'I will follow the law,' Bondi says after Dems storm out of Epstein files briefing

House Oversight Committee Democrats said Wednesday that Attorney General Pam Bondi refused to commit to complying with a subpoena that compels her to testify at a closed-door deposition over theJeffrey Epstein fileson April 14.

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Frustrations boiled over Wednesday evening as Democrats stormed out in protest of a closed-door briefing on the files -- characterizing it as a "fake hearing." Republicans chided Democrats for a "premeditated" stunt.

Rep. Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the committee, told reporters, "She refused on multiple occasions to commit to following the subpoena that Chairman [James] Comer actually just put out. I asked her repeatedly that question. Other members asked her that question, and she would not commit to it. It is outrageous. It's infuriating, and it's continuous -- this White House cover up of the Epstein files."

Nathan Howard/Reuters - PHOTO: Rep. Robert Garcia speaks to the media following a closed-door briefing for members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Capitol Hill, March 18, 2026.

Republicans, however, contended that Bondi actually stated that she would "follow the law" regarding her subpoena.

House Oversight committee seeks interview with prison guard on duty when Epstein died

"​​She said she's going to stick to the law, whatever the law is, that's what it is. So, I'm not the attorney but that was a legal answer, and that's what she's required to do as the attorney general," Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., said. "It was all staged, you could tell it, because it just built up to it."

Asked after the briefing if she would comply with the subpoena, Bondi replied, "I made it crystal clear. I will follow the law."

Congressional subpoenas carry the weight of law behind them -- defying one could result in a charge of contempt of Congress. But Democrats would need a handful of Republicans to vote with them to hold Bondi in contempt and the Department of Justice typically does not prosecute its own attorney general.

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The attorney general admonished Democrats, who she said did not ask any substantive questions.

"We were there to answer questions. It's the evening. We came at their convenience. We gave them as, really, as much time as they wanted," Bondi said. "We sat there saying, 'anything you want to ask us, ask us, anything you want to ask us.'"

Bank of America reaches proposed, non-binding settlement in suit alleging it aided Jeffrey Epstein's crimes

After the briefing, Comer told reporters that he does not believe Bondi should sit for a deposition -- even though the committee approved the subpoena.

"I personally don't see any reason for her to do a deposition. She's the sitting attorney general. She's turning over documents. I think the Democrats want to do this to embarrass her," he said.

Comer stressed that he did not vote for the subpoena to bring her in for a deposition.

"I want to bring in the bad guys for the deposition," Comer emphasized. "I want to bring in the men who have abused women. I want to bring in anyone who is involved in the prosecution and or lack of prosecution, of Epstein Maxwell and and some of these other guys. So that's where I think our time and energy should be spent."

Comer and Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., told reporters that they had a heated exchange, with the chairman acknowledging he scolded Lee to stop "bitching."

"She was just complaining about the format," Comer said. "The attorney general and [Deputy Attorney General Todd] Blanche and all the top brass at the DOJ in here to answer questions, and yet they don't ask a single question."

'I will follow the law,' Bondi says after Dems storm out of Epstein files briefing

House Oversight Committee Democrats said Wednesday that Attorney General Pam Bondi refused to commit to complying with a ...
Independent Hong Kong panel starts hearing into devastating inferno

By Jessie Pang and Joyce Zhou

Reuters

HONG KONG, March 19 (Reuters) - Human factors rendered ineffective almost all the fire safety measures at the site of a Hong Kong blaze that killed 168 people in ‌November, the lead lawyer for a panel led by a judge that is investigating the inferno said ‌on Thursday.

The Independent Committee set up by Hong Kong leader John Lee to recommend preventive measures began hearings into the Asian financial hub's deadliest ​fire in decades at the high-rise Wang Fuk housing complex in the precinct of Tai Po.

"Only by confronting past mistakes can the city become safer," said the lawyer, Victor Dawes, as he detailed evidence regarding the blaze in the complex of eight blocks that were under extensive renovation.

CCTV images and videos shot by the public before and during the blaze, including scenes ‌of construction workers smoking at the site, ⁠were played for the committee to review on Thursday.

"My family member has passed away, it's been hard to watch so many videos, it's like witnessing the whole process," said a former ⁠resident, Phyllis, who lost her mother in the fire and received the videos before the hearing.

Phyllis, who gave only one name, told reporters she wanted to know the cause of the fire. Other residents said they wanted to know why the fire ​alarms never ​sounded.

