No, Los Angeles still hasn’t rebuilt homes lost in January wildfires

Last Friday, Bass proudly announced that “the first home has officially been issued its Certificate of Occupancy,” which is the “final step in the rebuilding process” and “a major milestone in the City’s recovery effort in Pacific Palisades.” Everyone did a victory lap for this wondrous moment of cooperation and disaster recovery, proving that Democratic governance truly works in California. AIRLINE CATERING WORKERS BLOCK TRAFFIC AND CAUSE DISRUPTIONS AT PROTEST NEAR LAX The problem here is that the rebuilt home in question was not lost in the fires. According to property records, the homeowner requested a demolition permit in January, just before the fires started. The entire plan for the house was to be torn down and rebuilt. If the fires had never happened, this house still would have been destroyed and rebuilt the only difference is that much of the demolition was done by Mother Nature for free. Pull up the Los Angeles County rebuilding dashboard, and you will see that this remains the only house that has been rebuilt after the wildfires. Another 371 remain in construction, and roughly 1, 100 that have submitted full building plans are still waiting for a permit. Los Angeles has been so quick to declare victory in the fire rebuild that it included a house that was always going to be torn down and rebuilt because, otherwise, Los Angeles leaders have nothing to show five months later. MAN ACCUSED OF SPARKING DEADLY PALISADES FIRE PLEADS NOT GUILTY Meanwhile, Newsom is campaigning to be the next president, declaring that, while President Donald Trump “turns his back on LA fire survivors,” he is “creating more flexibility for recovery and rebuilding.” Newsom and Bass have spent the last 10 months bragging about cutting red tape and speeding up the recovery process, and they still have zero houses to show for it. They are both trying to claim a political victory, rather than ensuring that houses are rebuilt after a fire that spread out of control due to the incompetence of their administrations. There is no victory to be had in the Los Angeles rebuild, no matter how much Bassom want to put it behind them. Their failures led to this situation, and they are eager to claim they have fixed it without actually doing anything, so they can move on and focus on their political ambitions.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/beltway-confidential/3900085/los-angeles-still-has-not-rebuilt-homes-lost-january-wildfires/

