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Daily Briefing: A 17-hour voyage back to Earth


Good morning!🙋🏼‍♀️ I'm Nicole Fallert, Daily Briefing author. Lady Gaga will always be our innovator.

Get ready for Tuesday's news:

Boeing Starliner astronauts are flying home 

After an unexpected stay of more than nine months, NASA astronauts and Starliner crew members Sunita "Suni" Williams and Barry "Butch" Wilmore boarded a SpaceX Dragon capsule docked at the International Space Station in the early hours of Tuesday morning. Later Tuesday evening, the Dragon carrying the astronauts – including NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov – is due to splash down off the Florida coast. The astronauts are now on a roughly 17-hour voyage back to Earth.

Did Venezuelan deportations defy a judge's order?

Lawyers representing nearly 300 Venezuelans deported under President Donald Trump’s invocation of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act say deportation flights may have come after a judge ordered the removals halted.

What happened: The flights were in the air when Washington, D.C. Chief U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ruled that they should return to the U.S. while the case was litigated. But they continued to their destinations.

More news to know now

Turn up your Tuesday with our crossword! Sally's hint: iPod Shuffle.

How did a deadly storm rip across the US?

Weather that swept the nation over the weekend delivered an unusually powerful punch, spinning up more than 50 tornadoes, fanning wildfires and killing at least 42 people. During this transition between winter and spring, it's not unusual to get severe weather. But this system had more impact than usual, experts said. A trio of conditions in the atmosphere unleashed nature's fury as high winds in a very strong jet stream aloft encountered very dry air from the Desert Southwest and unusual warmth in the Gulf pulled in extra moisture. National Weather Service survey teams are still assessing the storm damage.

Texas midwife the first arrest under state abortion ban

A licensed midwife from the Houston area has been arrested and charged with performing two abortions, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced Monday, marking the first known arrest under the state's near-total abortion ban that prohibits all but lifesaving abortions. The law, which became active post-Roe, carries penalties, including the loss of a medical license, fines of no less than $100,000 and sentences of up to life in prison. Texas state Republicans also continue cracking down on abortions with new legislation this year.

Today's talkers

Do you use Gmail or Outlook? Be weary of ransomware

Federal authorities are warning users of Gmail, Outlook and other popular email services about dangerous ransomware linked to a group of developers who have breached hundreds of victims' data, including people in the medical, education, legal, insurance, tech and manufacturing fields. The group operating the ransomware variant, called "Medusa," has been identified as a group called Spearwing. The ransoms demanded by Spearwing using the Medusa ransomware have ranged from $100,000 up to $15 million, according to watchdogs. Here's how to protect yourself.

Photo of the day: Snowy stars

Celebrities bundled up in winter coats on a gorgeous, snowy night in the French Alps to take in some elevated fashion — literally. Models walked 6,500 feet above sea level as fresh snow flurried at the Moncler Grenoble fashion show. Sometimes you just gotta commit to the 'fit.

Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer at Paste BN, sign up for the email here. Want to send Nicole a note? Shoot her an email at NFallert@usatoday.com.