In 2024, authorities told residents that fire risks were "relatively low" ​following their complaints about fire hazards posed by ‌the renovations, the city's Labour Department said earlier.

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Dawes detailed five major problems, among them the shutting down of fire alarms in seven blocks and the removal of staircase and corridor windows to give access to scaffolding for workers, allowing smoke and flames to enter residents' escape routes.

Fire hydrants and hose reels were shut off and non-flame-retardant netting was used, Dawes said.

He added that cigarette butts were suspected to be the cause of the blaze, according to a report by ‌an inter-departmental task force. Residents' repeated complaints about workers smoking had ​not been taken seriously by authorities, he added.

Investigators found numerous butts on ​the scaffolding and platforms and in light wells.

Dozens ​of residents and members of the public arrived early on Thursday to attend the proceedings at ‌a public conference hall in Central.

Judge David Lok, ​who chaired the hearing, said ​they aimed to find the causes of the fire and the extent of the problem of bid-rigging by contractors and developers across city building projects.

Dawes said the panel received nearly 1 million files including photographs, videos ​and documents.

Some in the Chinese-ruled city had ‌launched an online petition calling for an independent investigation and accountability, while authorities warned of severe punishment ​for those who tried to politicise the disaster.

(Reporting by Jessie Pang and Joyce Zhou; Additional reporting ​by James Pomfret; Editing by Greg Torode and Clarence Fernandez)

Independent Hong Kong panel starts hearing into devastating inferno

By Jessie Pang and Joyce Zhou HONG KONG, March 19 (Reuters) - Human factors rendered ineffective almost all th...
Iconic labor leader Cesar Chavez accused of decades of sexual abuse as annual celebrations are canceled nationwide

Latino leaders and elected officials say they are shocked by "deeply troubling" sexual misconduct allegations against Cesar Chavez, one of the Latino community's most prominent civil rights icons, as planned annual celebrations of the late labor leader are canceled and his legacy as a labor movement hero is thrown into question.

CNN Cesar Chavez, a farm worker, labor organizer and leader of the California grape strike, is seen in a California office in 1965. - George Brich/AP/File

The cancellations came just hours before The New York Times published aninvestigative storyWednesday that includes allegations Chavez abused and molested multiple women over the course of decades — some of them minors — including longtime activist Dolores Huerta, a legend of the farm workers movement in her own right.

The United Farm Workers, co-founded by Chavez and Huerta, is among several groups now saying it will not participate in annual celebratory events this month.

The newspaper reported it interviewed more than 60 people regarding the allegations against Chavez, using union records, emails and other documents to corroborate aspects of the accounts.

CNN has not independently verified the allegations. United Farm Workers declined to provide any additional information beyond its issued statement when contacted by CNN.

Here are the allegations against Chavez and how states have responded:

Chavez's key partner in organizing says she was also his victim

Although the New York Times story contains numerous reports of abuse, the allegations from Huerta — who stood by Chavez's side for decades — are the most shocking against a man long lauded as a champion of human dignity.

"Unfortunately, he used some of his great leadership to abuse women and children — it's really awful," Huerta, who turns 96 next month, told the Times.

In astatement releasedafter the newspaper story was published, Huerta said she had sexual encounters with Chavez twice — once when she said she was "manipulated and pressured" and once against her will in 1966 — both resulting in pregnancies.

Huerta secretly gave birth to both children fathered by Chavez and arranged for others to raise them, she told the Times.

She said she even wore baggy clothes and ponchos to conceal her pregnancies.

Huerta wrote that over the years, she was able to develop a deep relationship with these children.

"No one knew the full truth about how they were conceived until just a few weeks ago," she wrote.

"I carried this secret for as long as I did because building the movement and securing farmworker rights was my life's work," Huerta wrote. "The formation of a union was the only vehicle to accomplish and secure those rights and I wasn't going to let Cesar or anyone else get in the way."

Huerta said she decided to come forward more than a half-century later after learning from the Times that other women said they were also victims.

"The knowledge that he hurt young girls sickens me," Huerta wrote. "My heart aches for everyone who suffered alone and in silence for years. There are no words strong enough to condemn those deplorable actions that he did. Cesar's actions do not reflect the values of our community and our movement."

Huerta declined further comment to CNN.

"While we acknowledge the weight of this moment, we remain focused, determined and inspired to serve our community with the same relentless determination she has modeled for us," the Dolores Huerta Foundationsaidin a statement Wednesday. "Her courage today doesn't change our path; it clarifies it."

