US detainee Dennis Coyle released by Taliban in Afghanistan

WASHINGTON − Colorado researcher Dennis Coyle is on his way home from Afghanistan after spending more than a year in Taliban captivity, the U.S. government said on March 24.

USA TODAY

Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed Coyle's release in a statement.

The Afghan Taliban government said earlier on on March 24 that it had decided to release Coyle in response to a request from his mother.

Dennis Coyle

"The foreign minister said that after a letter from the detainee's family ... theSupreme Court... deemed the period of his detention sufficient and decided to release him," the Afghan foreign ministry said in a statement.

Coyle, a resident of Pueblo, Colorado, was detained in January 2025 while in Afghanistan conducting research on Afghan languages,according to the Pueblo Chieftain, part of the USA TODAY Network.

More:Pueblo man's family fighting to bring him home from Taliban captivity

US soldiers look out over hillsides during a visit of the commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan General Scott Miller at the Afghan National Army (ANA) checkpoint in Nerkh district of Wardak province on June 6, 2019. Soldiers play football in front of the Boardwalk as the sun begins to set at Kandahar airfield on Nov. 12, 2014 in Kandahar, Afghanistan. Now that British combat operations have ended and the last UK base in Afghanistan had been handed over to the control of Afghan security forces, any remaining troops are leaving the country via Kandahar. As the drawdown of the US-led coalition troops heads into its final stages, many parts of Kandahar airfield - once home to tens of thousands of soldiers and contractors - are being closed or handed over to the Afghans. A soldier with the 3/509th of the U.S. Army's 25th Infantry Division keeps descends from a guard tower at Forward Operating Base Zerok Oct. 7, 2009 in Zerok, Afghanistan. The soldiers at FOB Zerok, which has been attacked repeatedly from the surrounding hostile countryside of Paktika province, keep an extensive 24 hour a day watch from several locations to guard the base. October 7th marks the anniversary of the beginning of the Afghanistan war in 2001; eight years later, thousands of American and international troops are camped out in field bases around the war-torn country. U.S. Army Engineer Staff Sgt. Rick Atkinson of Roswell, New Mexico plays with a puppy that soldiers of Forward Operating Base Zerok adopted a few weeks ago Oct. 7, 2009 in Zerok, Afghanistan. Oct. 7th marks the anniversary of the beginning of the Afghanistan war in 2001; eight years later, thousands of American and international troops are camped out in field bases around the war-torn country.

Afghanistan: America's longest war

"While this is a positive step by the Taliban, more work needs to be done," Rubio said. "The Taliban must end their practice of hostage diplomacy."

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The State Department accused the Taliban of using "terrorist tactics to seek policy concessions" andofficially declaredAfghanistan a state sponsor of wrongful detention on March 9.

The U.S. government is seeking the release of at least two other Americans it has designated as wrongfully detained in Afghanistan: freelance author Paul Overby, who has been missing since May of 2014; and Mahmood Habibi,an Afghan-born U.S. citizenandthe former director of civil aviationin Afghanistan. The U.S. says Habibi was arrested by the Taliban in August of 2022 while working for a Kabul-based telecommunications company.

In a statement, Republican Rep. Jeff Hurd, who represents Pueblo, thanked Rubio and PresidentDonald Trumpfor their work on Coyle's case. "My office will continue working to bring Dennis home safely to his family. No American should be unjustly detained abroad," Hurdwrote on X.

Rubio said in his statement that the United Arab Emirates helped to secure Coyle's release. Qatar has also advocated for the release of Americans in Afghanistan, the U.S. secretary of state said.

According to the State Department, more than 100 wrongfully detained Americans have been released in Trump's second term.

Contributing: Reuters

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Dennis Coyle released after being held by Taliban in Afghanistan

US detainee Dennis Coyle released by Taliban in Afghanistan

WASHINGTON − Colorado researcher Dennis Coyle is on his way home from Afghanistan after spending more than a year in Tali...
Ex-Prince Andrew's 'Glare' at Kate Middleton Explained by Expert

A moment from a 2011 royal wedding has caught attention again, as a body language expert decodes a "glare" reaction from ex-PrinceAndrew Mountbatten-WindsortowardKate Middleton. The moment took place during the wedding of Zara Tindall and Mike Tindall in Scotland.

The incident happened just a few months after Middleton and Prince William tied the knot. The expert noted that Andrew seemed to be trying to be part of the main spotlight, while the Waleses were clearly the center of public interest.

