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WSJ What’s News

Temporary FAA Grounding of Domestic Departures Upends Travel

WSJ What’s News

The Wall Street Journal

News, Daily News

4.14.2K Ratings

🗓️ 11 January 2023

⏱️ 15 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

P.M. Edition for Jan. 11. The Federal Aviation Administration temporarily suspended all departures Wednesday morning, due to the outage of a critical pilot-alert system. The disruption upended travel, snarling flight plans for travelers. Travel reporter Jacob Passy joins host Annmarie Fertoli to discuss what happened, and the potential fallout. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:13.0

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0:24.0

A rare ground stop on all domestic departures leaves airlines and passengers scrambling.

0:29.0

I think for the Department of Transportation there's going to be more scrutiny given that this is coming on the heels of the Southwest meltdown and the wave of cancellations we saw around the holidays due to the winter weather.

0:43.0

And what we know about the classified documents found at President Biden's former office. Plus how military working dogs do rehab.

0:51.0

It's Wednesday, January 11th. I'm Ann Marie for Tolly for the Wall Street Journal. This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move to the world today.

1:09.0

Republican officials on Long Island are calling for GOP representative George Santos to resign as he faces investigations over his campaign finances and lies he told during his campaign.

1:19.0

NASA County Republican chairman Joseph Cairo had strong words for Santos at a press conference today.

1:24.0

He's not welcome here at Republican headquarters for meetings or at any of our events. As I said, he's disgraced the House of Representatives and we do not consider him one of our Congress people.

1:37.0

Santos has admitted to lying about his resume but has denied committing any crimes. White House press secretary, Korean Jean Pierre didn't give reporters any new information today about classified documents.

1:48.0

The first time he identified documents found last year at a DC think tank used by President Biden after he was vice president.

1:55.0

Lawyers for Biden say they found the documents at the Penn Biden Center for diplomacy and global engagement in early November and that they turned them over to the National Archives the next day.

2:04.0

This comes as former president Donald Trump faces a criminal investigation into his handling of classified materials at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida.

2:12.0

President reporter Sadie German says there are some key differences between the cases.

2:19.0

We know that there were roughly a dozen documents found in Biden's office at the think tank and the Justice Department has said it found hundreds of sensitive classified and government documents at Mr. Trump's Mar-a-Lago.

2:29.0

So there's certainly a difference in terms of the magnitude of what we're looking at. And also the FBI searched Trump's house only after several other attempts to retrieve the documents through less invasive means.

2:41.0

Biden's lawyers in contrast came forward to the archives and the Justice Department shortly after finding these documents in November and relinquish them immediately.

2:50.0

Still Sadie says both cases could be political liabilities. She says the Justice Department hasn't yet determined whether to appoint a special counsel to look into the newly discovered documents.

3:01.0

The Bankrupt crypto exchange FTX says it's located more than $5 billion in cash and other liquid assets as it looks to recover customers' funds. And the company wants to sell hundreds of additional holdings with a book value of more than $4.6 billion.

3:16.0

The disclosures came during FTX's latest hearing in bankruptcy court today where a lawyer for the company said the total shortfall in customer funds still isn't clear.

3:26.0

And South Korean conglomerate Hanwag Group says it plans to invest $2.5 billion in U.S. solar manufacturing. The company plans to build an entire solar manufacturing supply chain in the state of Georgia that it says will manufacture 3.3 gigawatts of solar panels a year.

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