Chavez had eight children with his wife, Helen Chavez, and the Times said its investigation and a review of 23andMe match results showed that he also fathered at least four children with three other women, including Huerta.

Cesar Chavez and his wife Helen in California, 1970s. - Cathy Murphy/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Some alleged victims were children

Some of the women who say they were victimized by Chavez, who died in 1993, were minors at the time.

Ana Murguia, who was active in the labor movement even as a child, told The New York Times she was first molested by Chavez when she was 13 and he was 45. That was followed by "dozens" of sexual encounters over the next four years, though none included intercourse, she said.

Another accuser, Debra Rojas, said Chavez fondled her when she was 12 and first had sex with her when she was 15.

The newspaper said it interviewed multiple people who corroborated the accounts of Murguia and Rojas, saying they had spoken of the abuse years later.

A letter written by Rojas to Chavez when she was a teenager appears in the public archives of Cesar Chavez, according to the Times.

"I'm really glad I got to see you & spend time with you, well not like that, but just to know I was near you was enough," she wrote more than a year after she said she was first inappropriately touched.

"I had love for him," Rojas told the newspaper. "He did his grooming very well. He should get an Academy Award for all he did."

Chavez's family said in a statement to the Times they were "not in a position to judge" the newly revealed allegations against him.

"As a family steeped in the values of equity and justice, we honor the voices of those who feel unheard and who report sexual misconduct," the family told the Times. "These allegations are deeply painful to our family."

Organizers scramble to respond to allegations

The UFW Foundation, a nonprofit associated with the United Farm Workers,saidit is canceling "all Cesar Chavez Day activities this month."

"The UFW has learned of deeply troubling allegations that one of the union's co-founders, Cesar Chavez, behaved in ways that are incompatible with our organization's values. Some of the reports are family issues, and not our story to tell or our place to comment on. Far more troubling are allegations involving abuse of young women or minors," theUFWsaid in a statement, released before the Times article was published.

Cesar Chavez speaking in a news conference on September 16, 1975. - Anonymous/AP

The events were scheduled for Cesar Chavez Day, which commemorates the labor leader and is observed on March 31, his birthday.

"We have not received any direct reports, and we do not have any firsthand knowledge of these allegations," the UFWsaidin the statement.

The Cesar Chavez Foundation said it's "deeply shocked and saddened" by the "disturbing allegations" that came to light. The foundation is "working with leaders in the Farmworker Movement to be responsive to these allegations" and support people who may have been harmed, it said.

The union and the Cesar Chavez Foundation said they are setting up a confidential channel for those who want to share any harmful experiences, as well as a process to implement accountability measures.

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Instead of participating in this year's events, the United Farm Workers is calling on its allies and supporters to take part in "Immigration justice events and acts of service to support farmworkers," it said.

"Let us be direct: the alleged sexual abuse of women and minors by Cesar Chavez is indefensible," voter organizing group Voto Latino said in a statement. "No context, no historical framing, and no legacy excuses the abuse of power by someone in a position of authority to exploit women and minors. Voto Latino condemns these actions absolutely."

Texas will not observe the Cesar Chavez holiday, Gov. Greg Abbott said in a statement Wednesday, adding that he's directing all state agency heads to comply.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs' office also said the state will not recognize the commemorative holiday this year.

And the city of Lansing, Michigan,saidit had canceled an upcoming dinner in his honor.

Additional celebrations in California and other states have reportedly been called off as well. The declaration of March 31 as a state holiday honoring Chavez is required by law in California.

When asked whether he would change or rename the upcoming holiday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said he is "open" to the idea.

"These are brand-new conversations," the governor said. "I think we need to have those conversations. I think that's the right thing to do."

Speaking at an event in the Bay Area Wednesday, Newsom said he is still "processing" the news of the allegations and that it's been difficult to absorb. He said he has a long-standing relationship with Huerta and has photographs of Chavez with Robert F. Kennedy in his home.

"We're just going to have to reflect on all of that and reflect on a farm workers' movement and a labor movement that was much bigger than one man and celebrate that," Newsom said.

On Thursday, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and women on the City Council are set to sign a proclamation to rename the last Monday in March as "Farm Workers Day" in the city, according to a statement from her office.

"Real progress requires more than moments of reckoning – it demands sustained action to dismantle social, cultural, economic, and political structures that have hurt women throughout our history," Bass said in the statement.

