The future of Britain’s Friday teatime staple – fish and chips – could be under threat due to overfishing, conservationists warn.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
The future of Britain’s Friday teatime staple – fish and chips – could be under threat due to overfishing, conservationists warn.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
Dolly Parton’s sister has said that the country singer is “going to be just fine” after worrying fans by asking for prayers.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
The government did not apply any pressure to drop a China spy trial last month and is “incredibly disappointed”, a minister has told Sky News.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
Sir Keir Starmer has said the government will not relax visa rules for India, as he embarks upon a two-day trade trip to Mumbai.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
Suspected online hate crimes referred to police have quadrupled already this season in English football, Sky News can reveal.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
It’s dusty, sweltering, crowded. Waves of people start to arrive.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
By: Greg Knight, News of the North

Before and after the polls closed at eight o’clock Tuesday night, city officials worked to ensure the ballot count was accurate and complied with election integrity regulations put in place by the CBJ.
Ballots from Juneau’s five drop boxes and two vote centers were securely delivered to the city’s Ballot Processing Center on Thane Road. That center has been in operation since 2022.
Once ballots were inside, teams of two verified voter signatures, separated secrecy sleeves, and fed the ballots into high-speed scanners, all under strict chain-of-custody rules. Each envelope and unique barcodes were cross-checked to prevent double counting.
CBJ Municipal Clerk Breckan Hendricks says that election integrity is taken seriously by the borough.
“We need to make sure that we’re transparent, that everybody has faith in our system,” Hendricks said. “A lot of people don’t understand it. We have our election rules and procedures online now, on our juneau.org elections page, and we’re trying to get more PSAs out there, trying to make people hopefully understand the process a little better to give them more faith in our system. I know that there’s a lot of hesitancy with by-mail ballots, and we really are following all the rules and regulations to make sure that there’s no gaps.”

One thing to note is that mailed ballots postmarked on Tuesday and those needing signature fixes can be counted through October 21.
In the end, Hendricks told News of the North that patience is key, and that accuracy comes before speed in Juneau’s current vote-by-mail system.
By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

