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ARGIA
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Argia ematen duten landareak, hau ikusteko ere jaio garela dirudi. Gure artean ditugun landare ohikoak dira asko, orkideak edo krasak adibidez, baina zuhaitzekin ere ari dira halako probak egiten. Bioluminiszentzia deitzen zaio eta tratamendu genetikoak eginda lortzen da, hau da, landare transgenikoak dira. Ipurtargien eta berezko argia duten onddoen geneak hartu eta landareei txertatuta ari dira halakoak lortzen. Baliteke honek gure paisaia urbanoak urte gutxiren buruan aldatzea. Gaurko sendabelarra, berriz, ez da propioki sendabelarra, landare toxikoa bizik. Zikutari buruz aritu gara, baina uda partean askok azenario basatiarekin nahasten dute. Albistea Argentinatik ekarri dugu, han mihiluarekin nahasten dutelako. Gaur egun telefonoan ditugun aplikazioen akatsak direla medio, pozoinketak eta heriotzak gertatzen dira. Horregatik, arduratik eta halakoak gerta ez daitezen, nola jokatu azaldu dugu. Gomendioarena atalean une hauetan egiteko moduko ukendu bat: Milagritos deitutako ukendua hain zuzen. Berbena (Verbena officinalis), pasmo-belarra (Anagallis arvensis) eta plantaina arra (Plantago lanceolata) erabilita egiten den ukenduaz ari gara.

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ARGIA
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Argia ematen duten landareak, hau ikusteko ere jaio garela dirudi. Gure artean ditugun landare ohikoak dira asko, orkideak edo krasak adibidez, baina zuhaitzekin ere ari dira halako probak egiten. Bioluminiszentzia deitzen zaio eta tratamendu genetikoak eginda lortzen da, hau da, landare transgenikoak dira. Ipurtargien eta berezko argia duten onddoen geneak hartu eta landareei txertatuta ari dira halakoak lortzen. Baliteke honek gure paisaia urbanoak urte gutxiren buruan aldatzea. Gaurko sendabelarra, berriz, ez da propioki sendabelarra, landare toxikoa bizik. Zikutari buruz aritu gara, baina uda partean askok azenario basatiarekin nahasten dute. Albistea Argentinatik ekarri dugu, han mihiluarekin nahasten dutelako. Gaur egun telefonoan ditugun aplikazioen akatsak direla medio, pozoinketak eta heriotzak gertatzen dira. Horregatik, arduratik eta halakoak gerta ez daitezen, nola jokatu azaldu dugu. Gomendioarena atalean une hauetan egiteko moduko ukendu bat: Milagritos deitutako ukendua hain zuzen. Berbena (Verbena officinalis), pasmo-belarra (Anagallis arvensis) eta plantaina arra (Plantago lanceolata) erabilita egiten den ukenduaz ari gara.

AP-7 eta AP-2 autobideen blokeoek eragin dute nahasmendu handiena. Kalitatezko hezkuntza sistema baten alde dabiltza protestan, besteak beste lan baldintzen hobekuntza aldarrikatuz –batez ere soldaten emendio orokortuan zentraturik negoziazioak–.

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ARGIA
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AP-7 eta AP-2 autobideen blokeoek eragin dute nahasmendu handiena. Kalitatezko hezkuntza sistema baten alde dabiltza protestan, besteak beste lan baldintzen hobekuntza aldarrikatuz –batez ere soldaten emendio orokortuan zentraturik negoziazioak–.

Donostiako Euskal Herrian Euskarazek (EHE) eta Ikama antolakundeak ekintza bat egin zuten iazko azaroan Andia kalean, Eusko Jaurlaritzaren ordezkaritzaren aurrean. Ertzaintzak sei kide identifikatu zituen egun hartan, eta EHEk eta Ikamak jakinarazi dute deklaratzera deitu dituztela, irailaren 17rako, “desordena publikoak eragitea” egotzita. Hori dela eta, agerraldia egin zuten bi eragileek asteartean, Eusko Jaurlaritzaren ordezkaritzaren aurrean.

