas slate wereWarriors-Mavericks, Lakers-Rockets and Nuggets-Timberwolves.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NBA on Christmas Day TV ratings up as NFL invasion continues

Has NBA fought off NFL's Christmas Day invasion? Viewership up for hoops

For the NBA, Christmas Day in 2025 was a resounding success — at least in terms of viewership. Across the five-g...
Steven Stamkos scores goal No. 600, Predators win New Year's Eve matinee in Vegas 4-2

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Steven Stamkos scored his 600th career goal and the Nashville Predators beat the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 on Wednesday.

The Predators, in the middle of a season-long seven-game road trip, won for the 12th time in 17 games, including the third of their first four on the trip.

The win put the Predators (18-17-4) above .500 for the first time since Oct. 16, just five games into the season, when they were 2-1-2.

Vegas, meanwhile, lost for the sixth time in seven games. The Knights closed their four-game homestand with a 1-2-1 mark.

Now in his 18th season, Stamkos scored his 18th of the season and ninth against the Golden Knights since they entered the league in 2017. The game-tying goal was part of an unanswered three-goal spurt over five minutes that turned a 2-0 deficit into a 3-2 lead for the Predators.

Nick Perbix, Reid Schaefer and Michael Bunting also scored for the Predators. Justus Annunen made 29 saves.

Former Knight Erik Haula, who is two games shy of skating in his 800th game, registered the 200th assist of his career on Bunting's goal.

Mark Stone, who earlier in the day was named toCanada's Olympic roster, scored his 10th goal of the season, while Ben Hutton added his sixth for the Knights. Akira Schmid stopped 15 shots before being pulled late in the third period for an extra skater.

Vegas forward Mitch Marner and defenseman Shea Theodore were also named to Canada's team. All three of the Knights represented their homeland in the 2025 4 Nations Face-Off.

Nashville: Visits Seattle on Thursday.

Vegas: Visits St. Louis on Friday.

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/NHL

Steven Stamkos scores goal No. 600, Predators win New Year's Eve matinee in Vegas 4-2

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Steven Stamkos scored his 600th career goal and the Nashville Predators beat the Vegas Golden Knights 4-...
This screengrab taken from a video posted by US Southern Command on December 31, 2025, shows US forces striking a boat. - US Southern Command/X

US military strikes against alleged drug boats have killed at least eight people over the past two days – the latest salvos in the United States' escalating actions against what it says are drug traffickers.

On New Year's Eve,US Southern Commandsaid the military struck two boats "operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations," killing five people.

The day before, Tuesday, the US struck what it described as a "convoy" of three boats participating in the trafficking of narcotics, SOUTHCOM announcedin a post to Xon Wednesday. Three people aboard one boat were killed, while those in the other two abandoned their vessel.

SOUTHCOM said it notified the US Coast Guard after Tuesday's strike to activate search and rescue efforts. It's unclear whether any survivors have been recovered.

"The U.S. Coast Guard is coordinating search and rescue operations with vessels in the area," a USCG spokesperson said in a statement, adding that "a Coast Guard C-130 aircraft is en route to provide further search coverage with the ability to drop a survival raft and supplies."

The announcement of the latest US strikes offered no details about where they occurred – not even a body of water – as has been the case in the past. The military only said the Tuesday strikes occurred in "international waters."

Earlier this week, on Monday, the US military said itstruck a boat in the eastern Pacific Ocean, killing two people on board. That brings the total from three days of strikes this week to 10 people killed and six boats sunk, according to SOUTHCOM's information.

US strikes were first concentrated in the Caribbean Sea but the focus was later shifted to the eastern Pacific Ocean because administration officials believed they had stronger evidence linking cocaine transport to the US from those western routes, CNN previously reported.

CNN has reached out to Southern Command regarding the search and rescue mission for any survivors of Tuesday's strikes.

The Pentagon has rarely been proactive in acknowledging the survivors of prior strikes and military officials have come under intense scrutiny for their handling of those cases.

