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3 police officers shot, 2 fatally in Palm Springs...Boat full of young people capsizes in San Francisco Bay... Trumps stays the course


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PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) — Police Chief Bryan Reyes says three officers in Palm Springs, California, were trying to resolve a family dispute today when a man fatally shot two of them and wounded the third. Reyes says the officers were talking calmly to the man, trying to resolve things when he suddenly opened fire on them. Reyes says the gunman is still at large and may be in the home where the shooting occurred.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — There's word that a boat carrying about 30 young people has capsized near San Francisco's Pier 45, trapping some of them under the boat's hull. The San Francisco Fire Department says Coast Guard rescue crews and divers are en route. No other details are immediately available.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump says he'll continue his campaign even though he says the "media and establishment want me out of the race so badly." Trump vowed in capital letters on Twitter today to "never drop of out the race." He also pledged to "never let my supporters down." Some Republicans are calling for Trump to abandon his campaign in the wake of the release of a 2005 video in which he makes lewd remarks about women.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani is downplaying the number of Republicans who announced they're abandoning Donald Trump, suggesting that it's now "the insiders against the outsiders" in the GOP. He says "they already didn't support him in the first place so it's not really a surprise." He says calls for Trump to pull out are simply the "wishful thinking of the Clinton campaign and those people who have opposed him for a long time."

JEREMIE, Haiti (AP) — Haitians are beginning to mourn their dead in the area hardest hit by Hurricane Matthew while authorities warn of a looming humanitarian crisis in the southern region where more than 500 people were killed during the storm. Authorities say more than 60,000 homes were destroyed in one area and there is a growing threat from cholera and other diseases. In the U.S., at least 10 people are known dead as a result of the storm.

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