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ARGIA
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Donostiako Euskal Herrian Euskarazek (EHE) eta Ikama antolakundeak ekintza bat egin zuten iazko azaroan Andia kalean, Eusko Jaurlaritzaren ordezkaritzaren aurrean. Ertzaintzak sei kide identifikatu zituen egun hartan, eta EHEk eta Ikamak jakinarazi dute deklaratzera deitu dituztela, irailaren 17rako, “desordena publikoak eragitea” egotzita. Hori dela eta, agerraldia egin zuten bi eragileek asteartean, Eusko Jaurlaritzaren ordezkaritzaren aurrean.

Lapurretaren komodina
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3 minutes

ARGIA
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ARGIA
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2023ko urriaz geroztik, EAEko foru-, autonomia- eta udal-instituzioek hamahiru kontratu sinatu dituzte Israelgo Inteligentziako 8200 Unitateari lotutako firmekin.

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ARGIA
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2023ko urriaz geroztik, EAEko foru-, autonomia- eta udal-instituzioek hamahiru kontratu sinatu dituzte Israelgo Inteligentziako 8200 Unitateari lotutako firmekin.

A national watchdog group alleges Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche breached ethical rules in the Tennessee prosecution of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was cleared last week of criminal charges after a judge concluded the prosecution had been vindictive.

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Maryland Matters
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A national watchdog group alleges Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche breached ethical rules in the Tennessee prosecution of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was cleared last week of criminal charges after a judge concluded the prosecution had been vindictive.

22 minutes

Montana Free Press
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A new Montana Free Press-Eagleton poll conducted in late April and early May found 61% of registered voters in Montana reported some level of difficulty affording gas or other transportation costs. Asked the same question in a previous MTFP-Eagleton poll conducted late last year, just 34% of respondents reported any difficulty. The post Poll: What are Montanans struggling to afford? appeared first on Montana Free Press.

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Montana Free Press
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A new Montana Free Press-Eagleton poll conducted in late April and early May found 61% of registered voters in Montana reported some level of difficulty affording gas or other transportation costs. Asked the same question in a previous MTFP-Eagleton poll conducted late last year, just 34% of respondents reported any difficulty. The post Poll: What are Montanans struggling to afford? appeared first on Montana Free Press.

Nesta quarta-feira (27), celebra-se o Dia da Mata Atlântica, um dos biomas mais ricos e ao mesmo tempo mais ameaçados do mundo, mesmo com a redução de 28% no desmatamento em 2025, segundo a Fundação SOS Amazônia. Estima-se que apenas 24% da cobertura original do bioma esteja preservada. A data serve como um alerta para […] Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Nesta quarta-feira (27), celebra-se o Dia da Mata Atlântica, um dos biomas mais ricos e ao mesmo tempo mais ameaçados do mundo, mesmo com a redução de 28% no desmatamento em 2025, segundo a Fundação SOS Amazônia. Estima-se que apenas 24% da cobertura original do bioma esteja preservada. A data serve como um alerta para […] Fonte

North Dakota Republican lawmakers and legislative candidates on Wednesday accused Gov. Kelly Armstrong of attempting to unlawfully influence the state Legislature by donating to campaigns of handpicked candidates. The conservative Republicans lambasted the Republican governor in a press conference at the Capitol outside of Armstrong’s office. Sen. Jeff Magrum, R-Hazelton, alleged that Armstrong’s donations violate […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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North Dakota Republican lawmakers and legislative candidates on Wednesday accused Gov. Kelly Armstrong of attempting to unlawfully influence the state Legislature by donating to campaigns of handpicked candidates. The conservative Republicans lambasted the Republican governor in a press conference at the Capitol outside of Armstrong’s office. Sen. Jeff Magrum, R-Hazelton, alleged that Armstrong’s donations violate […]