Chavez served as a Latino icon and figure of pride for decades

Born near Yuma, Arizona, in 1927, the Mexican-American labor leader was raised working on California farms, where "he was exposed to the hardships and injustices of farm worker life," according to the foundation.

Along withHuerta and Larry Itliong, he co-founded the National Farm Workers Association in 1962 before it later became the United Farm Workers of America — an organization devoted to defending the rights of farmhands and field workers across the country.

Chavez rose to national prominence as a champion offair wages, humane treatment and safer working conditions, leading nonviolent marches, boycotts and hunger strikes on behalf of California's farm workers.

He went on his first hunger strike, which lasted 25 days, in 1968 to protest violence and inhumane conditions workers endured, according to the Cesar Chavez Foundation.

United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez addresses a large crowd at a rally in Calexico, California, on February 27, 1979. - Wally Fong/AP

At the same time, Chavez was controversial within his own organization for carrying out leadershippurgesat the United Farm Workers, according to a biography by journalist Miriam Pawel, as well as for his staunchoppositionto undocumented immigrants, who he said threatened union farm labor.

Since his death, Chavez has been honored and memorialized across the country, including with dozens of schools named after him.

California established the state holiday in his honor in 1995. In 2014, then-President Barack Obamadecreed March 31as Cesar Chavez Day and honored him with a national monument in Keene, California, where Chavez was buried and some of his family still reside.

On his first day as president, Joe Biden placed abustof Chavez on the credenza behind his Oval Office desk.

A sculpted bust of Cesar Chavez is seen with a collection of framed photos on a table in the Oval Office just hours after President Joe Biden's inauguration on January 20, 2021. - Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

On Wednesday, a statue of Chavez on the campus of California State University, Fresno, was seen covered by a black tarp and black plastic.

"I am deeply saddened and disturbed by the allegations being reported about César Chávez," the university's president, Dr. Saúl Jiménez-Sandoval, said in a campus-wide statement, CNN affiliateKMPHreported. "These profoundly troubling claims … call for our full attention and moral reckoning by removing his statue from our campus," he said, adding it was covering the statue as it determines next steps.

Juan Jose Gutierrez, executive director of the Full Rights for Immigrant Coalition, who collaborated with Chavez in providing legal help for agricultural workers, said he felt "utter disappointment" over the announcement.

"It's a bitter pill to swallow because I mean, Cesar Chavez is an icon," he told CNN. "Children, even now, know about Cesar Chavez and many generations before him were inspired by him. … He's revered and admired in the community."

As someone who knew him and worked with him, Gutierrez said the news is shocking. "I still can't recover," he said, while acknowledging the extent of the allegations is still unclear.

Chavez has been a "beloved hero of our community" whom Gutierrez admired, he said. But if the serious allegations were proven credible, it would be a "blow to his legacy," no matter how much time has passed since his death.

Sen. Alex Padilla, California'sfirst Latino electedto the US Senate, on Wednesday condemned the "abhorrent actions" described.

"There must be zero tolerance for abuse, exploitation, and the silencing of victims, no matter who is involved," Padilla said in a statement.

Padilla later told CNN's Jake Tapper that he will "rework" legislation he introduced last year to create a historic park named after Chavez and the farm worker movement.

"It is ok to feel angry, shocked, heartbroken, saddened, confused, and dismayed—all at the same time," US Rep. Adelita Grijalva, a Democrat from Arizona,saidin a statement Tuesday night. "We still have more questions than answers. However, it is important to remember that one person does not define a movement. We, the people, are the movement."

If you need help:

  • National Domestic Violence Hotline: Call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233), text START to 88788 or chat through website.

  • National Sexual Assault Hotline: Call 1-800-656-HOPE (4673), text HOPE to 64673 or chat through website. Provided by RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network).

This story has been updated with additional information.

CNN's Alex Stambaugh and Cindy Von Quednow contributed to this report.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Iconic labor leader Cesar Chavez accused of decades of sexual abuse as annual celebrations are canceled nationwide

Latino leaders and elected officials say they are shocked by "deeply troubling" sexual misconduct allegations a...
Rhode Island hockey team wins state title after deadly rink shooting

A Rhode Island high school hockey team won the state championship just weeks after a deadly shooting at a local rink.

USA TODAY Sports

The February shooting at a hockey arena in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, left three people dead,plus the gunman.