Hospital openings in Irvine mean lots of new hiring in region

When the sprawling City of Hope and UCI Health hospitals open in Irvine within days of each other early next month, it will be with approximately 1, 800 new staff. And Hoag is already hiring hundreds of additional employees to man an expansion of its Irvine campus with three new health institutes next year. Already, the region has “been feeling the impact of these investments,” Orange County Business Council President and CEO Jeffrey Ball said of the boom of jobs related to so much development and construction happening at one time. “Now, we’re moving into the more permanent clinical and administrative positions. “Many regions would give anything to have that in their area.” More than 18, 000 applications flooded City of Hope Orange County’s inboxes when it was hiring for the 740 positions its new 73-bed specialty hospital needs for its opening Dec. 1 in Irvine, said Annette Walker, president of the cancer care center’s expansion into the county. Just two years ago, her team opened a new 190, 000-square-foot outpatient center that also demanded a sizable hiring effort. Selecting staff for the new hospital, Walker said, was a laborious and intricate process one that spanned beyond browsing resumes and conducting interviews, but also making sure the needs of the county’s diverse communities are met, whether housing would be available and if Orange County could support the variety of skills needed. “It’s a big undertaking,” Walker said of building City of Hope’s new Irvine campus. “And I’ve always said that hiring would be the thing that worried me the most.” Who’s coming to Irvine? In 2018, City of Hope decided to expand into OC; for decades, it has offered Southern California its specialty cancer care from its Duarte campus, and this move into Irvine cuts the commute for so many. First, it built the outpatient care center that opened in 2022. Then it turned its attention, almost immediately, to the construction of the hospital just feet away. “So we’re gonna nearly double the number of people that we need to hire, and it’s going to be in basically a three- to four-month period that we’re gonna hire 740 people,” Walker said of the task that was at hand. Most of these are full-time positions of the more than 700 hires, just 69 are part-time and 37 are per diem. And the largest profession hired for was nurses more than 100 were needed. Dr. Carol Ann Friedman, interim associate dean of the Golden West College School of Nursing, anticipates the new hospitals making Orange County a more attractive location to stay for the school’s graduating cohort of 120 or so nursing students each year. “From the perspective of a nurse, it’s great to work at a hospital like UCI and City of Hope, which are of magnet status,” she said. “And to be able to get their first jobs, to be able to develop their skills at a high-quality institution, when you’re a new nurse, it’s really important to get that type of experience.” UCI Health’s new seven-story, 144-bed acute-care hospital, opening Dec. 10 in Irvine, was also “flush” with applicants, said Dr. Ryan Gibney, the medical director of the hospital’s emergency department. Overlooking the vast 300-acre San Joaquin Marsh Reserve from its spot on the edge of the UC Irvine campus off Jamboree Road, the 350, 000-square-foot facility the sixth in the academic health system that includes its founding UCI Medical Center trauma hospital in Orange will be the nation’s first all-electric hospital. “I had 51 (physician assistants) apply for five positions,” Gibney said. “I think there was 400 people in one of the job fair days for nursing alone. “People want to be here,” he said, “which is what I think we’re seeing when these jobs went up, people lining up out the door.” To care for the patients who will soon be visiting UCI Health-Irvine for its emergency room and operating rooms, about 180 physicians will be needed. But UCI Health also has the trauma center in Orange and, in recent years, acquired or opened several other medical centers around Orange County. So some physicians, such as surgeons, will float around, but it recruited 70 specifically for Irvine, spokesperson John Murray said. And when UCI Health-Irvine welcomes patients next month, it will be staffed with about “970 non-physician positions, including nurses, therapists and environmental services staff,” Murray said. A snapshot of UCI Health’s hiring logistics: For its emergency room, the hospital had about 40 positions to be filled. “About 30 of them were transfers, nurses in Orange that applied to move over,” Murray said. And that internal hiring “was enormously beneficial, because then we get an experienced staff that knows how to run an ER and understands all of our clinical policies.” Like City of Hope, which took into consideration language barriers and Orange County’s diverse communities while hiring, UCI Health was “intentional about who we hired, too,” Gibney said. “We have people that are native Korean speakers, Vietnamese, Arabic, Spanish. We have one that speaks Hindi. So all doctors are going to be able to interface with a population that exists around here,” he said. And as part of Hoag’s ambitious expansion at its Sun Family Campus in Irvine, which will add six new buildings, institutes dedicated to digestive health, cancer and women’s health and 155 new inpatient beds when complete next year, its leadership is in the midst of a staffing ramp-up. Hoag’s approach to hiring begins “long before a job is posted,” said Michael Krug, vice president and chief human resources officer. “We engage with future talent early