The most controversial was the first known strike against an alleged drug boat on September 2, in which CNN reported that US forces carried out a "follow-on strike" killing two survivors of the initial blast.

That revelation has prompted allegations of a possible war crime with some lawmakers demanding answers from the commander in charge.

In a subsequent strike, survivors were briefly detained aboard a US Navy ship before they were repatriated back to their home countries. In a third strike, the Pentagon contacted Mexican officials and tasked them with leading a search and rescue mission for one survivor who was never located. That individual is now presumed dead.

The new strikes bring the total number of vessels targeted by the US to at least 36 and the number of fatalities to at least 115 since the US began its campaign in September.

The Trump administration has claimed it is carrying out the strikes to stop the flow of drugs into the United States, but administration officials have also suggested they are part of a pressure campaign aimed at ousting Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, from whose country many of the stricken vessels have originated.

White House chief of staff Susie Wiles told Vanity Fair in interviews for a story published earlier this month that Trump wants to keep targeting boats until Maduro "cries uncle."

Last week President Donald Trump said the United States took out a"big facility"as part of a pressure campaign against Venezuela that has included a massive US naval and troop buildup in the Caribbean and a blockade of sanctioned oil tankers, in addition to the strikes.

The CIA carried out a drone strike earlier this month on a port facility on the coast of Venezuela, sources familiar with the mattertold CNN, marking the first known US attack on a target inside that country.

Trump, who has provided few additional details on the "big facility" action, told reporters on Monday that "there was a major explosion in the dock area where they load the boats up with drugs" and that an "implementation area" was "no longer around."

Maduro has repeatedly criticized the US military deployment in the Caribbean and accused the US of waging a campaign of "psychological terrorism" against his country.

In a response to Trump ordering a "complete" blockade of sanctioned oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuela earlier this month, Venezuela's National Assembly approved a law last week that allows for prison terms of up to 20 years for anyone found supporting "piracy" or "blockades."

This headline and story has been updated with Wednesday's strike.

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US military says at least eight killed in new strikes on alleged drug boats, with survivors abandoning ship

US military strikes against alleged drug boats have killed at least eight people over the past two days – the latest salvos in the United S...
Screengrab from Tricia McLaughlin @TriciaOhio's X account:

Some Minnesota families are in danger of losing child care after the US Department of Health and Human Services announced a freeze on child care payments to the state Tuesday amid a federal investigation into allegations of fraud, providers say.

It's the latest show of federal force in the state — home to the country'slargest Somali population.

Deputy Secretary of HHSJim O'Neillannounced the funding freeze on X Tuesday, weeks afterICE launched operationsin the Minneapolis-St. Paul area to specifically target undocumented Somali immigrants, precipitated by revelations aboutwidespread fraudas well as President Donald Trump's comments that he "doesn't want" Somalis in the country.

The stepped-up effort also comes days afterYouTube content creator Nick Shirley, who has created anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim videos in the past, posted a viral video in which he claimed to find widespread fraud at Somali-run child care centers. Thevideo, which includes limited evidence for the creator's allegations, has received more than 2.6 million views on YouTube as of Wednesday and was retweeted by Vice President JD Vance,FBI Director Kash Patel and former Department of Government Efficiency le ader Elon Musk.

To receive funding, child care centers suspected of committing fraud will be subject to an "additional level of verification," including providing complaints, internal state discrepancies and attendance and inspection records, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon told CNN. "Administrative data" will be expected from other centers in the country, he added.

"Funds will be released only when states prove they are being spent legitimately," O'Neill said.

Minnesota receives $185 million in federal child care funding for 19,000 children, the agency said in its post. The announcement did not specify any alternate plans for families across the state who will be affected by the freeze.

"If we allow this funding freeze to happen, all Minnesotans are going to suffer," Minnesota state Rep. Carlie Kotyza-Witthuhn, co-chair of the Children and Families Committee, said at a news conference Wednesday. "Instead of tearing down our Somali community and our child care centers, let's lift them up. Let's make sure that our children have safe places to learn and grow."

