Chicago Police Department(CHICAGO) A Chicago police officer who was gunned down Sunday outside his home after returning from his shift had his gun taken from him as well as his car in the attack, ABC station WLS reported Monday.The slain 30-year-old officer, Luis M. Huesca, was shot multiple times in the Gage Park neighborhood on the southwest side of Chicago, police superintendent Larry Snelling said during a news conference Sunday.Huesca was still in his uniform when he was fatally shot, Snelling said. He was killed two days shy of his 31st birthday, the superintendent said.Citing multiple sources, WLS reported the officer s gun was taken after he was shot. The Chicago Police Department has not yet confirmed the report.No arrests have been announced and investigators were working Monday to identify a suspect or suspects in the killing.Snelling said the officer s vehicle, a gray 2018 Toyota 4runner with Illinois plates, was also taken in the incident.Chicago Alderman Ray Lopez
joe daniel price/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) A majority of Supreme Court justices on Monday appeared sympathetic to an Oregon city making it a crime for anyone without a permanent residence to sleep outside in an effort to crack down on homeless encampments across public properties.The case, City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, carries enormous stakes nationwide as communities confront a growing tide of unhoused residents and increasingly turn to punitive measures to try to incentivize people to take advantage of social services and other shelter options."These generally applicable laws prohibit specific conduct and are essential to public health and safety," argued the city s attorney Theane Evangelis during oral arguments, which stretched more than two and a half hours.The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals said in a decision last year that a homeless camping ban amounts to "cruel and unusual punishment" under the 8th Amendment. But several members of the high court s conse
Raymond Boyd/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images(INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.) People who attended a total solar eclipse event at a children s museum in Indiana may have been exposed to measles, according to museum and health officials.An infected individual traveled to the event at the Children s Museum of Indianapolis on April 8 from out of state, the Marion County Public Health Department (MCPHD) said in a news release late Friday afternoon. Melissa McMasters, administrator of infectious disease and immunizations at the MCPHD, told ABC News the local county department was informed about the infected patient from the state Department of Health."Measles is one of those reportable diseases that s required to be reported by law because of the public health significance of it," she said.No information will be made available about the patient including name, age, sex, race/ethnicity or what state they are from due to privacy laws, McMasters said.Anyone who was exposed to measles, and is
Craig Hastings/Getty Images(NEW YORK) As the surge of summer travel draws near, the race to book a great vacation is on."If you re looking to travel domestically within the U.S., I think you should be booking now for summer travel," Clint Henderson, travel expert and managing editor of The Points Guy, told ABC News Good Morning America.Earlier this month while reporting quarterly earnings, Delta Airlines CEO Ed Bastian projected "record advance bookings for the summer," telling CNBC that the carrier s credit card data and bookings show customers are highly interested in air travel.An increase in budget airline routes that has created more competition, paired with an easing of the post-pandemic revenge travel surge, means travelers could see more deals."Overall prices are down from where they were when we just had that boom out of the pandemic," Henderson said. "So things are more reasonable."Hopper, the flight booking app, has shown predicted