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Second Opinion closes out the week with news that Fred's is closing nearly 30 percent of its stores, President Trump says he is considering releasing immigrants apprehended at the border into "sanctuary cities" while Chevron is buying Andarko Petroleum for $33 billion.
Second Opinion wraps up the week with news that U.S. jobs grew in March as hiring rebounds, the former co-chair of Willkie Farr & Gallagher pleads guilty in the college admissions scandal and Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger is recovering from a reported heart valve replacement surgery.
In Second Opinion, China's Tencent is raising $6 billion through a bond sale, President Trump is considering Hermain Cain for a seat on the Federal Reserve board and Jeff Bezos' divorce finalizes with the tech exec getting 75 percent of the former couple's Amazon stock.
In Second Opinion, payrolls post another disappointing month in March as job market keeps slowing, Viacom signs content distribution deal with T-Mobile and Yahoo spin-out Altaba is selling its entire Alibaba stake and closing down.
In Second Opinion, Bernie Sanders has raised $18.2 million in the first six weeks of his 2020 presidential campaign, Apple reportedly plans smaller and larger iPhone screens for 2020 and bitcoin prices are soaring again.
In Second Opinion, the Supreme Court refuses to block ban on bump stocks, Facebook has been charged with racial discrimination in targeted housing ads and a UK regulator says that Goldman Sachs made 220 million reporting errors over a decade.
In Second Opinion, Boeing unveils 737 Max software fixes, health insurer Centene is buying smaller rival WellCare for $15.27 billion and British Prime Minister Theresa May says she will quit if her Brexit plan is passed.
In Second Opinion, Facebook says a server change caused the widespread outage, Slack removes 28 accounts linked to hate groups and Texas Democrat Beto O'Rourke says he's running for president.
In Second Opinion, Pan-African e-commerce company Jumia files for an IPO on the New York Stock Exchange, Forte and Ripple form a $100 million fund for mainstream blockchain games and actresses Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin are among those charged in a college admissions cheating scheme.
In Second Opinion, Elizabeth Warren wants to break up Google, Amazon and Facebook, America is about to surpass Saudi Arabia as world's leading exporter of oil and Bill Shine resigns as White House communications director to join President Trump's re-election campaign.