US to share biometric data with Chile ‘to track criminals,’ Homeland Security’s Noem says

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SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — The United States will deploy biometric technologies in partnership with Chile to control migration and disrupt criminal networks, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Wednesday during a visit to the South American nation.

“This arrangement is going to serve as a bridge to help Chile and the United States work towards bringing criminals to justice and knowing who is in our countries perpetuating crimes,” Noem said while signing the preliminary agreement with Chile’s Security Minister Luis Cordero and Justice Minister Jaime Gajardo.

“This increased cooperation between our countries is extremely important to track criminals, terrorists and dangerous individuals,” she added from the capital of Santiago, while nearby thousands of residents heeded tsunami warnings to evacuate along the the country’s Pacific coast.

The plan comes as the Trump administration seeks to bolster regional cooperation in its clampdown against transnational criminal groups, including Tren de Aragua, a notorious Venezuelan gang designated as a foreign terrorist organization by the White House.

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The bilateral agreement allows Chilean officials to identify potentially dangerous migrants entering or exiting the country and share their biometric data, such as fingerprints and iris scans, with the Department of Homeland Security to prevent their travel to the U.S.

“That information will be incredibly important as we go after these criminal activities,” Noem said, praising past cooperation between the countries’ intelligence agencies.

Tren de Aragua has wreaked havoc across once-peaceful Chile in recent years — smuggling undocumented migrants across borders, running prostitution rings, trafficking drugs and terrorizing the population with grisly crimes.

But Chilean authorities have fought back, bringing a number of gang members to trial in recent months. After spreading across Latin America on the heels of illegal migration, Tren de Aragua infiltrated the U.S. and inflamed domestic politics.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation and Chile most recently teamed up to disrupt South American criminal networks allegedly responsible for a string of burglaries targeting the multimillion-dollar homes of high-profile celebrities and professional athletes in the U.S. and Europe. The suspects, among them Chilean nationals, are now facing charges in Florida.

US wants back millions in COVID relief from local governments over missing reports

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By DAVID A. LIEB, Associated Press

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The U.S. Treasury is seeking to recoup COVID-19 pandemic relief funds from hundreds of local governments that received millions of dollars but never complied with requirements to report how they used the money.

The federal government distributed $350 billion to state, local, territorial and tribal governments as part of the American Rescue Plan approved by Congress and President Joe Biden in 2021. More than 30,000 governments, from the largest state to the tiniest town, were to get a share.

Governments had until the end of 2024 to obligate the money for specific projects and were supposed to file either quarterly or annual progress reports, depending on their population and how much money they received. Most complied. But as of January, about 1,000 mostly smaller governments had failed to file any reports with the Treasury detailing how they used a total of $139 million, according to an analysis by the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

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A GAO report released last week said the Treasury sent notices to the local governments seeking to recoup the money.

As of June 24, a total of 740 local governments subsequently filed reports and will no longer be subject to repaying their funds, the Treasury said in a letter attached to the GAO report. Thirteen governments returned their funds to the Treasury. But that still left 235 local governments that had never filed a report nor returned their pandemic relief funds.

The GAO told The Associated Press it does not have list of the specific governments that haven’t complied with the reporting requirements. The Treasury has not responded to an AP request for a list of the 13 governments that returned their funds and those that still haven’t reported how they used it.

This is not the first time concerns have been raised about governments failing to disclose how they used their pandemic relief funds.

The GAO reported in October 2023 that the Treasury had sent noncompliance notices to more than 3,500 local governments that hadn’t filed progress reports on their pandemic relief funds. The Treasury at that time declined to provide the noncompliance letters to the AP. So the AP in January 2024 submitted a Freedom of Information Act request seeking copies of the noncompliance notices and related correspondence. The Treasury still has not fulfilled that request.

In its most recent report, the GAO said the failure of local governments to file regular progress reports is limiting the Treasury’s ability to determine whether they are spending the funds on allowable uses.

Twins blown out in final game before trade deadline

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There’s no telling what the Twins’ roster might look like the next time the team takes the field.

In between the end of Wednesday’s game — a 13-1 loss to the Boston Red Sox that demonstrated why the Twins are in this position in the first place — and the Twins’ next game on Friday night in Cleveland, Thursday’s trade deadline will come and go.

The Twins have already executed one deal, sending Chris Paddack to the Detroit Tigers, and are expected to make more before 5 p.m. CDT on Thursday.

Speculation has been running rampant about a team that is now 51-57 trading off some of its veteran players, and it reached a fever pitch in the ninth inning of the blowout loss when Willi Castro, who had taken his position at second base, came off the field and was replaced before the inning started. Castro is considered likely to be moved because he is an impending free agent.

Shortly after, Griffin Jax, another player whose name has been included in trade rumors, was replaced mid-inning on the mound by Kody Clemens once the Twins had reached the necessary deficit to allow a position player to pitch.

Jax, who left with a pair of runners on, appeared displeased with the decision. Clemens promptly gave up a three-run home run to Romy Gonzalez, with two of those runs charged to Jax.

It didn’t much matter at that point in the grand scheme of things, because the Twins had been trailing badly since the middle of the game.

Boston broke away in the fifth inning, scoring four runs and forcing starter Zebby Matthews from the game. Another pair of runs scored in the sixth inning, when Jarren Duran hit a two-run home run off new Twin Noah Davis, who was added to the roster Wednesday morning.

The Twins’ offense, meanwhile, finished with just five hits. The one run they scored came in the second inning when Matt Wallner hit his 13th home run of the season.

Connor Wong #12 of the Boston Red Sox fields the ball to tag out Kody Clemens #18 of the Minnesota Twins at home plate in the first inning at Target Field on July 30, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images)
Boston Red Sox designated hitter Masataka Yoshida, right, celebrates his RBI single as Minnesota Twins first baseman Kody Clemens looks on during the fifth inning of baseball game, Wednesday, July 30, 2025, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Matt Krohn)

China and Russia to hold joint naval exercise near Japan next month

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BEIJING (AP) — The Chinese military announced Wednesday that it would hold an annual naval exercise and conduct a maritime joint patrol with Russian forces next month.

Defense Ministry spokesperson Zhang Xiaogang said that the Joint Sea 2025 exercise would be held in the air and seas near the Russian port city of Vladivostok, which lies across the sea from Japan’s west coast. Last year, the drill was held off southern China in the South China Sea.

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The Chinese and Russian governments have deepened their ties in recent years, with China providing an economic lifeline to Russia in the face of Western sanctions over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. European leaders asked China again last week to use its influence to pressure Russia to end the war, now in its fourth year, but there was no sign that Beijing would do so.

Japan’s Defense Ministry said in an annual report earlier this month that China’s growing military cooperation with Russia poses serious security concerns.

Zhang said the exercise and patrol are part of an annual cooperation plan and are not aimed at any other country or related to the current international or regional situation.

He didn’t provide specific dates for the drill or the joint patrol in the Pacific, which he said would be the sixth of its kind.

Zhang, speaking at a monthly press conference, criticized ongoing drills that the U.S. Air Force is conducting with Japan and other partners in the western Pacific. Resolute Force Pacific is the largest contingency-response exercise ever conducted by the Air Force in the region, according to the U.S. military.

“The U.S. has been blindly flexing muscles in the Asia-Pacific region and attempting to use military drills as a pretext to gang up, intimidate and pressure other countries, and undermine peace and stability in the region,” Zhang said.

The Air Force has said the exercise will train its forces to maintain readiness and execute missions under stress to demonstrate their ability to defend the United States and partner nations in the Pacific.