This week on Up First, it's the last work week of the year for Congress anyway,
and that means time is running out for action on health care before premium skyrocket for millions of Americans.
We'll keep you updated on the 11th hour scramble on Capitol Hill.
This week on Up First, now a Golden Globe nominee for best podcast.
Listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Louise Giovanni.
Police in Providence,
Rhode Island say the man suspected of killing two and wounding nine others during a shooting at Brown University is 48-year-old Claudio Neves Valenti,
a former Brown student and a native of Portugal.
He's been found dead from suicide in a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire.
In Boston, meanwhile, U.S.
Attorney for the District of Massachusetts Lea Foley says Valenti is also believed to be the killer of Emma professor,
Nuno Louriero in Massachusetts.
Between December 13th and December 14th, Nese Valente returned to Massachusetts.
On December 15th,
he murdered MIT professor Nuno Louriero at Louriero's home in Brookline, Massachusetts.
Foley says police connected the two crimes through a rental vehicle that Valente was seen in in both places.
A jury has found Milwaukee judge Hannah Dugan guilty of obstructing immigration agents
as they attempted to arrest an undocumented defendant outside her courtroom last April.
Mayan Silver from member station WUWM reports.