Worldwide coronavirus cases top 4 million
The worldwide death toll topped 277,000 on Saturday, with the United States recording more than 78,000 deaths, the highest of any country in the world.
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Caroline Linton is an associate managing editor on the political team for CBSNews.com. A graduate of Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY, Caroline has filed stories from locations ranging from outside kindergarten on the first day of school to the headquarters of the European Union in Brussels, and has worked every shift from pre-dawn to overnight.
Prior to joining CBS News, she worked for The Daily Beast, Newsweek, WNYC and amNewYork, among other digital and print outlets, and an article she wrote once inspired a stranger to donate a kidney. Caroline currently writes and edits about local, state and national politics.
The worldwide death toll topped 277,000 on Saturday, with the United States recording more than 78,000 deaths, the highest of any country in the world.
Musk filed a lawsuit against Alameda County to reopen the Fremont Tesla plant.
Attorneys for Loughlin, Giannulli and several other parents had argued federal agents had coached the consultant at the center of the case to "bend the truth."
The announcement came as Texas recorded more than 2,000 coronavirus cases over May 2 and May 3, the most the state has seen in a two-day period since the coronavirus crisis began.
Another notable Pulitzer Prize winner was Nikole Hannah-Jones, who won the Commentary prize for The New York Times' 1619 series.
"We can't go into this mad scramble again," Cuomo said.
CBS News estimates Biden won 29 more delegates, giving him a total of 1,424 delegates of the 1,991 needed to clinch the nomination.
A total of 315 patients were treated at the temporary facility, Mount Sinai said Saturday.
The helicopter crashed into an apartment complex early Saturday.
Bernie Sanders will not have the chance to appear on the ballot in the state and Joe Biden, the presumptive nominee, will get all the delegates.
There are nearly 55,000 deaths in the U.S., according to Hohns Hopkins University.
There are more than 52,000 deaths in the U.S., according to a tally from Johns Hopkins University.
It appeared to be either a heart attack or related to being shocked by 220 volts of electricity while on the job the week prior, but autopsy results are pending.
The details of the executive action and how it would be carried out were not immediately clear.
Demonstrators in several states continued protests of stay-at-home orders in their areas Sunday.