5 Big News Stories Overnight - Sunday, July 19, 2026
GoLocalProv News Team
5 Big News Stories Overnight - Sunday, July 19, 2026
Welcome to Sunday.
Here are five major national and global news stories that took place over the past day.
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5 Big News Stories Overnight - Sunday, July 19, 2026
Tate Brothers Arrested in Florida
Just outside the James L. Knight Center in the heart of Miami, video shows infamous social media influencers Andrew and Tristan Tate being handcuffed and carted off by federal agents Saturday in the latest chapter of their year-long stay in South Florida.
The U.S. Marshals Service in South Florida arrested the brothers, who’ve received billions of views online and are known for “teaching” men how to be more dominant, on a sealed warrant, the agency said. The U.K.’s Crown Prosecution Service announced it would be pursuing new charges against the pair for rapes that allegedly occurred between July 2010 and August 2017.
PHOTO: Andrew Tate, Anything Goes with James English CC: 3.0
England Wins Third
Was this evidence of England head coach Thomas Tuchel already learning lessons from the Argentina collapse? Let’s hope so.
With England on the ropes and in danger of throwing away a lead against France, Tuchel resisted the temptation to flood his team with defenders and was rewarded with a World Cup bronze medal.
England looked on course to secure an emphatic victory to clinch the nation’s best World Cup finish since 1966 and yet Tuchel was left with the exact same scenario that had gone so badly against Argentina in the semi-final.
Leading by four goals at half-time, England somehow went into the final hydration break of this bronze medal game with a single-goal advantage. This time, Tuchel steered England over the line by getting his late substitutions right.
Jude Bellingham stepped off the bench to cap a wonderful tournament for him personally with the goal that made sure England finished the World Cup in third place.
The Justice Department Is Pulling Back on Prosecuting Corporate Crime
The Wall Street Journal reports:
The Trump administration has moved sharply away from charging companies over the wrongdoing of employees, recently closing a string of criminal investigations with lenient resolutions or no charges at all.
In matters involving Alibaba, EagleBank and Abbott Laboratories, the department declined to charge companies even when prosecutors thought executives or managers were involved in the wrongdoing. In those cases, the department didn’t charge any individuals.
Corporate investigations and prosecutions that were happening a few years ago “have pretty much been dialed way back,” said Evan T. Barr, a former federal prosecutor now with the law firm Reed Smith. “So if you’re in the world of financial services or a large public company, you can breathe a lot easier.”
Charging companies is the strongest weapon in the Justice Department’s arsenal for punishing businesses that violate the law. Convictions can send a strong message that wrongdoing carries public consequences. But businesses say they can also hobble a firm’s ability to get financing or compete for federal contracts, and other critics say that tends to hurt shareholders and employees more than executives.
Trump’s threats to revoke TV licenses get serious
President Donald Trump’s threats against broadcast television licenses are suddenly less of a laugh line to the media world and more of a real danger.
Trump’s broadsides Thursday night against NBC and ABC were just the latest occasion during the past nine years when he’s called for revoking the licenses of TV outlets that anger him, this time after the two networks declined to air his White House speech on election security.
“Fraud like this should mean a revocation of their licenses,” he said Thursday.
But unlike Trump’s first term, when Republican leaders at the Federal Communications Commission disavowed any such reprisals, current Chair Brendan Carr has repeatedly opened probes and inquiries into the same TV networks that have drawn the president’s ire. And that has some policy veterans worried that the FCC may act this time, teeing up a constitutional fight.
Red Sox's win streak hits 12 after four-run rally vs. Rays
Wilyer Abreu hit two home runs -- the second a go-ahead, two-run shot in the seventh inning that gave him four homers in two games -- and the Boston Red Sox rallied for a 7-6 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Saturday to extend their winning streak to 12 games.
Abreu also hit two in the nightcap of a doubleheader sweep Friday.
Abreu's shot off Garrett Cleavinger (2-3) capped a four-run inning that wiped out a 6-3 deficit. Ceddanne Rafaela had an RBI double and Masataka Yoshida had a run-scoring groundout in the inning.
The 12-game winning streak matches the third longest in franchise history for Boston. The Red Sox will have a chance to win 13 straight for the first time since 1948 with a win Sunday in the series finale.
Ryan Watson (1-0) pitched two innings for his first major league victory and Aroldis Chapman got the final three outs for his 21st save.