25 minutes

Freedom of the Press Foundation
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:A group of award-winning journalists and documentarians expressed strong opposition to the proposed merger between Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery during a press conference today, citing the threat the deal poses to journalism and American democracy. Journalists Kara Swisher, Jim Acosta, and Katie Phang along with Emmy-winning documentary filmmakers Laura Poitras and Geeta Gandbhir spoke at the event, hosted by Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF), Democracy Defenders Fund, International Documentary Association, Future Film Coalition, and Free Press. The 2026 News & Documentary Emmy Awards, which begin tonight, celebrate achievements that wouldn’t be possible without press freedom and editorial independence. But, as the speakers discussed, Paramount CEO David Ellison has a track record of throwing those fundamental American principles under the bus to curry favor with the Trump administration, harming the press, the public, and Paramount itself. Case in point, today news broke that Paramount-owned CBS News would not renew the contract of journalist Sharyn Alfonsi, who resisted censorship of her “60 Minutes” story on torture of Venezuelan migrants.“I think what’s happening right now is pretty dangerous,” said Acosta. “To essentially announce the departure of Sharyn Alfonsi from 60 Minutes is a very in-your-face move by some people who don’t care very much about the First Amendment.” Acosta added, “Folks need to use a little bit of their imagination here to recognize what may be coming down the pike” with a “strange oligarchical empire … attempting to do state media.” “There’s a feeling that the wall has come down between editorial independence and corporate interests,” said Swisher. “They’re not doing it for economics. The math doesn’t math. You think Elon Musk bought Twitter to make money? These people are rich beyond all possible wealth. You have to really be thinking about what’s the actual game here, and the actual game is influence, and to take corporate interests and align them with editorial.”Phang added that in a world where the government dictates who owns the media, “editorial independence will be a thing of the past, and what you’ll have is no one capable of being able to hold power to account.” “Consolidation of media is bad for the public, it’s bad for creators, it’s bad for the public’s right to know,” said Poitras, who also serves on FPF’s board of directors. “The government has always tried to silence and censor the press, and the job of the press and the journalist is to be adversarial to power … the interests of corporations are entirely different [from] what is good for the press,” which, she explained, leads to capitulation by conglomerates faced with government pressure. Gandbhir highlighted an often-overlooked issue: The proposed merger’s impact on news archives. “Many of us documentary filmmakers depend on access to archives to make our films, and specifically, the CNN archive holds over 4 million assets, spanning 45-plus years of global news, wars, elections, and political events. And, the CBS archive adds to that years of network television programming. And folding these two massive archives, two of the four major U.S. news archives, under the control of one entity, who has shown themselves to be active in editorial suppression, is a grave threat to documentary filmmakers,” she explained. FPF also released an open letter yesterday signed by over 200 current and former journalists, documentarians, journalism professors, and rights organizations. The letter elaborates on the dangers of allowing the administration to steer media companies to stooges and oligarchs who have shown a willingness to censor the news — and tank news companies — to further their own interests. Notable signers include Sam Donaldson, SE Cupp, and Mehdi Hasan, as well as Acosta, Phang, and Poitras, among many others. FPF plans to continue collecting signatures. FPF Chief of Advocacy Seth Stern said: “The First Amendment assumes that the government will attempt to silence the press, but the First Amendment also assumes that the press won’t voluntarily agree, won’t go down without a fight.” He added that “news outlets have a constitutional right to report from whichever perspective they see fit, but presidents don’t have a right to abuse their offices to shape those decisions, and executives like Ellison who are willing to let them do so need to stay out of the news business and find some other widget to sell.” Please contact us if you would like further comment or a copy of the transcript and/or video of the press conference.