"Minnesota is one of the more expensive states in the nation to afford child care," Kotyza-Witthuhn continued."These aren't exorbitant amounts of money. They're just real numbers because it is costly to provide quality care for kids."

While there are legal avenues for the federal and state government to ensure programs are being run properly, "this hasty scorched earth attack is not just wrong, it may well be illegal, and my team and I remain committed to protecting the people of Minnesota to the fullest extent of the law," Carin Mrotz, a senior adviser with the Minnesota Attorney General's office, said in a statement on behalf of state Attorney General Keith Ellison.

Child care center providers at the news conference warned the funding freeze could soon have a direct impact on the families they serve.

One child care center director said 75% of the children at her program quality for state child care funding, and that her center would close in a month without assistance funding. Another, Maria Snyder, said many families at her St. Paul center are one paycheck away from becoming homeless.

"I'm generally scared for what can happen next if funding is stopped, and I can't help but think that this is part of a larger design plan and strategy to cut public funding," Snyder said.

She said child care providers are subject to "extremely detailed," randomized audits that include attendance records.

Small Business Administration head Kelly LoefflerannouncedMonday that agency funding to Minnesota would be suspended to "investigate $430 million in suspected PPP fraud across the state." She did not say whether that investigation into the Covid-eraPaycheck Protection Programinvolved any businesses seen in Shirley's video.

By Monday, DHS began postingvideosshowing agents from Homeland Security Investigations entering what it called "suspected fraud sites," as some members of the state legislature demanded a new investigation.

"If true, the revelations … highlight obvious misuse of taxpayer dollars and raise serious questions about the oversight and integrity of programs aimed to help children," said aMonday lettersigned by 30 Republican state senators.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walzsaid Tuesday his administration has spent years cracking down on fraud, by "referring cases to law enforcement, shutting down and auditing high-risk programs." He also asked the state legislature for more authority to take aggressive action, a spokesperson for the governor told CNN.

The governor and other state leaders have been called to testify in front of the Republican-led House Oversight Committee in two separate hearings starting next week.

Here's what we know about the investigations and the viral video.

Surge follows viral video

What officials called a surge of federal resources follows a viral YouTube video by Shirley, a 23-year-old self-styled independent journalist who posts content on social media with a conservative bent.

One law enforcement official told CNN the buildup of DHS agents in Minneapolis on Monday, including visits to some 30 businesses, was due in part to the video.

In the video posted Friday, Shirley visits and tries to enter several child care centers in Minnesota he suggests are not actually operational, although he claims they're receiving government funding through the state'sChild Care Assistance Program, or CCAP, which provides child care funds for low-income families.

On Tuesday, Shirley told CNN's Whitney Wild he is "100% sure" the allegations in his video are true. A man whose research was featured in the video told CNN he obtained all of the information from publicly available websites and that it was not given to him by Republican politicians. CNN is looking into Shirley's claims.

CNN is looking into the centers identified in the video and has reached out to several of them. The video also shows Shirley escorted out of one building by police after reports he was trespassing and harassing people.

"While we have questions about some of the methods that were used in the video, we do take the concerns that the video raises about fraud very seriously," Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families(DCYF)Commissioner Tikki Brown said in a Monday news conference, CNN affiliate KAREreported.

Multiple attempts by CNN to reach Brown and DCYF have been unsuccessful.

One South Minneapolis day center said they have been receiving threatening voicemails and there was a break-in at their facility after the video was released.

Important documentation on child enrollment and staff employent was taken and there was extensive vandalism, the center said a news conference.

CNN has reached out to the day care for comment and additional information.

Nick Shirley, a 23-year-old YouTube creator. - Nick Shirley/Youtube

Ibrahim Ali, a manager at Quality Learning Center, one of the centers featured in the video, who said his parents own the facility,told KAREon Monday that Shirley's video was recorded when the business was scheduled to be closed. A sign on the door says its operating hours are 2 to 10 p.m.