through community partnerships, local schools, universities and career events well before they’re ready to apply.” All these jobs also start well before doors officially open, as departments and teams are built from scratch. And hiring for these hospitals is not limited to nurses and physicians; it takes cooks, janitors, security, ultrasound techs, phlebotomists, nursing assistants and an array of additional professions of all tiers and skill levels to oversee the day-to-day operations of all these facilities. Ball celebrates these hospitals coming to Irvine and the growing workforce brought on by such advancements in local health care. “You have more good jobs that are in the region and therefore you’re gonna have more opportunities for spending and that creates opportunities for our businesses as well,” he said. “So all of that is wonderful.” What about housing? The “ripples” of such a massive hiring wave, Ball said, will be enjoyed by the county at large, but also beg the inevitable question: How will these employers and the surrounding communities address the surging need for affordable housing? “When we think about the needed workforce and where they’re gonna live, this is not just an issue in Irvine,” Ball said.”This is a county-wide issue because they’re gonna be living in different places.” The financial goalpost for homebuyers in the county is ever moving further out. The required household income to buy a median-priced single-family home, which now is considered $1. 44 million, has surged this year to $367,600. Renters are also seeing overall hikes in Orange County. And in Irvine, tenth in the nation’s priciest places to live, renters pay an average of $3,090 monthly. Though these hospitals will bring “a lot of economic investment and growth” to the county, these openings will increase the demand for affordable housing and “exacerbate what is already a significant problem from a housing perspective,” Ball said. People inherently want to live near where they work. When approaching a massive workforce expansion like this, there are two elements community leaders must consider, Ball said. “One, is ensuring we have an adequate workforce for the positions that are being created, and they need to have access to attainable housing.” Even if developers want to quickly respond to this infusion of workforce, building is a lengthy permitting process, Ball said, “making it hard for our builders to really respond to the needs of the market.” One of the things Ball regularly lobbies for is the state loosening its California Environmental Quality Act regulations CEQA requires proposed projects to be evaluated for environmental impacts before being approved, which critics argue leads to delays. But the studies of impacts is necessary, CEQA supporters argue, to make sure communities aren’t overwhelmed by new developments. Ball referenced the recent Eaton and Palisades fires in Los Angeles that scorched thousands of homes and displaced countless residents after the flames erupted in January. “And when that happened? What was the first thing the governor did? He waived compliance with California Environmental Quality Act rules,” Ball said. A housing problem spurred by a medical expansion “may not rise to the level of an emergency like a wildfire,” Ball clarified. “But the dynamics are the same,” and they raise the same question, Ball said: “How can we break down these barriers so that we can build much more effectively?” This question has been “very much on mind” for Walker and the City of Hope team. A little more than 70% of City of Hope’s new employee population lives in Orange County. The rest live in neighboring counties such as San Diego and Riverside, Walker said. “So how can we help these people who would really like to live here and like to live close to their work, but it’s not affordable or practical for them at this time?” One solution on hand, she said, is a $25 million commitment toward workforce housing from RSI Dream Communities, a nonprofit owned by local executive and philanthropist Ron Simon. Potential housing locations are up in the air, but Irvine City Manager Sean Crumby said the city has some ideas. The city recently updated its general plan to change up zoning and guidelines to add capacity for 57, 000 additional units, and Crumby said the boom in health care was front of mind. The majority of the new units will “focus in three major areas of the city,” including near the Irvine Spectrum area, Crumby said. The shopping complex is just two miles away from City of Hope’s campus at 1000 Fivepoint and Hoag’s development off Sand Canyon. “So we are having discussions with City of Hope and looking to identify any way that we can help them in the future,” Crumby said. “I think Hoag is also close enough to the Spectrum area where we can target them as well.” Still, the reverberations of this extensive health-care hiring, Ball said, pose enduring questions on housing to be answered. Rents are rising. Homes are growing increasingly expensive. And local communities must find a way to accommodate their continual growth in a county that is already one of the nation’s most expensive places to live. “It means that the employers are going to have to engage in different strategies related to housing,” Ball said. “If you’re talking about a doctor with a particular skill, you don’t want him having to drive an hour and a half to come in if there’s an emergency procedure.” But still, Ball reiterated, many regions would “give anything” to have these questions to wrestle with.
https://www.ocregister.com/2025/11/23/hospital-openings-in-irvine-mean-lots-of-new-hiring-in-region/

Trump wants Commanders’ new DC stadium named for himself

The commander in chief wants the new Washington Commanders’ stadium, located outside of Washington, DC, to bear the Trump name. The White House is all but confirming a report from ESPN that it has expressed interest in naming the stadium after President Trump as the team moves ahead with plans for construction on the site of the old Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Southeast DC.

“That would be a beautiful name, as it was President Trump who made the rebuilding of the new stadium possible,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told The Post on Saturday.

The White House did not provide further clarification on whether the naming was a requirement for continued support, but a source told ESPN bluntly, “It’s what the president wants, and it will probably happen.”

Trump is set to attend Sunday’s Commanders home game against the Detroit Lions after spending the start of the weekend at Mar-a-Lago. He will join a special Veterans’ Day event at halftime and will view the game from owner Josh Harris’ luxury box.

Pro stadium naming rights sell for millions of dollars annually. For example, Northwest Federal Credit Union agreed to pay $7.5 million per year for an eight-year naming deal after a similar FedEx naming contract expired last year for the stadium that currently hosts the Commanders.

The current stadium is located in Landover, Maryland, outside DC, with a contract with the team running through 2027. The new stadium, part of a massive commercial development, is projected to be completed by 2030.

In July, Trump threatened to hold up the stadium deal unless the team changed its name back to the one it had during its glory days. The team ditched the Washington Redskins moniker in 2020 and adopted the Commanders name after years of pressure and controversy.

“I may put a restriction on them that if they don’t change the name back to the original ‘Washington Redskins,’ and get rid of the ridiculous moniker, ‘Washington Commanders,’ I won’t make a deal for them to build a stadium in Washington,” Trump posted on Truth Social at the time, although he did not follow through on the threat.

Like many projects in DC, the stadium naming involves overlapping bureaucracies. The stadium sits on land managed by the National Park Service, but D.C.’s city council would also have to approve a naming arrangement under a long-term lease.

Former President Joe Biden signed legislation in January transferring control of the land from the federal government to the city for a period of 99 years. The DC City Council approved plans for the $3.7 billion, 65,000-seat domed stadium in September.

The team played at RFK from 1961 until 1996, at a location that lines up with the U.S. Capitol and the Washington Monument and was a notable feature of aerial broadcasts during the team’s heyday.
https://nypost.com/2025/11/08/us-news/trump-wants-commanders-new-dc-stadium-named-for-himself/

OUTDOORS: Bois d’Arc is a bucket list visit

**Lake Bois d’Arc: Northeast Texas’s New Fishing Hotspot**

Lake Bois d’Arc in Fannin County has been open to the public since April 2024, and it’s quickly earning a reputation among Texas anglers. This newly-constructed lake has been on my wish list ever since the gates opened. With more design enhancements during construction than even Lake Fork, Bois d’Arc sets a new standard for fishing lakes in the region.

**Unmatched Habitat Enhancements**

During construction, Lake Bois d’Arc received a host of fish-friendly upgrades. Crews installed multiple brush piles and PVC fish attractors, and acres of timber and brush were left to be inundated with water. Several brood ponds were stocked with Florida Bass, resulting in a jaw-dropping 9-pound bass being caught within the lake’s first few weeks open. Rumor has it that the current lake record is slightly over 12 pounds, though it has yet to be officially certified.

**A Paradise for Crappie and Catfish Anglers**

Bois d’Arc is rapidly becoming a hot spot for crappie anglers. A quick internet search turns up plenty of local guides posting cleaning-table photos loaded with limits of big slabs. Catfish enthusiasts will also find success—recent whisker-fish stockings have been a hit, with catches coming in fast.

**Planning Your Visit**

I’m part of a group that gets together annually to spend a weekend at the lake—fishing, cooking, eating, and, most importantly, relaxing by the fire. At our age, rolling is easier than walking thanks to arthritis and other old age maladies, but those stories just get better with time.

While we’ve visited Toledo Bend, Falcon, and Fork, none of us have ever been to Bois d’Arc. For lodging, we found the Bois d’Arc Bungalows, several Airbnb options near the lake, and motels in nearby Bonham. If you prefer RVs or camping, there are several campgrounds in the area, including Bonham State Park.

**Boating & Facilities**

Lake Bois d’Arc features three public boat ramps: one at each end of the FM 1396 bridge, and another at FM 896. All are new and well maintained, with excellent day use and picnic areas for family or friends to enjoy.

**Current Fishing Conditions**

There’s plenty of vegetation and brush in the shallows right now—the next few weeks look especially promising for shallow bass. Buzz baits, surface lures, and squarebills worked along the edges of vegetation are producing consistent bites. While there is deeper action available, the surface bite remains my go-to until colder weather moves in.

Crappie anglers are reporting fish suspended 15–20 feet deep in 20–30 feet of water around the trees. Most are using forward-facing sonar, and the results are impressive: limits caught and excellent-sized fish. One online photo even showed a cooler full of magnum bream—still unconfirmed if it’s Bois d’Arc, but if so, it’s an incredible catch.

**Ready to Explore?**

Look for pictures and a detailed trip report coming soon. Lake Bois d’Arc is roughly a two-hour drive from Longview, so make plans to check it out soon!

For guide services and more information, contact Chris Smith at cksoutdoors@aol.com.
https://news-journal.com/2025/11/07/outdoors-bois-darc-is-a-bucket-list-visit/

AI data center in Louisiana brings unwanted construction, rising energy bills

Lisa Hopkins bought her house in Louisiana’s Richland Parish two years ago. However, lately, her family only finds peace and quiet on their front porch at night, after construction stops for the day. That’s because Meta, the company that owns Facebook and Instagram, is now building its largest artificial intelligence data center in the country right across the street.

“It’s always noise, all the time,” Hopkins told CBS News. She added, “We honestly didn’t know how big of a scale it was gonna be. Some mornings it’s hard to get out of our driveway, just because of all the dump trucks.”

### The $10 Billion Project and Economic Hopes

Louisiana approved the $10 billion project in August, expressing hopes that it would bring economic growth to the region. However, some experts warn that the data center’s massive power demands could raise electricity bills for customers statewide.

The state’s main utility company, Entergy, has agreed to pay for a $550 million transmission line to supply power to the center. Experts say this cost will likely be passed on to the 1.1 million customers served by Entergy Louisiana. This raises concerns in a parish where nearly a quarter of the population lives in poverty, according to the state’s utility commission.

### Impact on Energy Prices

The potential increase in utility bills is not the only concern. State officials who approved the plan admit that the increased energy demand from the data center could, in turn, push gas prices higher.

“This single data center is set to span an amount of land that is about 70 football fields worth of land, and it’s going to consume roughly three times the amount of electricity that the entire city of New Orleans consumes on an annual basis,” explained Paul Arbaje, an energy analyst with the nonprofit Union of Concerned Scientists, in an interview with CBS News.

The Hopkins family showed CBS News their recent power bills, which indicated that fuel costs increased by about $13 a month compared to last year.

### Broader Impacts Across the Country

As the nationwide construction boom in new data centers continues, other communities are already feeling the impacts. Customers in at least 13 states have reported higher utility bills linked to the development of new data centers, according to the Institute of Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

“We’re all kind of sharing the pain in that fight,” Arbaje said. “It’s up to state regulators, really, to step in and protect consumers and make sure that tech companies and utility companies are paying their fair share for this development.”

### Meta’s Response and Community Investments

Meta’s head of community development in North America, Katie Comer, said the company is working closely with Entergy to reduce impacts on customers. She told CBS News that Meta has “invested a million dollars into their bill pay assistance program to support low-income families.”

Addressing residents’ concerns about the impact on the neighborhood, Comer stated, “We are actively on the ground every day. We want to listen and learn and meet the community where they’re at.”

In addition, Meta is investing $200 million into local infrastructure projects and partnering with local school programs to support the community’s long-term development.

“This community as a whole is incredibly special,” Comer said. “We’ve been very proud of the work that we’ve been able to do together. I am extremely excited about the work that we will do in the future together.”

### Differing Perspectives and Local Sentiments

Entergy has suggested that Meta’s arrival in Louisiana could actually lead to lower power bills for customers. In a statement, the company indicated that resilience upgrades linked to the project could reduce electricity costs by up to 10%.

However, residents remain skeptical. Donna Collins, who has lived in the region her entire life, expressed hope that the company’s promises prove true but remains cautious. “I’m going to have to see it to believe it,” Collins told CBS News.

Collins also said that outreach from the state and Meta requesting local input was lacking. “I definitely don’t feel like I had a say, and I don’t know many people that do,” she said.

Hopkins echoed those concerns, sharing that she never received any notices about public hearings in the mail. “It’s not fair. It’s not something that we asked to be put here,” she said.

The construction of Meta’s massive AI data center in Richland Parish highlights the complex balance between economic development and community impact. As the project moves forward, many local residents remain watchful about how it will affect their daily lives and utility costs.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/meta-ai-data-center-richland-parish-louisiana-energy-costs/

Russia says more than 80 people detained for questioning after Moscow street fight

**Over 80 People Questioned Following Major Street Fight Between Migrants in Moscow**

*MOSCOW (Reuters)* – Russia’s Interior Ministry reported on Sunday that more than 80 individuals were taken to police stations for questioning following a significant street fight between migrants in a residential area of Moscow. The ministry stated that all foreigners involved in the incident would face deportation.

Russian media released videos showing people engaged in violent clashes on the street using clubs and spades. The footage also revealed the smashing of windows near parked cars around the Prokshino residential complex. However, the cause of the fight remains unclear.

According to the Interior Ministry, 19 people have been arrested on charges of hooliganism. The ministry added that migrants holding Russian citizenship risk having their citizenship revoked. Foreign nationals involved who are not imprisoned will be deported and banned from re-entry into Russia, said Irina Volk, a spokesperson for the Interior Ministry.

Migration, particularly from former Soviet republics in Central Asia and the Caucasus, has emerged as a major domestic political issue in Russia. Restrictions on migration intensified following a deadly attack at a Moscow concert hall in 2024, which Russian authorities attributed to Tajik nationals.

In 2024, approximately 6.3 million migrants arrived in Russia, according to Interior Ministry figures. Nearly half of these migrants came from Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan. Despite Russia’s domestic economy relying heavily on affordable labor from these regions—especially in construction and consumer industries—many Russian citizens have expressed concerns. They criticize the large influx of people, noting a perceived lack of familiarity with Russian customs and culture.

Additionally, Russia has been grappling with severe labor shortages across multiple sectors since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, as hundreds of thousands of Russian workers joined the military.

*Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Ros Russell*
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/russia-says-more-80-people-123257376.html

Manhunt underway for 4 suspects after heist of ‘priceless’ jewelry at Louvre in Paris

As alarms sounded at the Louvre Museum on Sunday morning, four suspects made a swift escape on two motorbikes, weaving through central Paris. They allegedly carried with them a haul of “priceless” jewelry once worn by queens, crafted from sapphires, diamonds, and emeralds. The suspects have not yet been apprehended.

About 24 hours after the daring theft — which occurred during daylight hours at the world’s most-visited museum — a manhunt and investigation are in full swing, according to state and law enforcement officials.

**A National Heritage Under Attack**

“The theft committed at the Louvre is an attack on a heritage that we cherish because it is our history,” President Emmanuel Macron said on social media Sunday. He and other French officials pledged that the stolen pieces would be recovered and the suspects brought to justice.

The museum was closed Sunday morning as police swarmed the area searching for suspects and collecting evidence.

“Following yesterday’s robbery at the Louvre, the museum regrets to inform you that it will remain closed to the public today,” officials announced on social media Monday. “Visitors who have already booked tickets will be refunded.”

**A Quick, Calculated Heist**

Authorities described how the suspects arrived in pairs: two in a truck and two on motorbikes. The truck was equipped with a moving ladder — a “mobile freight elevator” similar to those used by city furniture movers, according to Paris police.

The suspects reportedly parked the truck along a road near the Seine, next to the museum. Dressed in yellow vests resembling construction workers, they took deliberate steps to secure the area by placing orange construction cones around the truck.

Using the ladder, the thieves climbed to the second floor, accessing a narrow balcony outside the museum’s Apollo Gallery. This gallery housed some of the French crown jewels, police said.

They used an angle grinder to open a window and entered the museum through it, triggering the alarm, which was still sounding as they fled.

Inside, they smashed two display cases containing the “Napoleon jewels” and the “French crown jewels,” using the angle grinder to break the glass. Police confirmed the suspects stole numerous pieces of high-value jewelry.

The entire operation lasted just seven minutes, authorities said.

**Stolen Treasures of Inestimable Value**

When the suspects escaped through the same window, they carried nine pieces of jewelry described by France’s interior minister as of “inestimable” value. Culture Minister Rachida Dati called the items “priceless” in interviews with French media.