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Freedom of the Press Foundation
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:A group of award-winning journalists and documentarians expressed strong opposition to the proposed merger between Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery during a press conference today, citing the threat the deal poses to journalism and American democracy. Journalists Kara Swisher, Jim Acosta, and Katie Phang along with Emmy-winning documentary filmmakers Laura Poitras and Geeta Gandbhir spoke at the event, hosted by Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF), Democracy Defenders Fund, International Documentary Association, Future Film Coalition, and Free Press. The 2026 News & Documentary Emmy Awards, which begin tonight, celebrate achievements that wouldn’t be possible without press freedom and editorial independence. But, as the speakers discussed, Paramount CEO David Ellison has a track record of throwing those fundamental American principles under the bus to curry favor with the Trump administration, harming the press, the public, and Paramount itself. Case in point, today news broke that Paramount-owned CBS News would not renew the contract of journalist Sharyn Alfonsi, who resisted censorship of her “60 Minutes” story on torture of Venezuelan migrants.“I think what’s happening right now is pretty dangerous,” said Acosta. “To essentially announce the departure of Sharyn Alfonsi from 60 Minutes is a very in-your-face move by some people who don’t care very much about the First Amendment.” Acosta added, “Folks need to use a little bit of their imagination here to recognize what may be coming down the pike” with a “strange oligarchical empire … attempting to do state media.” “There’s a feeling that the wall has come down between editorial independence and corporate interests,” said Swisher. “They’re not doing it for economics. The math doesn’t math. You think Elon Musk bought Twitter to make money? These people are rich beyond all possible wealth. You have to really be thinking about what’s the actual game here, and the actual game is influence, and to take corporate interests and align them with editorial.”Phang added that in a world where the government dictates who owns the media, “editorial independence will be a thing of the past, and what you’ll have is no one capable of being able to hold power to account.” “Consolidation of media is bad for the public, it’s bad for creators, it’s bad for the public’s right to know,” said Poitras, who also serves on FPF’s board of directors. “The government has always tried to silence and censor the press, and the job of the press and the journalist is to be adversarial to power … the interests of corporations are entirely different [from] what is good for the press,” which, she explained, leads to capitulation by conglomerates faced with government pressure. Gandbhir highlighted an often-overlooked issue: The proposed merger’s impact on news archives. “Many of us documentary filmmakers depend on access to archives to make our films, and specifically, the CNN archive holds over 4 million assets, spanning 45-plus years of global news, wars, elections, and political events. And, the CBS archive adds to that years of network television programming. And folding these two massive archives, two of the four major U.S. news archives, under the control of one entity, who has shown themselves to be active in editorial suppression, is a grave threat to documentary filmmakers,” she explained. FPF also released an open letter yesterday signed by over 200 current and former journalists, documentarians, journalism professors, and rights organizations. The letter elaborates on the dangers of allowing the administration to steer media companies to stooges and oligarchs who have shown a willingness to censor the news — and tank news companies — to further their own interests. Notable signers include Sam Donaldson, SE Cupp, and Mehdi Hasan, as well as Acosta, Phang, and Poitras, among many others. FPF plans to continue collecting signatures. FPF Chief of Advocacy Seth Stern said: “The First Amendment assumes that the government will attempt to silence the press, but the First Amendment also assumes that the press won’t voluntarily agree, won’t go down without a fight.” He added that “news outlets have a constitutional right to report from whichever perspective they see fit, but presidents don’t have a right to abuse their offices to shape those decisions, and executives like Ellison who are willing to let them do so need to stay out of the news business and find some other widget to sell.” Please contact us if you would like further comment or a copy of the transcript and/or video of the press conference.

A preliminary city budget increase could raise property tax bills for average El Paso homeowners by just over $100 as officials weigh higher spending and funding priorities for next fiscal year. The post Average El Paso homeowner could pay about $105 more in city taxes next year appeared first on El Paso Matters.

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El Paso Matters
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A preliminary city budget increase could raise property tax bills for average El Paso homeowners by just over $100 as officials weigh higher spending and funding priorities for next fiscal year. The post Average El Paso homeowner could pay about $105 more in city taxes next year appeared first on El Paso Matters.

31 minutes

Verite
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Although prisoners face excessively harsh conditions — including laboring outdoors in dangerously hot conditions — while working the “farm line” at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, a federal judge has ruled he could not force the state to fix the problem due to a recent appeals court decision in another civil rights case against […]

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Verite
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Although prisoners face excessively harsh conditions — including laboring outdoors in dangerously hot conditions — while working the “farm line” at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, a federal judge has ruled he could not force the state to fix the problem due to a recent appeals court decision in another civil rights case against […]

El Geólogo y académico del Departamento de Ciencias Geológicas de la UCN Dr. Gabriel González, explicó que la intensidad percibida en la capital loína se debe a características especiales de su suelo y cercanía del hipocentro, lo que hizo que el evento se sintiera con fuerza en Calama a diferencia de lo ocurrido en Antofagasta, donde fue percibido con intensidad bastante menor. Este artículo “Actividad normal para la zona”: Sismólogo explica por qué el sismo magnitud 6.9 se sintió tan fuerte en Calama fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

