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BBC News at Six

who were adopted as children have been removed from a genealogy website. also this evening: the woman who stopped fostering after being prevented from staying in touch with the children she cared for. worth about £60 million in total. it's commonly thought that the rise of social media has increased problems with mental health — but a new study challenges that. the research done by the oxford internet institute looked at the rise of facebook and how well—being was affected in 72 countries. here's our technology editor, zoe kleinman. if you're one of facebook�*s 3 billion global users and you have sat scrolling through your timeline on the social media app, you may have found yourself wondering whether it is doing you any good.

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The Context

forjoining us. around the world and across the uk, this is bbc news. let's look at some other stories making news. the names of thousands of people adopted as children were available on a genealogy website, it has emerged. safety and privacy fears were raised after a motherfound details of adoptions dating back more than 100 years on the scotland's people site. the national record of scotland said it removed the information 36 hours after the mother complained it could endanger her adopted child. a fire which ripped through a landmark pub days before it was unexpectedly demolished is being treated as arson, police say. the crooked house, near dudley in the black country, caught fire on saturday night and was then bulldozed on monday, prompting anger from local residents. the pub, once britain's "wonkiest", was sold by marston's last month. a bbc investigation has discovered thousands of people on universal credit are having money deducted to pay their utility bills, despite a legal case that challenged the policy.

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The Context

mankind _ massive potential to improve mankind. we need to be working on it together _ mankind. we need to be working on it together. the stuff is happening at the worst _ together. the stuff is happening at the worst possible time. the most important — the worst possible time. the most important relationship ever been going _ important relationship ever been going south and it has never ever been _ going south and it has never ever been more — going south and it has never ever been more important that it goes the other wav~ _ been more important that it goes the other way. its been more important that it goes the other wa . �* ., ., ., been more important that it goes the otherwa .�* ., ., ., ,. ,, other way. a lot more to discuss with both of _ other way. a lot more to discuss with both of you. _ other way. a lot more to discuss with both of you. back— other way. a lot more to discuss with both of you. back with - other way. a lot more to discuss - with both of you. back with my panel in just a short bit. around the world and across the uk, this is bbc news. let's look at some other stories making news. the names of thousands of people adopted as children were available on a genealogy website, it has emerged. safety and privacy fears were raised after a motherfound details of adoptions dating back more than 100 years on the scotland's people site. the national record of scotland said it removed the information 36 hours after the mother complained it could endanger her adopted child. a fire which ripped through a landmark pub days before it was unexpectedly demolished is being treated as arson, police say. the crooked house, near dudley in the black country, caught fire on saturday night and was then bulldozed

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BBC News at Ten

flames, spurred by winds from hurricane dora. it's prompted evacuations on maui and the big island. the names of thousands of people, who were adopted as children, have been removed from a genealogy website over privacy and safety concerns. details of adoptions dating back decades were publicly available through the scotland's people website, but the information�*s been taken down, after an adoptive mother complained it could endager her child. david cowan has that story. the scotland's people website allows the public to trawl the archives for their scottish ancestors. a searchable database holds a vast collection of entries. but now tens of thousands have had to be removed after an adoptive mother found details of her child. the information included the first name he was given at birth, his new surname and a reference to the adoption register. to protect the child's identity, the mother's words are spoken by an actor. i was horrified. it is every adoptive

People , Children , Names , Thousands , Flames , Winds , Evacuations , Genealogy-website , Big-island , Hurricane-dora , Maui , Information

Fox News at Night

genealogy website submitted by a family member of his -- a law enforcement source told fox news that family member was the father. it goes on to say that at least 99.998% of the male population would be expected to be excluded from the possibility of being the suspect's biological father. that is hard to defend, ted. i have about 40 seconds for you to wrap it up. >> that is absolutely hard to defend. i spoke earlier to dr. mike -- the great forensic pathologist. he said, when you have that kind of dna, it's very difficult to defend. i certainly believe that under the circumstances. i think they've got their right man, trace. >> ted williams, great analysis, as always, thank you for helping us out. new restrictions in place on travelers coming in to the united states from china with several nations requiring proof of a negative covid test, this