Body language expert explains what Ex-Prince Andrew's stare meant

A report byExpresssuggests that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was staring angrily at Kate Middleton during Zara Tindall and Mike Tindall's wedding in 2011. Judi James, a body language expert, noted that he stared at her while she was the "center of a royal fan frenzy." The incident occurred months after Middleton and Prince William got married.

Photos taken during the 2011 wedding also show members of the royal family standing outside the venue in Edinburgh. While the rest of the family looked cheerful, the 66-year-old wore a "glowered" and a serious expression.

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The expert decoded Andrew's expression toward Middleton in detail. As reported by the Daily Mail, James said that since the Princess of Wales had just gotten married, people were very excited to see her and loudly cheered. Because of all that attention, ex-Prince Andrew and Prince Harry appeared less central.

Speaking about the former prince, she said, "Andrew appears to be in fully, socially opportunistic 'basking shark' mode here, moving from side to side at the back of the royal group".

The expert also claimed that the former Duke of York was seen "looming" behind William and Middleton. It was almost as if he was trying to be part of their moment. She added that William even turned his head to listen to Andrew, suggesting that he may have expected to join in.

The postEx-Prince Andrew's 'Glare' at Kate Middleton Explained by Expertappeared first onReality Tea.

Ex-Prince Andrew’s ‘Glare’ at Kate Middleton Explained by Expert

A moment from a 2011 royal wedding has caught attention again, as a body language expert decodes a "glare" reaction from ex-Princ...
Supreme Court to scrutinize former policy of turning away asylum seekers at southern border

The Supreme Court on Tuesday will consider the legality of a policy championed by President Donald Trump during his first term that prevented scores of migrants arriving at the southern border from starting the process of applying for asylum.

CNN The wall at the US-Mexico border is seen in Nogales, Arizona, on February 4, 2026. - Olivier Touron/AFP via Getty Images

The policy was rolled out under President Barack Obama, formalized by Trump and rescinded in 2021 under President Joe Biden, but the Justice Department has continued to defend it in court over the years. Trump's solicitor general, D. John Sauer, recently told the justices the measure is a "critical tool for addressing border surges and preventing overcrowding at ports of entry."

The case is one of several before the high court this session testing controversial immigration policies that Trump wants justices to approve. Next month, the nine will review an order he issued last year that sought to end birthright citizenship, as well as hisefforts to end temporary deportation protectionsfor Haitians and Syrians.

Officials have not said publicly whether they plan to revive the asylum policy, known as "metering," which was introduced during the waning weeks of the Obama administration and fleshed out by Trump in 2018.

But the current administration's decision to continue backing it in court underscores its desire to keep the policy as a backup avenue to stem the flow of migrants at the border as other restrictive measures face challenges in court.

"The Supreme Court isn't supposed to decide hypothetical questions, which is why it's weird that it agreed to take up this appeal in the first place," said Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at Georgetown University Law Center.

"Whether or not the Trump administration wants to restart this particular policy, the fact that it isn't currently in effect ought to be fatal to the Supreme Court's power to decide this case, one way or the other," he added.

Under federal law, the government must process a migrant who presents at a port of entry and is fleeing political, racial or religious persecution in their home country. A migrant covered under that requirement is defined as someone "who is physically present in the United States or who arrives in the United States."

But the metering policy enabled federal agents stationed at the border to turn back such asylum seekers before they ever stepped foot on US soil. The policy, which aimed to help officials manage the number of migrants seeking safe haven in recent years, gave workers at ports the flexibility to let in migrants if they determined there was "sufficient space and resources to process them."

The question before the justices on Tuesday is relatively straightforward: Is a migrant who is stopped by federal agents on the Mexican side of the border covered under the law that requires officials to begin passing them through the asylum process?

The administration contends the answer is "no."

"The ordinary meaning of 'arrives in' refers to entering a specified place, not just coming close to it. An alien who is stopped in Mexico does not arrive in the United States," Sauer wrote in court papers. "The phrase 'arrives in the United States' does not even plausibly, much less clearly, cover aliens in Mexico."

But an immigrant rights group and more than a dozen individuals who represent a class of migrants that challenged the policy have countered that the answer is an unequivocal "yes."

"Congress's use of the present tense" in the statute shows that lawmakers wanted the law's "mandates to apply not only to those who have arrived, but also to those who are attempting to step over the border," the policy's legal foes said in written arguments submitted ahead of Tuesday's hearing.

"If Congress wanted the law to cover only noncitizens who had arrived, it would have said so," their lawyers told the justices.

