Universal Orlando Mummy ride death and Powell backs Cook
[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.
