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Final debate ... Trump still insists fraud in US election system ... Iraqi Shiites want Turkish troops to get out


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WHITE PLAINS, New York (AP) — Tomorrow night is the last presidential debate between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. Clinton spent yesterday with advisers near her home in New York, preparing for the final faceoff. And one topic that's likely to come up is the investigation into her email and new allegations that while Clinton was secretary of state, a close aide contacted the FBI and tried to get the classification for one of Clinton's emails lowered.

WHITE PLAINS, New York (AP) — Donald Trump continues to insist that there's a lot of fraud in the U.S. voting system. Yesterday, Trump lashed out at Republicans who've tried to tone him down, calling his own party's leaders "so naive." A study by a Loyola Law School professor found that out of 1 billion votes cast in all American elections between 2000 and 2014, there were only 31 known cases of impersonation fraud.

KHAZER, Iraq (AP) — Thousands of Iraqi Shiites are marching in front of the Turkish Embassy in Baghdad, demanding the withdrawal of Turkish troops from a base near the northern city of Mosul. Turkey says the troops are training Iraqi fighters to help retake Mosul from the Islamic State group. But the protesters, followers of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, say they want the Turkish troops to get out.

NEW DELHI (AP) — A counterterrorism official says Bangladesh has discovered who funded the July 1 attack at a restaurant in Dhaka that killed 20 hostages. The police counterterrorism chief says financing of the attack came from three Bangladeshis, including a doctor who fled with his family to Syria to join the Islamic State group. IS has claimed the responsibility for attack, but the Bangladesh government insists the banned militant group Jumatul Mujahedeen (moo-jah-hih-DEEN') Bangladesh was behind it.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The D.C. Council will consider a bill that would allow terminally ill patients to end their lives with the help of a doctor. The right-to-die bill advanced in a narrow committee vote earlier this month. The bill would allow patients with six months or less to live to request lethal medication from their doctors.

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