| Wednesday, Aug 28, 2019 | | | | We’re covering a proposed settlement with the Sackler family, the use of LinkedIn to recruit spies and Tropical Storm Dorian. | | By Claire Moses | | | Protesters this month outside a Boston courthouse where a judge was to hear arguments in Massachusetts' lawsuit against Purdue Pharma. Charles Krupa/Associated Press | | | The family that owns the manufacturer of OxyContin, the prescription painkiller at the heart of the opioid crisis, is discussing a potential settlement for thousands of lawsuits over the drug’s toll in which family members would pay $3 billion of their own money, according to a person familiar with the negotiations. | | | The drug company, which introduced the painkiller in 1996, would pay out billions more by filing for bankruptcy protection and becoming a “public beneficiary trust” that would direct profit from drug sales to the plaintiffs. Participants in the talks put the plan’s total value at $10 billion to $12 billion. | | | The company would promise to provide, without cost, several addiction treatment drugs that it’s currently developing. | | | What’s next: The framework for the agreement and a decision on which plaintiffs would sign onto it are still in flux. If the deal is completed, Purdue would be the first company to settle all claims against it for its role in a public health crisis that has killed hundreds of thousands of people in the past two decades. | | | Jennifer Araoz, who accused Jeffrey Epstein of sexual assault, after a hearing in Federal District Court on Tuesday. Jefferson Siegel for The New York Times | | | “The fact I will never have a chance to face my predator in court eats away at my soul,” said Jennifer Araoz, who has accused Mr. Epstein of raping her when she was 15. | | | She was one of nearly two dozen accusers who shared their accounts at the hearing called to dismiss the sex trafficking charges against Mr. Epstein, who killed himself in his jail cell this month. | | | Although the identities of the people or organizations were redacted in the publicly available document, current and former bank officials have said that Deutsche Bank has portions of Mr. Trump’s personal and corporate tax returns for multiple years as part of the reams of financial data it has collected over its two-decade relationship with him. | | | Background: Congressional investigators trying to determine whether Mr. Trump’s financial dealings made him subject to foreign influence believe the bank’s documents could be more helpful than the tax returns in understanding Mr. Trump’s web of businesses. | | | In the summer of 2009, as the recession-ravaged economy bled half a million jobs a month in the U.S., organizers convened “tea parties” across the country. They were angry about spending, and had a specific set of demands. | | | The movement ignited a revival of the politics of outrage and mistrust in government. A decade later, the Tea Party’s ideals have been largely abandoned by Republicans, but its attitude lives on. | | | Carsten Snejbjerg for The New York Times | | | Many LinkedIn users welcome connections to strangers. That makes them vulnerable to spy recruiters. | | | PAID POST: A MESSAGE FROM CAMPAIGN MONITOR | | Email Marketing 102: Work smarter, not harder. | | Working smarter means running beautiful, results-driven email marketing campaigns – without sacrificing any bandwidth along the way. And with Campaign Monitor, you'll have access to a drag-and-drop email builder, a gallery of templates, and personalized customer journeys – all the tools you need to replace ‘harder’ with ‘smarter.' | | | Learn More | | | | Ride-share nightmare: An Uber driver kidnapped a 15-year-old girl on Long Island, the authorities said. She escaped by persuading him to pull over so she could use the bathroom. | | | Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times | | | Snapshot: Above, demonstrators in Hong Kong’s airport on Aug. 12. The antigovernment campaign in the city reached a milestone on Tuesday: 80 days of protests, passing the 2014 Umbrella Movement in length. A Times photographer has spent those 12 weeks documenting the developments. Here some of his most powerful images. | | | Late-night comedy: Most shows are in reruns, so our column is on hiatus. | | | What we’re reading: Michael Wines, a national correspondent, recommends this article from Medium. “Barely two years ago, potentially the worst aviation disaster in history was averted by maybe 10 feet and fewer seconds,” he writes. “Read this dry but riveting — and terrifying — account of what almost went disastrously wrong at San Francisco International Airport.” | | | Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times | | | Listen: For our writer, one world-traveling, chart-conquering rhythm — deployed by the likes of Daddy Yankee, Justin Bieber and Drake — defines the sweatiest time of year. | | | Read: “The Code,” by Margaret O’Mara, is an ambitious history of the cozy relationship between tech start-ups and the federal government. | | | Smarter Living: One of the worst things you can do with your passwords is to use the same one for multiple sites. If one account is compromised, hackers will be able to get into the others. To keep yourself safe, use two-factor authentication, keep your operating system and browser up-to-date, and use a password manager. | | | You have to go way back to find the source of the Amazon. | | | By many geological accounts, about 180 million years ago an enormous land mass broke across the middle. After 40 million more years, the southern part — now South America and Africa — also split. | | | The collision of tectonic plates that raised the Andes roughly 15 million years ago may have helped block the Amazon’s flow, creating a vast inland sea — and an evolutionary challenge for former saltwater inhabitants. | | | The Amazon's pink river dolphin evolved from a marine species. Sylvain Cordier/Gamma-Rapho, via Getty Images | | | The Amazon basin drained when the Ice Age reduced global water levels, leaving pockets of water and flora — and more opportunities for species to subdivide. | | | The flood-drain cycle appeared to occur again about 6,000 years ago. | | | That’s it for this briefing. See you next time. | | Thank you Melina Delkic helped compile today’s briefing. Mark Josephson and Eleanor Stanford provided the break from the news. Andrea Kannapell, the briefings editor, wrote today’s Back Story. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com. | | | Were you sent this briefing by a friend? Sign up here to get the Morning Briefing. | | |
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