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Scrape Result #9117 — cnn.com

Success · 5 headlines · 2026-06-24T02:02:00Z → 2026-06-24T02:02:30Z

Note sent in February said Nancy Guthrie, mother of ‘Today’ show anchor, had died shortly after kidnapping

A note sent in February to local news outlets about the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, mother of NBC “Today” show anchor Savannah Guthrie, said the 84-year-old died shortly after she was kidnapped early this year, law enforcement sources briefed on the investigation told CNN at the time. Investigators believed the note – and one earlier note demanding a ransom of millions of dollars, which CNN also learned about at the time – were legitimate communications from whoever took Nancy Guthrie from her home in Arizona’s Catalina Foothills early on February 1 without her phone or medications, the sources said. “The second note said, basically, it wasn’t intended to work this way but in the course of the kidnapping some things happened and Nancy Guthrie is dead,” CNN Chief Law Enforcement and Intelligence Analyst John Miller said on “AC360” Monday night.

Financial: 1 Sport: 1 War: 1 Sentiment: 2 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 8 Local: 1 Global: 5 Clickbait: 7
The article focuses on a kidnapping case involving a public figure's family, which generates significant emotional and social interest, but it lacks financial, sports, or war elements, and the title is somewhat misleading, prompting curiosity.

Bill Gates says he didn’t witness crimes but may have been in presence of Epstein victims

Billionaire Bill Gates testified that he never interacted with victims of Jeffrey Epstein but acknowledged that he may have been in their presence, according to a transcript of his closed-door interview with the House Oversight Committee released Tuesday. The Microsoft co-founder maintained in the voluntary interview, which took place on Capitol Hill earlier this month, that his three-year relationship with the convicted sex offender was strictly professional and that he never witnessed or participated in any sexual misconduct. But Democratic Rep. Robert Garcia pointed out that the panel’s investigation has shown that some of Epstein’s employees were also abused by the late financier, making it difficult for Gates to rule out that he was never around any of Epstein’s victims.

Financial: 1 Sport: 1 War: 1 Sentiment: 4 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 8 Local: 1 Global: 9 Clickbait: 6
The article focuses on a high-profile investigation involving Bill Gates and Jeffrey Epstein, highlighting social implications and global significance, but lacks financial, sports, or humorous elements.

Why can’t Britain hold on to prime ministers? It’s the economy

The catchphrase made famous by Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign springs to mind when considering the instability that seems to have become a feature of Britain’s political life. The United Kingdom is on course for its sixth prime minister in some seven years, as one political leader after another proves no match for a stubbornly weak economy, which has weighed on incomes and living standards, wearing down the electorate. Outgoing Prime Minister and Labour Party leader Keir Starmer, who is stepping down after just two years in the role, is in good company. His four predecessors — Rishi Sunak, Liz Truss, Boris Johnson and Theresa May — faced many of the same thorny challenges, and abided similarly brief terms.

Financial: 9 Sport: 1 War: 1 Sentiment: 4 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 3 Local: 1 Global: 8 Clickbait: 6
The article primarily discusses the economic challenges facing British prime ministers, scoring high on financial and global relevance, while it lacks elements of sport, humor, and local focus.

Japan isn’t quite where it once was. Scientists say a newly recognized seismic event is to blame

When massive 9.0 magnitude earthquake shook Japan on March 11, 2011, the ground also made a more lasting move. About 15 minutes after the event began at 2:46 p.m. local time, nearly the entire country shifted eastward, according to GPS station measurements. The lurch was small — 5 to 6 millimeters, or 0.20 to 0.24 inches — but permanent and at the time went largely unnoticed or was passed off as a data glitch. However, University of Chicago geophysicist Sunyoung Park felt the recorded signals that indicated a shift pointed to something tangible. In fact, the ground movement reflected an “extraordinary” and previously undocumented seismic phenomenon, according to a new study. “What was unusual about this movement is basically the whole of Japan was moving nearly uniformly at the same time,” said Park, who led the research.

Financial: 1 Sport: 1 War: 1 Sentiment: 5 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 1 Local: 1 Global: 9 Clickbait: 6
The article discusses a significant seismic event in Japan, which has global implications, but lacks financial, sport, or local content, and has a moderate level of clickbait in its title.

Wall Street is getting trampled by an AI sell-off. South Korean market plunges 10%

Volatility has returned to the stock market, and AI is once again the culprit. The tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped 2.21% and the S&P 500 fell 1.44% Tuesday as investors sold semiconductor chip stocks and other AI-related shares. The Dow, which has less exposure to tech, was down about 0.1%. The S&P and Nasdaq each had their worst day in about two weeks. The declines came after steep sell-offs in Asia. Nerves about AI quickly spiraled into full-on panic trading in South Korea on Tuesday, where the Kospi index tumbled 10%, tripping a circuit breaker that led to a 20-minute cooling-off session.

Financial: 10 Sport: 1 War: 1 Sentiment: 3 Humor: 1 Season: 1 Social: 2 Local: 1 Global: 9 Clickbait: 8
The article focuses heavily on financial market volatility due to AI-related sell-offs, with a global perspective on the impact on stock indices, while the title is designed to attract clicks by emphasizing dramatic market movements.