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- CBS News
Hamtramck, Dearborn Heights voters select new faces to run for mayor in November election
With the mayors of Hamtramck and Dearborn Heights stepping down, new names have been announced in Tuesday's August primary election. According to unofficial results, Adam Alharbi and City Councilman Muhith Mahmood are the winners in Hamtramck's mayoral primary race, with all five precincts reporting. Meanwhile, City Council Chairman Mo Baydoun and Denise Malinowski Maxwell were the projected winners in Dearborn Heights, with all 15 precincts reporting. The winners of the November general election will succeed Hamtramck Mayor Amer Ghalib and Dearborn Heights Mayor Bill Bazzi, who were picked by President Trump to serve as the U.S. ambassador to Kuwait and Tunisia, respectively. Ghalib, who was born in Yemen, was elected in 2021, becoming the first Arab American and Muslim mayor of Hamtramck. At the same time, the city swore in its first all-Muslim city council since its incorporation. Bazzi has been in office since 2021. Mahmood and Councilmember Abu Musa were recently at the center of controversy after their residences were called into question at a city council meeting earlier this year. A private investigator revealed at the April 25 meeting that Muhith Mahmood lives in Troy, and Abu Musa lives in Warren, using public records, surveillance, and GPS tracking as evidence. Both Mahmood and Musa argued that while they do have second homes in those communities, they live in Hamtramck. Despite the claims, the council voted against removing either member from the board. In June, Mahmood was named in a lawsuit filed by City Manager Max Garbarino and Hamtramck Special Investigator David Adamczyk. The lawsuit alleged corruption and violation of the Michigan Whistleblower Protection Act and Open Meetings Act. Other council members, as well as Ghalib and Police Chief Jamiel Altaheri, were named in the lawsuit.


Fox News
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- Fox News
Trace Gallagher: This US congresswoman said she was most proud of Guatemala?
'Common Sense' Department: Call us old fashioned but here at the CSD, we believe those who are in government should probably be loyal to America first…


CBS News
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- CBS News
Father of slain NYPD Det. Didarul Islam breaks silence: "I feel like I'm in darkness"
The father of NYPD Det. Didarul Islam, who was killed in last week's Midtown Manhattan office shooting, spoke out Tuesday for the first time since his son's death. Two brothers, ages 7 and 4 years old, are too young to fully understand what they've lost. Last Monday, their father was moonlighting as a security guard at 345 Park Ave., when a gunman from Las Vegas opened fire, killing him and three others. Abdur Rob, Islam's father, spoke with CBS News New York through a translator from his home in the Bronx. "Didarul Islam was my only son. Without him here, I feel emptiness. When I went and first saw his body, I had a mini stroke. After that, I've been lost ever since," Rob said. His 36-year-old son was born in Bangladesh and moved to the United States as a child. Joining the NYPD, his family said, was a dream come true. "He always wanted to be a police officer to serve his community, to serve the people around him, and set a better example for his kids," said Zamilur Rahman, Islam's cousin. Absent from Tuesday's solemn family gathering was the detective's widow, who is due to give birth to their third son next week. "There's not a moment that goes by I don't think about my son. I feel like I'm in darkness, but I will try my best so my grandsons can always remember him in the good times, not the bad times," Rob said. Islam was laid to rest last week, with hundreds of New Yorkers, including his brothers in blue, coming to pay their respects. "In this difficult time, we saw something powerful. People from all walks of life, all parts of city, coming together to support one another. The sense of unity gives us hope," Rahman said.