The three people killed were all related to Colin Dorgan, a high school senior who is a member of the Blackstone Valley team that beat Lincoln 3-2 in quadruple overtime in the Division 2 state championship game on Wednesday, March 18.

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"I truly felt it in my heart and my soul that they're still with me," Dorgan told the media after the game. "I love them so much, and they're still here and I know it."

Dorgan tied the game late, before his team prevailed in the fourth overtime.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Rhode Island high school hockey team wins title after rink shooting

Rhode Island hockey team wins state title after deadly rink shooting

A Rhode Island high school hockey team won the state championship just weeks after a deadly shooting at a local rink. ...
Farabee and Gridin score shootout goals in the Flames' 2-1 victory over the Blues

CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Joel Farabee and rookie Matvei Gridin scored in a shootout to give the Calgary Flames a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday night.

Associated Press St. Louis Blues goalie Joel Hofer, left, lets in a goal from Calgary Flames' Joel Farabee that was later called back during second period NHL hockey action in Calgary on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP) St. Louis Blues goalie Joel Hofer, left, lets in a goal from Calgary Flames' Connor Zary during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Calgary on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP) St. Louis Blues' Jake Neighbours, left, is checked by Calgary Flames' Matt Coronato during the third period of an NHL hockey game in Calgary, Alberta, on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP) Calgary Flames' Connor Zary, left, celebrates his goal with teammate Yegor Sharangovich during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Calgary on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP) St. Louis Blues' Pius Suter, right, is checked by Calgary Flames' Hunter Brzustewicz during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Calgary on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

Blues Flames Hockey

Connor Zary scored early in the first period for Calgary, and Devin Cooley stopped 26 shots.

Dylan Holloway tied it for St. Louis early in the second. Joel Hofer made 31 saves.

After Farabee scored in the second round of the shootout to give Calgary a 1-0 lead, coach Ryan Huska turned to Gridin after Jimmy Snuggerud was stopped, and Gridin won it with a shot over Hofer's glove.

The unlikely star performer of the opening 40 minutes was St. Louis video coach Elliott Mondou, with the Flames having three goals waived off after Blues' coach's challenges.

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St. Louis had won eight consecutive games against Calgary,

Up next

Blues: At Vancouver on Saturday night.

Flames: Host Florida on Friday night.

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

Farabee and Gridin score shootout goals in the Flames' 2-1 victory over the Blues

CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Joel Farabee and rookie Matvei Gridin scored in a shootout to give the Calgary Flames a 2-1 victo...
March Madness bracket scores: Miami (Ohio) wins first NCAA tournament game since 1999, makes statement against SMU in First Four

Miami (Ohio) was playing in Dayton on Wednesday night in the First Four, but it sounded like Oxford. About an hour drive separates the two Ohio cities, and that kind of distance is no issue for the RedHawks.

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Not for their fans, who made the short trip and injected palpable energy into the First Four matchup against SMU, and not for their players, who fired from long range at will.

With 7:18 left, Luke Skaljac hit a transition 3 that gave Miami a 14-point cushion, and a symphony of RedHawks cheers reached a crescendo that nearly took the roof off UD Arena.

From there, Miami, which went 16-of-41 from 3-point land, put the finishing touches ona statement-making, 89-79 win, the program's firstNCAA tournamentvictory since their run to the Sweet 16 in 1999.

Yahoo Fantasy Bracket Mayhem: Make your picks for $50K in total prizes

SMU (20-14) ends its season with six losses in its final seven games. With a No. 11 seed, Miami (32-1) will face No. 6 seed Tennessee in the first round of the Midwest region.

The RedHawks were six days removed from suffering their first loss of the season.UMass bounced Miami in the quarterfinals of the MAC tournamentand tainted its perfect record in the process.

That setback cost Travis Steele's team a chance at an automatic bid andplaced the RedHawks firmly on the bubble, where they had to sweat out Selection Sunday and hope thattheir Wins Above Bubble rankingmade up for their much lower NET ranking.

Their schedule had been the subject of scrutiny throughout their 2025-26 campaign while they became the first team to post an undefeated regular-season record since 2020-21 Gonzaga. But Miami proved it belonged on the same stage as SMU, another program searching for its first NCAA tournament win this century.

Skaljac, a sophomore guard, and junior wing Eian Elmer combined for 26 of the RedHawks' first 28 points. Skaljac finished with 17 points, and Elmer had a team-high 23.

