A 20-year-old student at Arizona State University broke the news that a key US Department of State official who was involved in talks between US President Donald Trump and the Ukrainian government had stepped down from his post.
Andrew Howard, a managing editor of the State Press student newspaper, on Friday evening reported that Kurt Volker stepped down from his role as the department’s special envoy for Ukraine.
“I’m not sure any of us thought it would just be this big scoop,” Howard told the Associated Press (AP). “It’s just incredible.”
Usually, the State Press competes with Arizona media outlets, he said.
“It turned out we were competing with the world,” Howard said. “I was never thinking we have to beat the Times and the AP and the Washington Post.”
Volker is executive director of the McCain Institute, a think tank in Washington that is run by Arizona State University.
Howard said he knew about Volker’s ties to the institute and decided to see if he could get information about him from his work with the university.
“I just talked to editor-in-chief [of the State Press] and said we should look into this, because we thought it would be good to localize a big story,” he said.
Howard began looking into Volker and, by Friday evening, confirmed with an unnamed school official that Volker had resigned.
He worked on the story with the editor-in-chief and another managing editor.
“We did hard work. We wanted to make sure our facts are right,” Howard said.
When the story went online about 6:15pm, Howard was working in the newsroom of the Arizona Republic, where he is an intern.
Howard said he jokingly apologized to the newsroom for the story.
“I briefly said out loud: ‘Sorry about that,’” he said. “They were incredibly nice about it.”
ROCKY RELATIONS: The figures on residents come as Chinese tourist numbers drop following Beijing’s warnings to avoid traveling to Japan The number of Chinese residents in Japan has continued to rise, even as ties between the two countries have become increasingly fractious, data released on Friday showed. As of the end of December last year, the number of Chinese residents had increased by 6.5 percent from the previous year to 930,428. Chinese people accounted for 22.6 percent of all foreign residents in Japan, making them by far the largest group, Japanese Ministry of Justice data showed. Beijing has criticized Tokyo in increasingly strident terms since Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi last year suggested that a military conflict around Taiwan could
A retired US colonel behind a privately financed rocket launch site in the Dominican Republic sees the project as a response to China’s dominance of the space race in Latin America. Florida-based Launch on Demand is slated to begin building a US$600 million facility in a remote region near the border with Haiti late this year. The project is designed to meet surging demand for the heavy-lift rockets needed to put clusters of satellites into orbit. It is also an answer to China’s growing presence in the region, said CEO Burton Catledge, a former commander of the US Air Force’s 45th Operations
Germany is considering Australia’s Ghost Bat robot fighter as it looks to select a combat drone to modernize its air force, German Minister of Defense Boris Pistorius said yesterday. Germany has said it wants to field hundreds of uncrewed fighter jets by 2029, and would make a decision soon as it considers a range of German, European and US projects developing so-called “collaborative combat aircraft.” Australia has said it will integrate the Ghost Bat, jointly developed by Boeing Australia and the Royal Australian Air Force, into its military after a successful weapons test last year. After inspecting the Ghost Bat in Queensland yesterday,
A pro-Iran hacking group claimed to breach FBI Director Kash Patel’s personal e-mail inbox and posted some of the contents online. The e-mails provided by the hacking group include travel details, correspondence with leasing agents in Washington and global entry, and loyalty account numbers. The e-mail address the hackers claim to have compromised has been previously tied to Patel’s personal details, and the leaked e-mails contain photos of Patel and others, in addition to correspondence with family members and colleagues. “The FBI is aware of malicious actors targeting Director Patel’s personal email information,” the agency said in a statement on