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El Diario de Antofagasta
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El Geólogo y académico del Departamento de Ciencias Geológicas de la UCN Dr. Gabriel González, explicó que la intensidad percibida en la capital loína se debe a características especiales de su suelo y cercanía del hipocentro, lo que hizo que el evento se sintiera con fuerza en Calama a diferencia de lo ocurrido en Antofagasta, donde fue percibido con intensidad bastante menor. Este artículo “Actividad normal para la zona”: Sismólogo explica por qué el sismo magnitud 6.9 se sintió tan fuerte en Calama fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

35 minutes

The Center Square
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When Lee Ann Sommerville took a Charleston, West Virginia chemical plant to court last year, she framed her case as a public health crisis. Sommerville claimed she had been exposed to ethylene oxide – an alleged carcinogen – and argued that she needed medical monitoring before it was too late. Her case relied almost entirely on the testimony of Dr. Ranajit Sahu, a mechanical engineer who had appeared as an expert witness in every EtO lawsuit filed to date. The District Court rejected his testimony, excluding his findings under Federal Rule of Evidence 702 on the grounds that his methodology was unreliable and that he had “cherry-picked” data to support a predetermined conclusion. Rule 702 helps keep misinformation out of the court. Testimony rooted in speculative science can mislead juries, skew verdicts, and drive up costs for consumers. Upholding strong evidentiary standards is not just an ethical responsibility for judges – it's the law. Rule 702 requires witnesses to be “qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education.” Cases like Lee Ann Sommerville’s are not uncommon. Rather, they emphasize the need for strong evidentiary standards. Without such safeguards, courts risk becoming venues for speculative or methodologically unsound testimony that can mislead juries and drain judicial resources. Consistently applying Rule 702 across federal and state courts would help prevent flawed cases like this from advancing to trial, preserving both the integrity of the legal system and the time and resources of courts and litigants alike. Judges must constantly look to weed out expert testimony and evidence that is rooted in speculative science. Too often, attorneys working on contingency fees are willing to overlook questionable scientific rigor when self-proclaimed “experts” provide testimony that advances their case, regardless of how flawed its scientific methodologies may be. Yet despite this clear mandate to reject unsupported scientific testimony, questionable expert evidence continues to influence litigation across the country. Federal courts that have mentioned either Daubert or Rule 702 regularly apply the standard incorrectly – leaving much room for error in the American justice system. When Rule 702 standards are applied correctly, unfair verdicts can be avoided. These standards serve as a critical check against outcomes built on shaky science. Sommerville's case illustrates exactly why that matters. Without the District Court judge acting as a gatekeeper, Dr. Sahu’s flawed testimony might have gone unchallenged, and Sommerville could have walked away with a substantial award based on manufactured risk rather than real harm. Cases like Sommerville’s are driving momentum for reform at the state level to align evidentiary standards with Rule 702’s amended language. Several states have recently moved to bring their standards in line with the latest version of Rule 702, signaling a broader shift in how courts are expected to evaluate expert testimony. Leading that shift, states like Arizona, Oklahoma and South Dakota have adopted Rule 702, requiring their state judges to rigorously assess the reliability of expert testimony before it reaches the jury. North Dakota and Florida are among other states that have taken significant steps toward alignment, recognizing a consistent, high bar for expert evidence is essential. Advocates for strong evidentiary standards are hopeful that more states will follow this trend. Correctly applying Rule 702 to all expert testimony will protect all Americans and prevent courts from delivering unjust verdicts.