Lower courts sided against the policy

When Obama rolled out the first iteration of the policy in 2016, officials at the border were reeling from a surge of Haitian asylum seekers, which had overwhelmed their ability to manage the situation.

But after Trump took office and formalized a more robust version of the policy, the government was taken to court by Al Otro Lado, a nonprofit legal services organization for asylum seekers, and the 13 individual challengers.

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A federal judge in California ruled the policy was unlawful and certified a class of individuals to be shielded from it.

In a divided decision in 2024, the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that ruling, concluding the policy ran afoul of the federal law.

"The phrase 'physically present in the United States' encompasses noncitizens within our borders, and the phrase 'arrives in the United States' encompasses those who encounter officials at the border, whichever side of the border they are standing on," Judge Michelle Friedland wrote in the majority decision.

Notably, Friedland, who was joined by fellow Obama appointee John Owens, stressed that the ruling left the government "with wide latitude and flexibility to carry out its duties at the border."

Federal laws, Friedland said, "require border officials to inspect noncitizens seeking asylum at the border, and the metering policy withheld that duty."

A connection to the past

Policy decisions on managing asylum seekers at the southern border have changed frequently in recent years.

Biden's solution was to have migrants use a phone app to schedule appointments with federal agents at a legal port of entry. They then waited outside the US until they could be inspected by an immigration officer and begin the asylum process.

Though Biden rolled back the metering policy in November 2021, his Justice Department continued defending its legality in court, telling the 9th Circuit that the policy was "reasonably based on demonstrated capacity constraints."

Trump ended the Biden-era appointment policy after returning to office last year, and he shut down the border for asylum seekers. That decision is at the center of a legal challenge making its way through the federal courts in Washington, DC.

When the metering policy was in place, it frustrated the ability of tens of thousands of migrants to move forward in seeking asylum, according to the Strauss Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Turning those people back, the policy's challengers told the high court, "quickly created a humanitarian crisis in Mexico."

"As CBP continued to refuse to inspect or process asylum seekers, many of those turned away found themselves living in makeshift camps on the Mexican side of the border," they told the justices in court papers. "The growing bottleneck of asylum seekers turned back by (Customs and Border Patrol) waited near the ports for weeks and then months without reliable food sources, shelter, or safety."

Some, they said, "attempted instead to enter the United States between ports and died while crossing the Rio Grande or the Sonoran Desert."

That reality has drawn comparisons to a World War II-era episode during which the US turned away the MS St. Louis, a ship ferrying nearly 1,000 Jewish refugees fleeing Europe in 1939.

HIAS, formerly known as the Hebrew Immigrants Aid Society, told the justices in court papers that the metering policy "creates a legal no man's land" that puts the safety of asylum seekers at risk.

"People are left in limbo in dangerous border towns, unable to access the process our laws guarantee to those who arrive at a port of entry and present themselves to US officials standing on US soil," the group said in its friend-of-the-court brief. "It is the kind of purgatory experienced by the St. Louis passengers and that Congress eradicated for those who reach a port of entry: safety visible but unreachable."

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Supreme Court to scrutinize former policy of turning away asylum seekers at southern border

The Supreme Court on Tuesday will consider the legality of a policy championed by President Donald Trump during his first...
Ciara and Russell Wilson Show Their 2 Eldest Children the Ropes on the Red Carpet: 'We Want Them to Be Inspired,' Singer Says

Ciara and Russell Wilson attended the Fashion Scholarship Fund gala in New York with their children, Sienna and Future, on Monday, March 23

People (L-R): Russell Wilson; Sienna Princess Wilson; Ciara Wilson; Future Zahir WilburnCredit: Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • While on the red carpet, Ciara expressed the importance of inspiring their children by including them in events

  • Ciara and Russell are also parents to Win Harrison Wilson, 5, and Amora Princess Wilson, 2

CiaraandRussell Wilsonare teaching by example how to navigate industry events.

The singer, 40, and the NFL quarterback, 37, appeared in high spirits as they attended the Fashion Scholarship Fund gala alongside their two eldest children, Sienna Princess Wilson, 8, and Future Zahir Wilburn, 11, on Monday, March 23.

The proud parents beamed as they posed for the cameras with their kids at the event, which was held at The Glasshouse in NYC.

Future, Russell, Ciara and Sienna at the fashion galaCredit: Craig Barritt/Getty

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Mom of 4 Ciara opened up toUSA Todayabout why it was important to have Sienna and Future with them, describing the day out as "fun".

"Clearly, they have a lot of energy, but it makes us so happy that they can see us in moments like this, you know, because they are the future," she said.

