Universal Orlando Mummy ride death and Powell backs Cook

Universal Orlando is facing new scrutiny after Florida’s theme-park injury report linked a November death to the indoor coaster Revenge of the Mummy. The state report says a 70-year-old woman became unresponsive on Nov. 25 and later died at a hospital; Universal declined to comment. Civil rights attorney Ben Crump identified her as Ma de La Luz Mejia Rosas, and her family is seeking details on ride operations, safety protocols, maintenance history, and prior incidents. The attraction’s safety guidance warns against riding with certain medical conditions, and Florida law requires reporting injuries that lead to hospital stays of at least 24 hours. Meanwhile, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell plans to attend a Supreme Court oral argument in a case tied to President Donald Trump’s attempted firing of Fed governor Lisa Cook. The case tests boundaries of Fed independence as Trump pushes for much lower interest rates. Cook denies allegations cited by the administration, and the Court has allowed her to remain on the board while it considers the dispute.

[00:00] Elise Moreau: From Neural Newscast, I'm Elise Moreau.
[00:03] Elise Moreau: And I'm Evelyn Hartwell.
[00:05] Elise Moreau: Today, two stories where oversight and accountability sit in plain view.
[00:09] Elise Moreau: Theme Park Safety in Florida and Central Bank Independence in Washington.
[00:14] Elise Moreau: Both hinge on what records show, what questions remain unanswered,
[00:18] Elise Moreau: and what happens next when institutions face public pressure.
[00:22] Elise Moreau: Turning now to Universal Orlando, a Florida state injury report links the death to the park's revenge of the mummy roller coaster.
[00:29] Elise Moreau: The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services says a 70-year-old woman became unresponsive on November 25 and later died at a hospital.
[00:39] Elise Moreau: The report offers no added detail on what occurred during the ride, and Universal Orlando declined to comment when contacted by CBS News.
[00:47] Elise Moreau: Civil rights attorney Ben Crump identified the woman as Malus de la Luz Magia Rosas.
[00:53] Elise Moreau: Her family says they want information about operations, safety protocols, maintenance history, and any earlier incidents tied to the attraction.
[01:02] Elise Moreau: Revenge of the Mummy is billed as an immersive indoor coaster with sudden acceleration and sharp changes in motion.
[01:09] Elise Moreau: The park's safety guide warns it is not suitable for guests with several medical conditions, including some heart and blood pressure histories.
[01:18] Elise Moreau: This state reporting matters because Florida law requires theme parks to report ride-related injuries
[01:26] Elise Moreau: when a hospital stay lasts at least 24 hours.
[01:29] Elise Moreau: That creates a paper trail, but it does not answer every question families may have.
[01:34] Elise Moreau: Next, we move from ride restraints to institutional guardrails.
[01:39] Elise Moreau: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell plans to attend a Supreme Court oral argument
[01:44] Elise Moreau: tied to an attempted firing of Fed Governor Lisa Cook.
[01:48] Elise Moreau: The case centers on whether President Donald Trump can remove Cook from the Fed's board.
[01:53] Elise Moreau: It is unusual for a Fed chair to appear in person at an argument.
[01:58] Elise Moreau: And it signals how high the stakes are.
[02:01] Elise Moreau: Reporting says the administration has accused Cook of mortgage fraud, which she denies,
[02:06] Elise Moreau: and no charges have been filed.
[02:08] Elise Moreau: The Supreme Court has allowed her to stay on the board while it considers the case.
[02:13] Elise Moreau: The broader issue is independence.
[02:16] Elise Moreau: If a president can remove a governor, it could reshape the balance of power on the Fed's board
[02:22] Elise Moreau: and influence decisions on interest rates and bank regulation.
[02:26] Elise Moreau: Powell has also criticized subpoenas sent to the Fed as pressure aimed at forcing deeper rate cuts.
[02:33] Elise Moreau: The policy debate becomes a governance debate when personnel decisions carry monetary consequences.
[02:41] Evelyn Hartwell: In both stories, the immediate question is simple.
[02:44] Evelyn Hartwell: What happened and who decides what comes next?
[02:48] Evelyn Hartwell: The longer question is how transparency holds up under stress.
[02:52] Elise Moreau: I'm Elise Moreau.
[02:54] Evelyn Hartwell: And I'm Evelyn Hartwell.
[02:56] Evelyn Hartwell: Neural Newscast is AI-assisted, human-reviewed.
[02:59] Evelyn Hartwell: View our AI Transparency Policy at neuralnewscast.com.

Universal Orlando Mummy ride death and Powell backs Cook
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