
Japan Airlines flight bumps Delta plane while taxiing in Seattle
The Japan Airlines flight had just touched down in Seattle from Tokyo and was taxiing when its right wing struck the tail of a Delta Air Lines flight, officials said.
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The Japan Airlines flight had just touched down in Seattle from Tokyo and was taxiing when its right wing struck the tail of a Delta Air Lines flight, officials said.
Forecasters have warned of another round of winter weather that could complicate travel around the Thanksgiving holiday.
A bomb cyclone, or a low-pressure system that strengthens over 24 hours, moved through the Pacific Northwest, killing two people. Washington, California and Nevada residents experienced widespread power outages and heavy rain. CBS News correspondent Carter Evans has more.
Seattle police said the 10 stabbings occurred over a period of two days. The attacks were believed to be random in nature.
Law enforcement officials found five people killed in a shooting inside a home southeast of Seattle and took a teenager into custody, police said.
Police in Washington state say a 15-year-old suspect is in custody for the death of five members of the same family. Several neighbors called 911 early Monday, reporting gunfire coming from a home where a family of seven lived. When deputies arrived, they found five people dead. A sixth victim, an 11-year-old girl, was injured. Police arrested the teen, who also lived at the home.
The man had been sitting on a ledge above the train tracks when he slipped and fell.
Stadiums in Pittsburgh, New Jersey, Seattle, and Tampa have been picked as emergency locations.
It's easy to focus on building security when it comes to preventing school shootings. Still, CBS News investigators looked through decades of data and found that the majority of these deadly incidents occur outside of campus buildings. CBS News national investigative correspondent Stephen Stock explains.
Aysenur Eygi, a Turkish-American activist who was likely killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank, was buried on Saturday.
Boeing assembly workers went on strike early Friday morning after 95% of the union members rejected the company's latest tentative contract, essentially shutting down production at factories in the Seattle area. CBS News senior transportation correspondent Kris Van Cleave has more.
Boeing said 33,000 workers represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers would get pay raises of 25% over the four-year contract.
Dorothy Marie Silzel was assaulted and killed in February 1980.
The Port of Seattle, including Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, is still working to resolve a suspected cyberattack that began Saturday morning. The attack shut down operations directly tied to the Port of Seattle's web-based system, forcing several airlines to resort to writing everything by hand. Sam Sabin, cybersecurity reporter at Axios, joined CBS News to discuss the attack.
Officer Daniel Auderer was heard laughing after stating Jaahnavi Kandula was dead, saying her young life had "limited value."
Jeana Moore just walked 334 miles from Spokane, Washington, to Seattle, as her form of gratitude for the bone marrow transplant that saved her granddaughter's life. Now she does it to enroll even more donors.
Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell said that the facility would be supported by the Seattle Fire Department's overdose response team.
A Sacramento mom is accused of assaulting her 2-year-old child on a flight from Mexico to Seattle, prosecutors said Monday.
Daniel Lyon faced the unimaginable when his fire engine crashed in a Central Washington wildfire last year. He was the only one to make it out of that crash alive. He's now undergone 14 surgeries, but he always has a smile on his face. And as Carter Evans reports, now he has a girl on his arm.
Officer Daniel Auderer violated policing standards when he was recorded talking about the death of a graduate student from India, a watchdog group said.
Chef Renee Erickson has crafted a notable career, including publishing two cookbooks and operating nine establishments. The James Beard Award winner is committed to using locally sourced, high-quality ingredients that showcase the flavors of the region, and has played a pivotal role in shaping Seattle's gastronomic landscape. CBS News' Dana Jacobson has more.
Google's Project Green Light aims to reduce stop-and-go traffic by up to 30%, cutting down on planet-warming emissions.
Billions of dollars' worth of gift cards go unspent every year. Here's what to know about redeeming them — and avoiding scams.
The Green River Killer, Gary Ridgway, led authorities in 2002 to the site where the bones had been found in 1985.
Rates of homelessness in the United States have skyrocketed in 2023, according to new data from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Steve Berg, the chief policy officer for the National Alliance to End Homelessness, joins CBS News with his analysis.
Two young children were killed and 17 others injured in a shooting during a Catholic Mass packed with young students. The shooter is also dead.
Immigration officials are moving detainees out of a controversial, state-run detention center in the middle of the Florida Everglades dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz."
Susan Monarez, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has been removed from her job, a source told CBS News — but her attorneys called her firing "legally deficient."
The Food and Drug Administration rescinded the emergency use authorization that made COVID-19 shots available for healthy children under 5 years old.
Denmark's primary national broadcaster says Americans linked to Trump are carrying out covert influence operations to foment dissent in Greenland.
A lawyer for Kilmar Abrego Garcia said he has asked a judge to reopen his immigration proceedings and is seeking asylum in the United States.
Two children are dead and more are injured after a shooting at a back-to-school mass at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis.
Sean Dunn allegedly threw a "submarine-style sandwich" at a CBP officer stationed in Northwest Washington, D.C., earlier this month.
A judge said in an order that it was "baffling" that the woman had been "detained in the first place."