"We want them to be inspired in rooms like this and see mommy and dad do what they do… they're also going to go back to doing homework in a second," Ciara added. "We're staying focused around here!"

Future was seen cheekily shaking his head while smiling.

The 6th-grader also told the news outlet that the gala was "a lot of fun, a lot of energy," with his sister Sienna joking, "Yeah, I have a lot of energy, that's why he said that, I'm crazy!"

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The family was dressed in stylish, matching neutral colors, with Ciara wearing wide sandy-colored trousers and a button-up cream top. Russell opted for a crisp white shirt and khaki cargo pants with military-style boots.

Russell Wilson kissed his wife's handCredit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty

Sienna donned a cream jumper, a leather skirt and boots, whereas Future proudly sported a beige jumper with suit trousers, which he paired with black and white sneakers.

Ciara and Russell met in 2015, when theLevel Upsinger was already a mom to Future Zahir, from her previous relationship with rapperFuture.

The pair married in 2016 and welcomed Sienna Princess a year later. Win Harrison Wilson, 5, was born in 2020, and their youngest daughter, Amora Princess Wilson, 2, was born in December 2023.

Although being a full household of six can be hectic at times, the couple says they've embraced the chaos,telling PEOPLEit is "non-stop entertainment."

Russell revealed on Saturday, March 14,that he recently took his stepson, Future, on his first college visitto the University of Texas at Austin.

The pair went to view the college's athletics facilities for their team, the Texas Longhorns.

Russell said while sitting beside Future in a car: "Taking Future to his first visit ever to see a school. Future, what do you think?"

"I love Texas," Future replied. "I love the stadium. It's just yeah, everything's bigger in Texas, look at the stadium, pretty big."

Read the original article onPeople

Ciara and Russell Wilson Show Their 2 Eldest Children the Ropes on the Red Carpet: ‘We Want Them to Be Inspired,’ Singer Says

Ciara and Russell Wilson attended the Fashion Scholarship Fund gala in New York with their children, Sienna and Future, o...
Vietnam and Russia advance nuclear power deal as energy security concerns grow in Southeast Asia

HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — Vietnam and Russia signed a deal to build a nuclear power plant in Vietnam as the Southeast Asian countryrevives its nuclear planswith hopes of boosting energy security while curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

Associated Press Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, standing left and Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin, standing right, witness a signing ceremony of agreements during Chinh's official visit in Moscow, Russia, March. 23, 2026. (Duong Van Giang/VNA via AP) Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, right and Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin, hug during Chinh's official visit in Moscow, Russia, March. 23, 2026. (Duong Van Giang/VNA via AP) Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, second left and Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin, second right, applaud at a signing ceremony of agreements during Chinh's official visit in Moscow, Russia, March. 23, 2026. (Duong Van Giang/VNA via AP)

Vietnam-Russia-Nuclear

The deal for the Ninh Thuan 1 plant, reported by Vietnamese state media, comes after two similar projects were shelved in 2016 over rising costs and safety issues.

The agreement was signed Monday during Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính's visit to Moscow, where he met his Russian counterpart Mikhail Mishustin. The two countries described the plant as a "symbolic project" of their friendship, according to Vietnam's official government newspaper.

The new plant also fits with Vietnam's ambitions tobecome richby 2050 by growing into Asia's next "tiger economy."

The deal outlines plans to build two Russian-designed reactors with a combined capacity of 2,400 megawatts, which are based on an existing plant in Russia.

Concerns over energy security have sharpened since thewar in Irantriggered aglobal energy shortage, raising the cost of imported fossil fuels and adding urgency to Hanoi's search for stable, long-term power sources.

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Across Southeast Asia, fast-growing economies areturning to nuclear powerfor cleaner, more reliable energy. Advocates say it offers lower emissions than coal, oil and gas, while newer technology has made reactors safer, smaller and cheaper to build.

Beyond nuclear energy, Monday's meeting in Moscow included discussion of expanding cooperation in oil and gas, technology and infrastructure.

Vietnam and Russia have maintained ties since 1950, rooted in the Cold War. But economic links remain modest. Trade rose from $3.63 billion in 2023 to $4.77 billion in 2025, far below Vietnam's trade with China and the United States.

Russia remains a key arms supplier, thoughHanoi is seeking to diversify.

The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find the AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Vietnam and Russia advance nuclear power deal as energy security concerns grow in Southeast Asia

HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — Vietnam and Russia signed a deal to build a nuclear power plant in Vietnam as the Southeast Asian c...

 

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