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The Center Square
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When Lee Ann Sommerville took a Charleston, West Virginia chemical plant to court last year, she framed her case as a public health crisis. Sommerville claimed she had been exposed to ethylene oxide – an alleged carcinogen – and argued that she needed medical monitoring before it was too late. Her case relied almost entirely on the testimony of Dr. Ranajit Sahu, a mechanical engineer who had appeared as an expert witness in every EtO lawsuit filed to date. The District Court rejected his testimony, excluding his findings under Federal Rule of Evidence 702 on the grounds that his methodology was unreliable and that he had “cherry-picked” data to support a predetermined conclusion. Rule 702 helps keep misinformation out of the court. Testimony rooted in speculative science can mislead juries, skew verdicts, and drive up costs for consumers. Upholding strong evidentiary standards is not just an ethical responsibility for judges – it's the law. Rule 702 requires witnesses to be “qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education.” Cases like Lee Ann Sommerville’s are not uncommon. Rather, they emphasize the need for strong evidentiary standards. Without such safeguards, courts risk becoming venues for speculative or methodologically unsound testimony that can mislead juries and drain judicial resources. Consistently applying Rule 702 across federal and state courts would help prevent flawed cases like this from advancing to trial, preserving both the integrity of the legal system and the time and resources of courts and litigants alike. Judges must constantly look to weed out expert testimony and evidence that is rooted in speculative science. Too often, attorneys working on contingency fees are willing to overlook questionable scientific rigor when self-proclaimed “experts” provide testimony that advances their case, regardless of how flawed its scientific methodologies may be. Yet despite this clear mandate to reject unsupported scientific testimony, questionable expert evidence continues to influence litigation across the country. Federal courts that have mentioned either Daubert or Rule 702 regularly apply the standard incorrectly – leaving much room for error in the American justice system. When Rule 702 standards are applied correctly, unfair verdicts can be avoided. These standards serve as a critical check against outcomes built on shaky science. Sommerville's case illustrates exactly why that matters. Without the District Court judge acting as a gatekeeper, Dr. Sahu’s flawed testimony might have gone unchallenged, and Sommerville could have walked away with a substantial award based on manufactured risk rather than real harm. Cases like Sommerville’s are driving momentum for reform at the state level to align evidentiary standards with Rule 702’s amended language. Several states have recently moved to bring their standards in line with the latest version of Rule 702, signaling a broader shift in how courts are expected to evaluate expert testimony. Leading that shift, states like Arizona, Oklahoma and South Dakota have adopted Rule 702, requiring their state judges to rigorously assess the reliability of expert testimony before it reaches the jury. North Dakota and Florida are among other states that have taken significant steps toward alignment, recognizing a consistent, high bar for expert evidence is essential. Advocates for strong evidentiary standards are hopeful that more states will follow this trend. Correctly applying Rule 702 to all expert testimony will protect all Americans and prevent courts from delivering unjust verdicts.

35 minutes

Capitol News Illinois
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Aiming to expand transparency and safety around large artificial intelligence models, the bill passed the House Wednesday and now heads to the governor.

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Capitol News Illinois
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Aiming to expand transparency and safety around large artificial intelligence models, the bill passed the House Wednesday and now heads to the governor.

Las últimas intervenciones de la excandidata presidencial Evelyn Matthei volvieron a mover las aguas al interior de Chile Vamos, desde...

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BioBioChile
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Las últimas intervenciones de la excandidata presidencial Evelyn Matthei volvieron a mover las aguas al interior de Chile Vamos, desde...

39 minutes

Oregon Capital Chronicle
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Nearly 1,000 Oregon households used a state-sponsored lending program to help buy a home in 2025.  The Flex Lending program, which Oregon Housing and Community Services began developing in 2018, allows low- to moderate-income borrowers to buy homes in the Beaver State with minimal cash upfront and lower interest rates.  Last year, 33 state-approved lenders […]

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Oregon Capital Chronicle
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Nearly 1,000 Oregon households used a state-sponsored lending program to help buy a home in 2025.  The Flex Lending program, which Oregon Housing and Community Services began developing in 2018, allows low- to moderate-income borrowers to buy homes in the Beaver State with minimal cash upfront and lower interest rates.  Last year, 33 state-approved lenders […]

The New Mexico State Land Office on Wednesday began a two-day public hearing over a proposal that would increase the amount of money oil and gas companies operating on state land must guarantee for plugging and cleaning wells, and would implement annual reporting requirements.

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Source NM
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The New Mexico State Land Office on Wednesday began a two-day public hearing over a proposal that would increase the amount of money oil and gas companies operating on state land must guarantee for plugging and cleaning wells, and would implement annual reporting requirements.

A Inglaterra arribó la expresidenta de Chile, Michelle Bachelet, en medio de su campaña a la secretaría general de...

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BioBioChile
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A Inglaterra arribó la expresidenta de Chile, Michelle Bachelet, en medio de su campaña a la secretaría general de...

A días de la primera Cuenta Pública, especialistas advierten que la izquierda enfrenta una serie de dificultades para disputarle la...

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BioBioChile
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A días de la primera Cuenta Pública, especialistas advierten que la izquierda enfrenta una serie de dificultades para disputarle la...