President Donald Trump on Monday signed an order that overturns a decision by the Biden administration to cancel a 211-mile mining road through Alaska’s Brooks Range by denying a right-of-way permit.
The action removes a major hurdle for the project, but developers would still need to overcome lawsuits and opposition from environmental and tribal groups. They would also need approval from NANA and Doyon Ltd., two Alaska Native regional corporations who own land in the road’s path.
Ambler Road, planned by the state of Alaska’s development bank and supported by state officials and Alaska’s congressional delegation, would link the Dalton Highway with a mineral-rich region of northwest Alaska, providing access to the mining of rare minerals needed for batteries and high-technology manufacturing.
“It’s an economic gold mine, so to speak. I signed this years ago, and Biden un-signed it for me,” Trump told reporters on Monday at the White House.
Last year, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management concluded that the road would have a litany of negative impacts, and the Biden administration issued a record of decision saying that the best route for the project was no route at all.
The Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority, Alaska’s state-owned investment bank and the road’s developer, sued the Biden administration, seeking a reversal.
U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, speaking at the White House on Monday, said the state of Alaska requested an appeal of that decision, and that under federal law, President Trump has the executive authority to make decisions on land use.
The appeal in question was filed by AIDEA under Section 1106 of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act of 1980.
“This opens up a wealth of resources,” Burgum said, adding that the federal government will also take partial ownership of Trilogy Metals, one of several firms exploring for minerals in northwest Alaska.
As currently planned, the road would consist of a gravel strip stretching from the Dalton Highway almost to Kotzebue. It is envisioned as a toll road, with no public access, and the cost of construction would be paid for via fees levied on users, similar to the way the AIDEA-funded DeLong Mountain Transportation System provides a port for lead and zinc exported from the Red Dog Mine in northwest Alaska.
In a special late-September meeting, AIDEA’s board voted to authorize limited negotiations with landowners in the road’s path.
The road is expected to cross more than 10 miles of land owned by Doyon Ltd., the regional Alaska Native corporation for Interior Alaska.
To date, that corporation hasn’t expressed official support or opposition for the road. Sarah Obed, senior vice president of external affairs for Doyon, said by email that Monday’s announcement was “not a surprise to Doyon” because of a different executive order signed earlier this year.
NANA Regional Corp. owns more than 20 miles of land in the path of the road. In a written statement, NANA President and CEO John Lincoln said the company “appreciates the Trump Administration and Governor Dunleavy’s support for economic development in Alaska and their work towards stabilizing the federal permitting process” but he declined to express support for the road.
In 2024, NANA ended its involvement with the road process, citing concerns about the way the project was being managed.
Lincoln said that still stands: “Our position on the Ambler Access Project has not changed and will only be reconsidered if and when our established criteria are satisfied, in consultation with shareholders, local communities, and other stakeholders.”
Trump’s action on Monday restores a federal right-of-way grant issued in 2021, at the end of the first Trump administration. It also requires federal agencies to issue clean-water permits and other approvals needed for the road.
A lawsuit challenging the 2021 right-of-way grant remains open in the U.S. District Court in Anchorage. Attorney Bridget Psarianos, with the nonprofit law firm Trustees for Alaska, is one of the attorneys challenging that right-of-way.
By phone, she said she hasn’t ever seen a president use the authority that Trump did on Monday.
“He’s wielding this presidential power like a cudgel, including to overturn decisions that his own agencies have made and provided good reasons for,” she said.
The Tanana Chiefs Conference, a group of 39 Interior villages and 37 federally recognized tribes, opposes the road. In a statement Monday, it said it was “deeply disappointed by the decision.”
“This decision is a direct affront to the voices of Alaska Native people,” said Chief/Chairman Brian Ridley in a written statement. He added that TCC will continue to fight the project.
Psarianos, by phone, said that the BLM opposed the project in 2024 “because they found that there would be significant impacts to subsistence and to communities and their health along the road corridor.”
Athan Manuel, director of the environmental nonprofit Sierra Club’s Lands Protection Program, offered similar thoughts in a written statement. “This order ignores those voices in favor of corporate polluters. The Ambler Road will lead to significant harm to fragile Alaskan landscapes and the local communities and wildlife that rely on them,” he said.
Most of the road’s path is on land owned or controlled by the state of Alaska; an easement allowing the road remains under consideration by the Alaska Department of Natural Resources, but approval is expected.
In a statement published after Trump’s announcement on Monday, Gov. Mike Dunleavy thanked the president for his action, saying, “this decision will unleash development opportunities, create new jobs for Alaskans and secure access to strategic minerals.”
Similarly, all three members of Alaska’s congressional delegation expressed support for Trump’s decision.
“By advancing this access, we are creating new opportunities for Alaskans while strengthening America’s supply chain and reducing dependence on foreign adversaries for our critical mineral needs,” said U.S. Rep. Nick Begich, R-Alaska. “I applaud the President’s decision to support this appeal, and I look forward to working with the Administration, state leaders, and Alaska Native communities to ensure this project moves forward in a way that benefits all Alaskans.”
U.S. Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan also thanked the president for his action.
“The President’s re-approval will unlock a world-class mining district, deliver quality-of-life benefits for communities in the region, and help grow Alaska’s economy. It will also improve our national security by strengthening our mineral security and enabling us to produce more of our most important resources here at home,” Murkowski said.
Sullivan said, “I’m glad to see another critically important project for our state’s economy and working families being put back on track.”
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As we previously reported, former NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez was hospitalized over the weekend after being stabbed on Friday night.
Sanchez was transported directly from the hospital to a nearby jail, where he was charged with felony assault after details of the incident emerged.
Police now believe that the 69-year-old delivery driver who stabbed Sanchez was acting in self-defense.

According to a report from the New York Post, the narrative police pieced together based on witness statements goes something like this:
Sanchez was in Indianapolis as part of the Fox broadcast team for Sunday’s Colts vs. Las Vegas Raiders game.
The 38-year-old was allegedly “running sprints” in an empty hotel parking lot after midnight on Friday night when he became enraged at the delivery driver whose car was blocking his path.
The allegedly intoxicated Sanchez shouted at the driver, who says he had removed his hearing aids and did not hear the verbal abuse.