Steele's crew had the greenest of lights from downtown, and they played with the kind of pace that had them ranked 44th nationally in adjusted tempo coming into the dance, according to KenPom.

That speed was especially evident on a heads-up play made by MAC Player of the Year Peter Suder. He tracked down a pass on the break and angled a bounce pass for Elmer, who elevated at the perfect time to meet the ball and then gently redirect it into the basket. Elmer got a friendly roll.

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Mostly everything was falling for Elmer. He had 14 first-half points and made five of his first six field-goal attempts, including 4-of-5 from deep.

Brant Byers caught fire as well. The redshirt sophomore wing engineered a self-made 9-0 run in the final two minutes of the opening frame. He converted an and-1 and then drilled back-to-back 3s, helping Miami take a 43-34 advantage into the break.

Andy Enfield's SMU, still missing third-leading scorer B.J. Edwards due to the veteran guard's ankle injury, leaned on guards Boopie Miller and Jaron Pierre Jr., plus center Jaden Toombs.

Before Byers' surge, Miller pulled the Mustangs within two points of Miami. First he knocked down a pair of 3s, and then, soon after, he dropped in a step-through bucket.

SMU answered again to start the second half, even tying the game 47-47 thanks to Sam Walters. The junior forward followed a 3-pointer with a second-chance bucket to knot things up. Shortly after that, Walters found a cutting Corey Washington, setting up the senior forward for a go-ahead dunk.

That said, it wasn't long before the momentum swung back Miami's way. Byers sank another 3, and Bradley transfer forward Almar Atlason strung together five straight points to extend what ultimately became a 13-0 run that gave Miami a 63-50 lead. Suder assisted two of the first three field goals in that sequence and clocked out with six dimes.

Later, Skaljac dribbled into his deafening 3-pointer.

Meanwhile, Miller struggled from the field, as SMU failed to keep pace with the RedHawks' 3-point barrage. Toombs scored a team-high 20 points for the Mustangs, and Pierre was close behind with 18. But Miller was 6-of-17 from the floor, and SMU connected on just five of its 21 3-point attempts.

It looked like the game was going to end like it started, with Elmer splashing 3s. He poured in two more down the stretch. But a quick Mustangs flurry made it a seven-point game with two minutes to go.

Instead, Elmer used a backdoor cut and one-handed slam to put the exclamation point on the victory, a validating one for a Miami program that's dealt with outsiders doubting its NCAA tournament résumé all season.

Prairie View A&M wins first NCAA tournament game

History was made earlier in the night when Prairie View A&M — a year removed from finishing with just five victories — logged its first NCAA tournament win. The SWAC tournament champion Panthers defeated Patriot League tournament champion Lehigh ,67-55.

Prairie View A&M pulled away in the second half, and senior guard Dontae Horne led the way with 25 points, 7 rebounds and 4 steals. Once 9-16, the Panthers are now 19-17, having won 10 of their last 11 games.

TheHoward Bison and Texas Longhorns each secured their bidsto the first round on Tuesday.

March Madness bracket scores: Miami (Ohio) wins first NCAA tournament game since 1999, makes statement against SMU in First Four

Miami (Ohio) was playing in Dayton on Wednesday night in the First Four, but it sounded like Oxford. About an hour drive ...
Thousands of Moldovans cut off from water after Russian strike on Ukrainian hydropower plant

BALTI, Moldova (AP) — Tens of thousands of Moldovans have been left without water after a Russian strike on a hydroelectric plant in neighboring Ukraine resulted in oil polluting a major river that flows through both countries.

Associated Press Valentin Belischii, 73 years-old, pauses on a bench before climbing the stairs to his fourth floor apartment with a container of water he bought in Balti, Moldova, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Aurel Obreja) People fill containers with drinking water distributed by the emergency services in Balti, Moldova, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Aurel Obreja) Chemical absorbent booms are placed in the Dniester river in Curesnita, Moldova, on the border with Ukraine, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Aurel Obreja) People fill containers with non-potable water distributed by the emergency services in Balti, Moldova, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Aurel Obreja) A map showing the Novodnistrovsk hydropower plant and the Dniester River. (AP Digital Embed)

Moldova Pollution

Moldovan President Maia Sandu has blamed Russia for the pollution on the Dniester River following an attack on Ukraine's Novodnistrovsk hydropower plant on March 7, saying it's "threatening Moldova's water supply" in the European Union candidate country.

