Manhunt for Charlie Kirk's Killer Extends Into a Second Day: What We Know
The manhunt for the person who killed Charlie Kirk, the influential founder of the right-wing youth activist group Turning Point USA, has entered its second day. No suspects were in custody as of Thursday morning, more than 15 hours after Kirk was shot during an appearance at Utah Valley University. Law enforcement officials said Wednesday evening that authorities had detained two people in the case but later released them. “There are no current ties to the shooting with either of these individuals,” the Utah Department of Public Safety said in a statement. FBI Director Kash Patel said around 8 p.m. ET that a person who had been taken into custody hours earlier “has been released after an interrogation by law enforcement.” “Our investigation continues and we will continue to release information in interest of transparency,” Patel wrote on X. Earlier on Wednesday, Utah Valley University said in a statement that a suspect was in custody, but a spokesperson for the university later told the New York Times that authorities had determined the person was not the shooter. Read more: The Killing of Charlie Kirk and the Political Violence Haunting America The FBI said in a post Wednesday night that it was “working alongside our local and state law enforcement partners in Utah to fully investigate and seek justice” and that “anyone with information, photos, and video from the incident can help the FBI identity more answers.” Kirk’s shooting, which occurred roughly 20 minutes after he began speaking to a crowd of around 3,000 people at the university in Orem, Utah, has stoked fears about the rise of political violence in the U.S. It has drawn condemnations from figures across the political aisle. Some on the right—including President Donald Trump, a friend and ally of Kirk’s—have sought to pin blame on the political left, despite no suspect having yet been identified.China to reemerge as a major oil buyer in August, JPMorgan says. Here are its top picks
The pullback in oil imports by the world's largest oil importer has helped absorb the global energy shock and cap the surge in oil prices since the war began.
Why Wall Street banks and foreign borrowers are rushing to tap China's cheap money
Foreign governments, Wall Street banks and multinational companies are flocking to China's panda bond market.
Treasury 2-year yield post-Fed spike 'exaggerated' or is there room for more? Strategists weigh in
Markets pushed up short-term Treasury yields after Kevin Warsh's first Fed meeting, though strategists disagreed on whether the move signals a lasting shift toward tighter policy.
Google Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer leaves for OpenAI
Google's vice president of engineering and a co-leader of its Gemini AI models announced Wednesday he is leaving the company to join OpenAI.
India’s largest stock exchange files for IPO as mega-listings gather pace
India's largest stock exchange sets the ball rolling for mega IPOs this year as it files papers to go public.