The driver, whose identity has not been made public, told police that he thought, “This guy is trying to kill me,” before taking out his knife and stabbing Sanchez once.
At a Monday morning press conference, Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears announced that Sanchez is facing a Level 5 Felony battery charge, which carries a sentence of one to six years behind bars.
Indianapolis police chief Chris Bailey noted Sanchez won’t get any special treatment due to his celebrity status, saying:
“I don’t care who you are, I don’t care what you do for a living, I don’t care where you live — if you come into our city, commit violence, we will use all the tools at our disposal to hold you accountable.”

Dispelling any doubts about the seriousness of the incident, Bailey remarked, “We’re lucky that no one’s dead right now.”
Sanchez has not yet spoken publicly about the incident.
The former first-round draft pick began his NFL career with the New York Jets, leading the team to two consecutive AFC Championship game appearances in his first two years in the league and earning the nickname “the Sanchize.”
He later played for the Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, and Washington Commanders (then the Redskins) before stepping away from the field to focus on his broadcasting career.
A fixture on the New York social scene, Sanchez had high-profile relationships with Kate Upton and Eva Longoria before marrying actress Perry Mattfeld in 2023.
We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.
Mark Sanchez Facing Felony Assault Charges After Being Stabbed By Elderly Delivery Driver was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip
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Ghislaine Maxwell isn’t getting a get-out-of-jail-free card from SCOTUS.
The disgraced associate and partner of Jeffrey Epstein is serving a prison sentence for her unspeakable crimes.
Maxwell’s parole eligibility will not begin until 2037.
Her hope is to get out of prison early. But, if she does, it won’t be the Supreme Court that helps her.

On Monday, October 6, the Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal of Ghislaine Maxwell.
The infamous former socialite is currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking.
Her heinous crimes involved the sexual abuse of underage girls by Jeffrey Epstein.
Unlike a SCOTUS ruling on a matter of law, we do not know which of the nine justices were open to hearing Maxwell’s argument.
We only know that, as a once-august judicial body, they declined to hear her case. She will not get to present her appeal.

In 2022, a Manhattan federal court convicted Maxwell.
This was only three years after Epstein’s death in prison.
Officially, he died by suicide.
Maxwell’s appeal to the Supreme Court was not on the merits of the case — such as evidence — but of legal technicalities.
At this stage, she simply cannot argue her innocence. She can, however, make a case that her conviction cannot stand on other grounds.

We know that Ghislaine Maxwell’s attorneys have presented the argument that federal authorities should never have prosecuted her.
See, Epstein had obtained an outrageous non-prosecutiona greement from the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida.
The agreement included a provision that the US government would not prosecute “any potential co-conspirators” of the notorious sex offender.
That was an extremely broad agreement from simply one district in Florida.
According to Maxwell’s attorneys, that agreement should enjoin the potential prosecution of Prince Andrew, of former president Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, and many others. And, of course, of Maxwell herself.

Maxwell is not the only one who feels disappointed by SCOTUS’ decision.
See, some had hoped that her case going before the Supreme Court could mean further exposure of evidence in the Epstein scandal.
At present, Republicans in Congress — despite some defectors — are scrambling to keep Epstein documentation under wraps.
Mike Johnson is even stalling in swearing in a new representative because she could be a tie-breaking vote. Most of the GOP is rallying to protect Trump at all costs.
However, we have to note that a legal argument before SCOTUS is unlikely to expose much new information on Epstein. This is simply not that kind of court case.

This summer, Donald Trump sent his former personal attorney — who, of course, now works for the DOJ because the corruption is beyond parody — to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell.
In the aftermath, Maxwell went from her restrictive prison in Florida to a minimum-security camp in Texas.
Maxwell’s work release authorization also turned heads. These are simply unheard of privileges for someone with crimes as atrocious as hers.
At this point, her sole hope of leaving prison seems to be securing a commutation or pardon from Donald Trump.
At present, there is no reason to believe that he won’t. He has refused to rule it out. And, many speculate, he may be hoping to buy her silence in this manner.
Ghislaine Maxwell Appeal DECLINED by SCOTUS! Disgraced Trafficker’s Only Hope Now … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip