A woman in Mexico City heals hummingbirds, and gets healing in return


MEXICO CITY (AP) — Gently holding a baby hummingbird between her hands, Catia Lattouf says, “Hello, cute little guy. Are you very hungry?” It’s the newest patient at her apartment in a toney section of Mexico City where she has nursed hundreds of the tiny birds back to health over the past decade.

Under Lattouf’s caress, the bird relaxes little by little, allowing her to evaluate it. A young man who rescued it after it fell from a nest onto his patio watched attentively.

“It is a broad-billed hummingbird,” the 73-year-old Lattouf said, as she moved an eyedropper to its beak. “Oh, mama, you want to eat!”

This is often how Lattouf’s days have gone since she turned her apartment in Mexico City’s Polanco neighborhood into a clinic for sick, injured or infant hummingbirds, about 60 of which currently flit around.

Lattouf, who studied French literature, has become a reference source for bird lovers, amateur and professional alike, across Mexico and other parts of Latin America.

Her improvised clinic also supports more formal institutions like the Iztacala campus of Mexico’s National Autonomous University, which sometimes refers cases to her due to a lack of resources, time and space, said one of its researchers, the ornithologist María del Coro Arizmendi.

Arizmendi said there are 22 species of hummingbird in Mexico’s sprawling capital, of which the broad-billed and the berylline hummingbird are the most common. In Mexico, there are some 57 species and around 350 across the Americas.

With dozens of the tiny birds buzzing overhead, along walls and the window of her bedroom, Lattouf explained that she began caring for them a year after surviving colon cancer in 2011. It started with one hummingbird that had an eye injured by another bird.

A veterinarian friend encouraged her to try to help it. She named it Gucci after the brand of the glasses case she kept it in. The bird became her inseparable companion, perching on her computer screen while she worked.

“It wrote me a new life,” she said of the nine months the bird lived with her.

It helped pull Lattouf out of the sadness and loneliness she had experienced after her husband’s 2009 death followed by her own bout with cancer. Her illness had pushed her to sell her five high-end boutiques to focus on her recovery.

Later, friends and acquaintances began bringing her more hummingbirds. She began studying how to better care for the birds that are native to the Americas and usually weigh just 4 to 6 grams (a fifth of an ounce or less) and are about 10 to 12 centimeters long (4 to 5 inches long).

“Most come to me as babies. Many come to me broken,” she said.

Some have injuries to wings after colliding with things or falling from nests. Some have infections from drinking contaminated water from hummingbird feeders, which are popular in the city.

Since May, the demand for her services has jumped. Someone put a video about her work on the social platform TikTok that has been viewed more than 1.5 million times.

Lattouf says she never turns away a bird. Together with her collaborator Cecilia Santos, who she calls the “hummingbird nanny,” they care for the birds in long days that stretch from 5 a.m. into the night.

Most of the hummingbirds are in the bedroom where Lattouf sleeps. They stay there until they are strong enough to fly and feed themselves. Then she moves them to a neighboring room to prepare them to eventually be freed. Their release comes in a wooded area on the city’s southside.

Many of them do manage to return to the wild, but the ones who die under Lattouf’s care are buried near her building between small plants.

The city is filled with threats to hummingbirds. There are the sleek black grackles that attack the birds and destroy their nests, as well as constant construction projects that replace flower gardens with concrete.

But Lattouf remains optimistic and is betting on other bird lovers planting more flowers to feed the great pollinators.

“Nothing is guaranteed,” she said. “I believe God gives life and God takes it, but we do everything possible.”



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Texas woman known as the ‘Sassy Trucker’ leaves Dubai after monthslong legal dispute, advocate says


DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A Houston woman known online as the “Sassy Trucker” who had been stranded in Dubai for months over an altercation at a car rental agency left the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday, an advocate for the woman said.

Tierra Young Allen, 29, took off on a flight out of the UAE and will transit through the United Kingdom on her way back to the U.S., said Radha Stirling, who runs a for-hire advocacy group long critical of the UAE called Detained in Dubai.

Allen paid a $1,360 deposit to Dubai police to clear the travel ban she faced, Stirling said.

It wasn’t clear if Allen still has any legal complaints against her in the UAE, a federation of seven sheikhdoms on the Arabian Peninsula. Officials in Dubai did not immediately return a request for comment, nor did the U.S. State Department.

The circumstances of the April altercation at the unidentified car rental agency also remain unclear. Allen earlier had been in a rental car involved in a crash.

Stirling had described Allen as facing possible charges for “shouting” at an employee of the rental car agency, without elaborating on what Allen said at the time. Stirling accused the car rental agency employee of “raising his voice” at Allen and following her out of the shop in a threatening manner during the incident.

Dubai police disputed Stirling’s description of the altercation, instead saying they received a complaint from the car rental agency about Allen “accusing her of slandering and defaming an employee amidst a dispute over car rental fees.”

The UAE has rules that strictly govern speech far beyond what’s common in Western nations. A middle finger raised in a traffic dispute, a text message calling someone a name or swearing in public easily can spark criminal cases — something that foreign tourists who flock here may not realize until it is too late.

Under Emirati law, publicly insulting another person can carry a sentence of up to one year in prison and a fine of $5,450. Disputes over rental car agency fees have seen other foreign tourists stuck in the city-state in the past as well.



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Shark attacks, critically wounds woman at NYC’s Rockaway Beach


Woman in critical condition after being bitten by shark off Rockaway Beach


Woman in critical condition after being bitten by shark off Rockaway Beach

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A woman was critically wounded in the latest shark attack in the New York City area.

Beachgoers looked on in disbelief Monday night at Rockaway Beach as she was bitten on a leg.

That 50-year-old was taken to a local hospital in critical condition.

Woman In Critical Condition After Reported Shark Attack At New York's Rockaway Beach
Police gather along Rockaway Beach after a woman was attacked by a shark in the early evening on August 7, 2023 in New York City. 

Getty Images


Before Monday, there were no reports of shark bites at Rockaway Beach in recent memory, but it was to have a delayed opening Tuesday while city officials continued enhanced surveillance of the water.

Police were flying drones overhead.

“The lady’s on the stretcher. She’s bleeding on the leg,” a witness said.

That person said the woman was awake but seemed to be in shock.

“I see one big bite and one little one,” the person said.

“That’s crazy, though. I can’t believe someone got attacked,” surfer Yaan Vessial said.

Woman In Critical Condition After Reported Shark Attack At New York's Rockaway Beach
A stretch of beach stands empty along Rockaway Beach after a woman was attacked by a shark in the early evening of August 7, 2023 in New York City. 

Getty Images


Far Rockaway residents said they were surprised to hear of a shark attack at the beach because the water is usually pretty barren.

“There’s nothing here. You don’t really see any fish. It’s just sand, like a big desert under there,” Vessial said.

“Finding out about the shark bite — that blew my mind,” remarked Colin Smith.

There have already been at least five reported shark attacks at New York beaches this summer. Last year, there were at least eight statewide.

The city Parks Department issued the following a statement saying, “We hope for a full recovery for this swimmer. Though this was a frightening event, we want to remind New Yorkers that shark bites in Rockaway are extremely rare. We remain vigilant in monitoring the beach and always clear the water when a shark is spotted.”



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Woman arrested for allegedly plotting to help assassinate Zelenskyy


Woman arrested for allegedly plotting to help assassinate Zelenskyy – CBS News

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A woman has been arrested for plotting to help kill Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukrainian authorities said. She is accused of giving information to Russia about Zelenskyy’s itinerary from a visit to the war’s southeat front last month. Ramy Inocencio Reports.

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Woman critical after shark attack at popular New York City beach


A woman was in critical condition following a shark attack Monday off Rockaway Beach, one of the New York City’s most popular Atlantic coast attractions, authorities said.

The attack was reported at 5:49 p.m., in the water at 59th Street, according to the New York Police Department’s public information office.

She remained in critical condition at Jamaica Hospital Medical Center late Monday night, spokesperson Michael Hinck said.

The city’s Department of Parks and Recreation said the victim was a 50-year-old swimmer bitten on her left leg.

The attack prompted lifeguards to clear the beach as police in a helicopter searched unsuccessfully for the shark, the parks department said in a statement.

The beach is subject to a delayed open Tuesday, with a start time of 11 a.m. at the earliest, as authorities will continue to monitor the area for sharks, the parks department said.

“We hope for a full recovery for this swimmer,” the parks department said. “Though this was a frightening event, we want to remind New Yorkers that shark bites in Rockaway are extremely rare.”

Multiple shark attacks were reported a month ago northeast of Rockaway, in the waters off Fire Island, off Quogue, a village on Long Island, and off Babylon, New York.

Sand tiger sharks, which can grow to 10 feet, have been spotted in relatively large numbers along the surf line off Long Island this summer.

Experts at the Florida Museum’s International Shark Attack File say they are attracted to the bays and baitfish of the Long Island coast.

The file last year said that in 2022 New York state recorded eight of its 20 shark attacks reported since 1837.





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Woman captured in alleged plot to assassinate Ukraine’s Zelenskyy


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Ukraine intelligence says a Russian informant was captured while trying to carry out a plot to assassinate President Zelenskyy during a trip to Mykolaiv last month. Meanwhile, a patrol of 11 Chinese and Russian warships cruised together near Alaska. NBC News’ Richard Engel has more details.

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Oregon man accused of holding woman captive in makeshift cell appeared on ‘Judge Judy’ with children’s mother


A man who officials say kidnapped and held a woman captive in a makeshift cell in his Oregon garage appeared in a 2018 episode of “Judge Judy” with the mother of his two children.

Negasi Zuberi — a 29-year-old who goes by the aliases “Sakima,” “Justin Hyche” and “Justin Kouassi” — was arrested July 16 after the woman escaped and was able to flag down help. He was charged with one count of interstate kidnapping.

Zuberi has been linked to four violent sexual assaults in at least four states, officials said, without detailing the locations.

In the episode, which is circulating on Facebook, 29-year-old Negasi Zuberi went by the alias, Justin Hyche.

He claimed that his ex-fiancée had assaulted him with a glass bottle at his apartment in June 2018 and also destroyed property at his home days later.

Zuberi and the woman had moved together from California to New York after the birth of their son but no longer lived together, they said. Their son was 21 months old.

NBC News is not identifying the woman or her children, who may be victims of abuse. 

Zuberi submitted footage from the initial incident that Judge Judy watched in court.

In the footage, the woman can be heard telling Zuberi not to take their child out into the cold. She asks someone nearby to call the police and alleges that Zuberi is drunk.

It appears that the woman and Zuberi have some physical exchanges before he walks outside. A glass bottle is then heard shattering on the sidewalk.

Zuberi told the judge that he filed a police report against the woman but was arrested instead. He spent about two days in jail.

“They completely went on her side, they assumed that I assaulted her and they didn’t believe anything I said,” Zuberi told the judge.

The woman said she’d arrived at Zuberi’s home that day around 11 p.m. to pick their son up but he didn’t let her take him. She claims she didn’t throw the glass bottle at Zuberi.

Judge Judy took Zuberi’s side, telling the woman she should’ve arrived at 6 p.m., the earlier agreed upon time, to pick up their son.

The woman said she was pregnant at the time of the incident and claimed Zuberi put his hands on her and that she called an ambulance following the exchange to get her blood pressure checked.

Judge Judy, whose full name is Judy Sheindlin, didn’t believe her and asked for a medical report proving she was injured.

“Who cares about your blood pressure,” Judge Judy asked.

The judge asks Zuberi if the baby the woman is pregnant with is his, to which he responded “there could be a possibility.”

The woman denied attacking Zuberi and destroying his property and counter sued for her phone, which she said her ex-fiancé broke after getting out of jail.

Judge Judy dismissed the counter claim and ruled in favor of Zuberi, ordering the woman to pay him $2,500 for destroying his property.

“I would’ve awarded you money for false arrest because I don’t think that there was any basis for you to be arrested other than the police in New York sometimes are scared not to make an arrest if there’s a call for domestic violence,” Judy told Zuberi.

Authorities in July homed in on Zuberi one day after he traveled from his Klamath Falls, Oregon, home to Seattle, Washington, where he solicited a prostitute and kidnapped her, the FBI’s Portland Field Office said.

He posed as an undercover police officer, flashing a badge, pointing a Taser, and placing the woman in handcuffs, before putting her into the back seat of his car, according to the criminal complaint.

Once at his home, he put her into a makeshift cell he constructed in his garage of cinder blocks with a metal door that couldn’t be opened from the inside, officials said. 

The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Portland Field Office is asking for the public’s help in identifying potential victims of a violent sex assault offender who has lived in at least 10 states.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Portland Field Office is asking for the public’s help in identifying potential victims of a violent sex assault offender who has lived in at least 10 states.FBI Oregon

The woman managed to escape and the Klamath Falls Police Department obtained a search warrant for Zuberi’s home and found the cell as the victim described. 

Zuberi fled and he was ultimately found in Reno, Nevada, on July 16, with his family.

He was in a car, holding one of his children in the front seat, speaking with a woman who was outside the car in a Walmart parking lot when officials located him last month. It’s not clear at this time if this woman he was with is the same one from the “Judge Judy” episode.

After a 45-minute standoff, he was taken into custody.

Zuberi is also accused of allegedly attacking, abusing and threatening to kill a woman and their two children before she sought a protective order against him three years ago.

The woman who filed the protective order is the same woman who appeared on “Judge Judy” with Zuberi.

Zuberi’s lawyer in Oregon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, call the National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline at 1-800-656-4673. The hotline, run by the Rape, Abuse, & Incest National Network (RAINN), can put you in contact with your local rape crisis center. You can also access RAINN’s online chat service at https://www.rainn.org/get-help.



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Woman arrested in alleged plot to kill Ukraine’s Zelenskyy


Woman arrested in alleged plot to kill Ukraine’s Zelenskyy – CBS News

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Ukraine’s intelligence agency, the Secret Service of Ukraine (SSU), said Monday that it had arrested a woman in connection with an alleged assassination plot against President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The woman in question “was preparing a Russian airstrike in the Mykolaiv region during the visit of the President of Ukraine,” the SSU said. CBS News foreign correspondent Ramy Inocencio has more.

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Ukraine says woman held in plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelenskyy


Ukraine says woman held in plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelenskyy – CBS News

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Ukraine’s intelligence agency said Monday it arrested a woman in connection with an alleged assassination plot against President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The woman in question “was preparing a Russian airstrike in the Mykolaiv region during the visit of the President of Ukraine,” the Secret Service of Ukraine said. Ramy Inocencio reports.

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Ukraine says woman held in plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as airstrikes kill 3


Ukraine’s intelligence agency, the Secret Service of Ukraine (SSU), said Monday that it had arrested a woman in connection with an alleged assassination plot against President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The woman in question “was preparing a Russian airstrike in the Mykolaiv region during the visit of the President of Ukraine,” the SSU said.

“Primarily, the woman tried to establish time and list of locations of the Head of State’s tentative itinerary in the region,” a statement from the SSU said, referring to a planned visit by the president to the southern region.

The report from Kyiv’s intelligence community came as Russian forces struck the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson in the south, and border areas in the northeast Kharkiv region, with at least three people killed in the attacks, according to Ukrainian officials. 

Ukraine says woman killed in Russian shelling of Kherson
A building damaged by Russian shelling in Kherson, Ukraine, August 7, 2023. 

Reuters/OLEKSANDR PROKUDIN/TELEGRAM


“A difficult night for Kherson… The Russian army continued to set fire to the homes of Kherson residents in the central part of the city,” Kherson Governor Oleksandr Prokudin said on social media. One woman was killed in the attacks, Prokudin said. 

Separately, Andriy Yermak, President Zelenskyy’s chief of staff, said Moscow had shelled the village of Kucherivka, close to Ukraine’s border with Russia in the Kharkiv region. That strike left two people dead, Yermak said.

The strikes were just the latest examples of Russia’s daily aerial bombardment of Ukrainian towns and cities. Both countries have ramped up attacks on each other’s troops, infrastructure and military hardware in recent weeks as the deadliest war in Europe since World War II nears the 18-month mark. 

On Sunday, the Reuters news agency, citing officials in both Kyiv and Moscow, reported that Ukraine had struck two bridges linking Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula — a large region that has been occupied by Russia since 2014 — to the Ukrainian mainland.

Over the weekend, Russia unleashed a missile and drone barrage across Ukraine, including an assault on a blood transfusion center that Zelenskyy called “a war crime.” The strikes were seen as likely retaliation for a Ukrainian attack on a major Russian port in the Black Sea, which was struck by Ukrainian sea drones Friday, causing significant damage to a Russian warship. 

Attacks on key strategic ports in the Black Sea have increased following Russia’s withdrawal in July from an internationally brokered deal that had allowed Ukraine to export grain to the rest of the world. 

Meanwhile, senior officials from some 40 countries including Ukraine, the U.S and China, but notably not Russia, gathered in Saudi Arabia on Sunday for peace talks, with no concrete steps emerging from the summit. 

The Ukrainian delegation described the talks as an attempt to secure broad international support for Kyiv’s terms and conditions for peace, including the withdrawal of all Russian troops and the return of all Ukrainian territory to its control.

On Monday, China’s foreign ministry said in a written statement to Reuters that the talks in Jeddah had helped “to consolidate international consensus.”

Last week, Ukraine’s Zelenskyy expressed hope that a Ukraine “peace summit” would be held later this year, and he said the talks in Saudi Arabia were a step toward that objective. 



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