"There's no fraud going on whatsoever," Ali told KARE.

Shirley told CNN he visited that center on December 16 around 11:00 a.m. and made a follow up visit "later in the day" on the following day.

CNN observed families dropping children off at Quality Learning Center on Tuesday.

Astate licensing reviewfor the business from June lists several violations — including a lack of required training for some staff and inadequate documentation for medications — but nothing suggesting the business was unoccupied.

The state Department of Human ServicessaysCCAP payments to day care facilities can be withheld for fraud, but not for "licensing violations alone."

CNN tried to reach Quality Learning Center on Monday, but there was no answer at listed numbers.

It is not unusual for child care centers to keep their doors locked or to require a key card for entry due to safety concerns, according to Clare Sanford, the vice president of government and community relations for theMinnesota Child Care Association.

Quality Learning Center is seen in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on December 29. - KARE

CCAP funding — the kind of funding Shirley says is being stolen — is based on the eligible children enrolled at a facility, not its total capacity.

Child care centers face strict regulations in Minnesota, Sanford told CNN. Under the law, each licensed center should be visited at least once a year by an unannounced licensor, who spends hours running through a checklist of roughly 400 items, she explained.

The video does not address those regulations. Its explosive impact is one example of the growing power of the right-wing media ecosystem, largely fueled by independent creators whom the president has favored over traditional news networks. Shirley wasinvited to speak with Trumpat the White House in October, part ofa roundtable discussion on Antifawith other conservative online creators. He previously filmeda video at the Capitol attackon January 6, 2021, a look at"deported migrant scammers in NYC,"and an interview withAttorney General Pam Bondi.

Hearings and investigations underway by Congress, DHS and FBI

The House Oversight Committee has called Minnesota state representatives to testify before the panel ona January 7 hearingcentered around "fraud and misuse of federal funds" in the state.

The investigative panel run by Republican Rep. James Comer is also expected to hear testimony fromWalzand Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison in a separate hearing on February 10.

"Fraud that steals from taxpayers and robs vulnerable children will remain a top FBI priority in Minnesota and nationwide," the FBI director saidin a post on X.

Officials at DHS have announced their own investigation into alleged fraud.

CNN has reached out to the agencies regarding whether any arrests have been made in the latest investigations.

Five Republicans in the state legislature are calling on Walz to resign.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is seen outside of the Capitol in St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 7. - Abbie Parr/AP

"People in our districts raise this issue constantly. It is the number one issue we hear about," they said in astatementMonday. "They want to know why nobody is being held accountable. They want to know when somebody is going to fix it. And they want to know why the governor isn't resigning."

State Speaker of the House Lisa Demuth said the chamber's Fraud Prevention Committee has beeninvestigatingallegations of fraud regarding CCAP funding for months.

"No one's lost their job," Demuthsaidin a Monday news conference. "No one has been publicly disciplined in any way."

The state's child care auditors refer an average of five cases a year to law enforcement for criminal investigation, the Department of Human Services said in areportpresented to the House committee in February.

Authorities have targeted fraud in the state previously, including in July, when the FBI raided five businesses in the Twin Cities which had allegedly committed Medicaid housing assistance fraud,according to the Minnesota Star Tribune.

Half or more of the roughly $18 billion in Medicaid funds that supported 14 Minnesota-run programs since 2018 may have been stolen due to fraud, a federal prosecutor said on December 18,according to The Associated Press.

"The magnitude cannot be overstated," First Assistant US Attorney Joe Thompson said. "What we see in Minnesota is not a handful of bad actors committing crimes. It's staggering, industrial-scale fraud."

Walz accused Thompson of pulling the $9 billion figure out of thin air.

"You should be equally outraged about one dollar or whatever that number is, but they're using that number without the proof behind it," Walz said in a December 19 news conference,according to KARE. "To extrapolate what that number is for sensationalism, or to make statements about it, it doesn't really help us."