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Fox News at Night

bryan kohberger was shackled and wearing this red jumpsuit. he dodged questions after agreeing to extradition -- waving extradition. his lawyer is confident he will be exonerated and called the suspect "just an ordinary guy." authorities have ten days to get @foxnewsnight in on back to idaho where he faces 4 counts of first-degree murder. it he sitting in front of the judge, the center of the most high-profile murder case in the country right now. police sources tell fox news detectives match dna found at the crime scene with dna from one of the kohberger immediate relatives. submitted to a genealogy website. >> having read those documents in the sealed affidavits of probable cause, i definitely believe that one of the main reasons the defendant chose to waive extradition and hurry his return back to idaho was the need to know what was in those documents. >> on his way back from

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The Story With Martha MacCallum

returning to the city where police say that he stabbed the four students to death inside of that off campus home back in november. it took weeks to track him down. police did it, they caughts him. sources say police have matcheded the dna at the crime scene with one of his immediate relatives that in the past submitted it to a genealogy website. it's the key piece of evidence. dr. michael boden says his team will do their own investigation. listen. >> sounds like the defense lawyers are doing a good job. they have already stopped the idaho police from tearing down the crime scene. so that they could have their own experts come in. >> swat teams swarmed his parent's house. his family says they're standing by his side and in court today. neighbors say they can't believe this happened in the small town

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Special Report With Bret Baier

investigation. perp walk we got in just a short time ago when he was at court bret. can you see him there. brian kohberger wearing red jumpsuit and shackles as he walked out of the pennsylvania courthouse. he agreed to waive extradition. lawyers said they are confident he will be exonerated. 28-year-old been brought back. he faces four first count degrees of murder. for stabbing four students in idaho in november. sitting in front of the judge the center of the most high profile murder case in the country. sources tell us the accused killer thought he had committed the perfect crime but d.n.a. evidence that helped police track him down. sources telling fox news detectives matched d.n.a. found at the crime scene with d.n.a. that one of kohberger's immediate relatives submitted to a genealogy website now leading to more questions. >> having read those documents and the sealed affidavits of probable cause, i definitely believe that one of the main reasons the defendant chose to

Court-bret , Extradition , Investigation , Brian-kohberger , Shackles , Pennsylvania-courthouse , Perp-walk , Red-jumpsuit , Judge , Lawyers , Students , Murder

CNN Tonight

and why, if law enforcement was confident last week they had their suspect, why they waited until today to make that arrest? >> well, that's a question that's -- that's a decision that's normally made in conjunction with prosecutors in idaho who are handling this case, which is a potentially death penalty case. i'm sure there's a lot of review before steps are taken legally. once charges are filed, then you have a speedy trial motion. everybody is entitled to a speedy trial. you have to really have all your ducks the in a row. i think once they assessed him, once they started surveilling him, is he going to leave the country, does he have the means to do that, is he the type to do that, once they had him on surveillance, they were a little more comfortable knowing they were sourcing everything out. jean was right. they did a dna sample to the genealogy website which led to his father which led to him.

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Shepard Smith Reporting-20190927-19:39:00

for it. good to see you. >> thank you. >> shepard: the justice department regulating how law enforcement officials use consumer dna test kits to solve criminal cases. the top investigator in california says the genealogy website helped him crack a decades old golden state killer case. the feds say there has to be a balance between solving crimes and protecting privacy. kristin fisher reporting live in washington. kristin? >> we're talking about the dna kits like ancestry and 23 and me where you swab the inside of your mouth, mail it in and get the dna. the kits have led to the rise of forensic genetic genealogy. it's a new technique that connects dna found at a crime scene with the dna of the victim or the suspect's distant relatives. they have created public profiles on those websites.

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