The Ukrainian plant is situated about 15 kilometers (9 miles) upstream from Moldova's northern border with Ukraine and supplies water to about 80% of Moldova's population of about 2.5 million. Moscow has repeatedly targeted Ukraine's civilian infrastructure, such as dams and river ports, since it fully invaded the country in 2022.

"Russia bears full responsibility," Sandu said on Sunday in a post on X.

Moldova declares environmental alert

Moldova's environment ministry on Sunday declared an environmental state of alert for 15 days, giving the authorities a legal mechanism to boost technical interventions and impose temporary restrictions on water supplies.

"We are taking this decision to make sure we prevent any risk to the population's health," it said. "Because of the continuous wave of pollution with oil products, the risk of the pollution spreading, and the exceedance of contaminant levels in the northern area of the Dniester River."

While oil pollutants have been confirmed in the river following the strike, the exact source of the pollutant is not yet clear.

The situation has forced the authorities to cut the water supply to several districts, including Moldova's second-largest city of Balti, which has a population of about 90,000 people. As well as humanitarian aid from neighboring Romania, Moldova's military stepped in this week to distribute drinking water in the northern city from a 10-tonne tanker.

Water shortage impacts residents

"It's very hard, very hard," said 84-year-old Balti resident Liuba Istrati, who has been carrying buckets of water up to her apartment. "We live on the fifth floor, it's just the two of us, old people, my husband is sick in bed."

The water shortage has also forced some schools to close and move learning online.

"It's a complicated situation, I have to come every day to get water," said Irina Mutluc, a teacher living in Balti. "Even for one person you need quite an amount of water to consume, for the bathroom and so on, so it's really complicated."

The authorities are now racing to clean up pollution and analyze and monitor the river water. Neighboring Romania, which has close relations with Moldova, has dispatched teams and equipment, such as absorbent materials for dams, to aid cleanup efforts.

Tests show improvement in water

"The latest samples taken show an improvement in the water indicators, which confirms the effectiveness of the filters and barriers for the capture and disposal of pollutants," the Ministry of Environment said on Wednesday.

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The ministry added that the authorities are "working at an accelerated pace" to resume water supplies, "but this decision will be made exclusively on the basis of at least two consecutive sets of analyses, taken on two different days ... Protecting the health of citizens remains the absolute priority."

Moldova's environment minister Gheorghe Hajder said Wednesday at a press briefing that for the first time since the crisis began, three critical monitoring points on the river "reached the admissible limit" of oil pollution.

He added that if the analyses show the same results or improve in the next 48 hours, authorities will consider reopening a pumping station on the northeastern border with Ukraine, which supplies several districts and Balti.

"It is clear evidence that upstream oil diversions have been greatly mitigated, and the absorbing dams have had their effect," he said.

The Dniester River originates in southwestern Ukraine and spans more than 1,300 kilometers (846 miles), continuing downstream through Moldova, back through southern Ukraine and empties into the Black Sea.

"Although at some points values may temporarily return within acceptable limits, matter continues to come in waves, making it difficult to accurately anticipate evolution," the environment ministry said.

Moldova plans criminal case

Moldova's General Prosecutor's Office said Tuesday that it will open a criminal case to investigate the matter, while Moldova's foreign ministry summoned Russia's ambassador to Chisinau, Oleg Ozerov, who was presented with a bottle of brownish water.

In an online statement on Wednesday, the Russian embassy in Moldova argued that the Moldovan authorities have not presented any evidence of Russia's complicity, aside from "a container with an unknown murky liquid, with no markings regarding where and when it was obtained," and that "by definition cannot be proof of anything."

The statement claimed that Moldovan authorities "publicly claim a lack of precise information about the nature of the incident, the type, and the amount of pollutants," putting forward "conflicting theories."

Ilya Trombitsky, a biologist at Eco-TIRAS, an umbrella of nongovernmental organizations in Moldova and Ukraine, says that while it's difficult yet to determine the short or long-term consequences of the pollution, the fact that "several cities are without water is an evident social damage."

"It depends on the nature of the pollutant … we still do not know either the source or the substance of pollution," he told The Associated Press. "It is evident that it is not healthy for birds, wetland birds. It is evident that some invertebrates were killed, especially upstream … crustaceans, but small ones, (which) can be food for fish."

"Moldova does not have experience in such spills," he added.

McGrath reported from Leamington Spa, England.

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