A California judge has ordered Alec Baldwin to face a civil trial in October over allegations of negligence stemming from the fatal shooting on the set of "Rust" in October 2021. The ruling advances civil litigation against Baldwin even though his criminal manslaughter case was dismissed in July 2024, when the presiding judge found that prosecutors had withheld evidence. Civil and criminal proceedings operate under different evidentiary and burden-of-proof standards, meaning the collapse of the prosecution does not shield Baldwin from civil liability claims. Baldwin faces multiple lawsuits connected to the incident, in which cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was killed when a gun Baldwin was holding discharged during a rehearsal. The October trial date sets a firm near-term deadline for pretrial proceedings and will draw renewed public attention to questions of on-set firearms safety protocols and production company liability. How jurors weigh the distinction between criminal intent and civil negligence will be the central legal question.
Elon Musk has crossed one trillion dollars in net worth, becoming the world's first trillionaire after SpaceX's stock market debut crystallised the value of his stake in the company. The listing is also a major market event, opening one of the last large private tech companies to public investors.
Donald Trump Jr. secretly acquired a stake in America First Refining, a struggling Texas oil refinery startup, before India's Reliance Industries made a nine-figure investment in the company. The deal came as the Trump administration was pressuring Reliance over Russian oil purchases, and was followed by major U.S.
India's AAIB will publish an interim factual report next month on the Air India crash that killed 260 people in Ahmedabad in June 2025. Preliminary findings suggest fuel control switches moved to 'cut off' after take-off, causing engine power loss. A final report awaits further consultations.
The White House was locked down after dozens of apparent gunshots were heard nearby, with the Secret Service and FBI responding to the scene. Journalists inside the building were moved to the press briefing room while authorities assessed the threat.