The French Ministry of Culture detailed some of the missing treasures, which included:

– A diadem (crown) from Queen Marie-Amelie and Queen Hortense’s collection
– An emerald necklace and a pair of emerald earrings from Marie-Louise, Napoleon’s second wife
– A large bow brooch from Empress Eugenie’s bodice

The Paris Prosecutor’s Office revealed the perpetrators attempted, but failed, to set fire to the mobile freight elevator used during the heist before fleeing the scene.

**A Comprehensive Investigation Underway**

Museum officials confirmed an investigation had been launched into what they termed an “organized theft and criminal conspiracy.”

The Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office is overseeing the case and has assigned the Brigade for the Suppression of Banditry — a specialized unit within the French National Police — to lead the inquiry.

Laure Beccuau, the Paris prosecutor, told a local TV station Sunday that about 60 investigators are dedicated to the case, expressing “total determination” to find the perpetrators.

As of Monday morning, police had not announced any leads on the suspects’ identities. Officials believe the theft was carried out by professionals.

Beccuau described the crime as organized and said authorities have not ruled out foreign involvement but are currently treating it as a domestic case.

**Officials Pledge Swift Justice**

“Everything is being done to apprehend the perpetrators of this unacceptable act as quickly as possible,” Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said Sunday.

The Louvre Museum and French law enforcement continue their efforts to recover the stolen jewels and bring those responsible to justice. Updates will follow as the investigation progresses.

*Reporting by ABC News contributors Will Gretsky, Somayeh Malekian, Hugo Leenhardt, Camilla Alcini, Bill Hutchinson, Victoria Beaule, Dragana Jovanovic, and Joe Simonetti.*
https://abc30.com/post/louvre-jewel-heist-manhunt-underway-4-suspects-priceless-jewelry-paris-stolen/18043128/

How to find King’s Rock in Pokémon Legends Z-A

How to Find the King’s Rock in Pokémon Legends Z-A

The King’s Rock is one of several evolution items you can collect in Pokémon Legends Z-A. Knowing how to find this item will be beneficial as you progress through the game. After clearing the initial stages, you’ll need various evolution items, including the King’s Rock, to evolve certain Pokémon.

There are two main ways to obtain the King’s Rock: you can either purchase it from a vendor or earn it by completing a side quest. This guide will walk you through both methods.

How to Purchase the King’s Rock

To buy the King’s Rock (along with other evolution items), make your way to the Racine Construction building, located in the southeast part of the map. The easiest way to get there is by following the main route heading southeast. Pass through Wild Zone 2 and continue straight until you reach the edge of the map. At this point, turn right (which will be to your left on the map) and proceed straight ahead.

Once you arrive at Racine Construction, enter the building. Inside, you’ll find several vendors selling various evolution items. Speak with the vendor on your right, and you will have the option to purchase the King’s Rock. This vendor also offers other evolution items like the Metal Coat.

It’s worth noting that the King’s Rock may only become available for purchase after you progress further in the game, possibly during the post-game content. If you don’t see it right away, continue playing through the main story and check back later.

How to Obtain the King’s Rock by Completing a Side Quest

If you prefer not to buy the King’s Rock, you can earn it by completing the side quest titled Strike First to Make ‘Em Flinch (Side Quest No. 84). This quest becomes accessible after you’ve advanced significantly in the game.

The side quest is straightforward and involves battling challenges that will help you gain the King’s Rock along with other rewards. You can find this quest in the battle court located beneath the Quasartico Inc. building.

Additional Tips for Evolution Items

For trainers focused on evolving their Pokémon, don’t forget to visit the Stone Emporium. This shop offers many Mega Stones for purchase, which allow certain Pokémon to Mega Evolve during battle when holding these items.

With these options in mind, you’ll have everything you need to collect the King’s Rock and other evolution items as you continue your journey in Pokémon Legends Z-A.

https://www.destructoid.com/how-to-find-kings-rock-in-pokemon-legends-z-a/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-find-kings-rock-in-pokemon-legends-z-a