First Assistant US Attorney Joseph H. Thompson delivers a statement during a news conference at the US Attorney's Office inside the United States Courthouse on December 18 in Minneapolis. - Kerem Yücel  /AP

"I am accountable for this, and more importantly, I am the one that will fix it," Walz added.

Dozens arrested in previous fraud scandal

Most of the outrage regarding allegations of fraud in the Somali community has focused onFeeding Our Future, a nonprofit prosecutors say falsely claimed to be providing meals to needy children during the Covid-19 pandemic. Federal charges were brought against dozens of people — the vast majority of them Somali — beginning in 2022.

A raft of state audits into lax oversight of Minnesota funds was dismissed by Walz,CNN reported last year. This came amid allegations the Somali community's strong support for — and contributions to — Democrats helped shield them from scrutiny.

An early investigation by the Minnesota Department of Education into alleged fraud by Feeding Our Future was stymied in part by a lawsuit filed by the organization and its founder, Aimee Bock — who is not Somali — alleging the investigation was discriminatory. She later voluntarily dropped the suit a week after federal agents raided her home and the nonprofit's offices.

Bock waslater convictedof seven federal charges, including bribery. She has not yet been sentenced, but a judge denied her request for a new trial.

The office of Minnesota nonprofit Feeding Our Future is seen on January 27, 2022, in St. Anthony, Minnesota. - Shari L. Gross/Star Tribune/Getty Images

Thompson, the lead federal prosecutor in the case, said authorities have recovered only about $60 million of the $250 million stolen in the Feeding Our Future conspiracy, according to the AP.

"I hear they ripped off — Somalians ripped off that state for billions of dollars," Trump said. "Billions. Every year, billions of dollars, and they contribute nothing."

President has long-standing grudge against Somalis

The fraud allegations — producing more than 40 convictions in the Feeding Our Future case alone — have proved a lightning rod for Trump's invectives against Somalis. The president has long railed against Minnesota's Somali diaspora, the vast majority of whom are US citizens. Around 84,000 people of Somali descent live in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, many of whom resettled after fleeing a bloody and lasting civil war in their home country.

His attention to Somali immigrants and Americans of Somali descent date to his first presidential term, when he included Somalia on a travel ban alongside other Muslim-majority nations.

Although state leaders have rejected the label, the Trump administration calls Minnesota a "sanctuary jurisdiction."

US Rep. Ilhan Omar, a naturalized citizen who came to the country from Somalia as a refugee, has been a frequent target of the president's ire.

Earlier in December,Trump saidOmar and "her friends" shouldn't be allowed to serve as members of Congress. He also called Somalis in Minnesota "garbage" who should "go back to where they came from."

"When they come from hell, and they complain and do nothing but bitch, we don't want 'em in our country," Trump said in a cabinet meeting this month. Vance loudly rapped his fist on the conference table in support.

Somalis and their advocates, however, point out the group convicted of fraud does not reflect the entire community.

"The Somali community in the Twin Cities is overwhelmingly made up of hardworking families, small business owners, healthcare workers, students, and taxpayers who contribute every day to Minnesota's economy and civic life," Jaylani Hussein, the executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relation's Minnesota chapter, told CNN in an email.

"There's a few bad apples, you know, that committed crimes and broke the law, " Kamali Ali, a 39-year-old who came to the US from Somalia as a child,previously told CNNafter the ICE operation targeting Somalis was announced. "But at the same time, you can't do a collective punishment."

CNN's Sarah Owermohle, Whitney Wild, Hannah Rabinowitz, Omar Jimenez, TuAnh Dam, Rob Kuznia, Emma Tucker and Rebekah Riess contributed to this report.

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Federal payment freeze puts some Minnesota families in danger of losing child care amid investigation into alleged fraud

Some Minnesota families are in danger of losing child care after the US Department of Health and Human Services announced a freeze on child...

 

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