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Barry, ICE Raids, Jeffrey Epstein: Your Weekend Briefing

Adam PasickAndrea Kannapell and

Here are the week’s top stories, and a look ahead.

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Credit...Johnny Milano for The New York Times

1. Tropical Storm Barry is inundating parts of Louisiana and coastal Mississippi.

Check out these photos of the storm’s slow progression. It strengthened only briefly to hurricane-force winds, and the more urgent danger comes from flooding rains — possibly 25 inches in some areas. Above, a bar on Lake Pontchartrain in Mandeville, La.

Tens of thousands of people have lost electricity. Here’s the latest. (Part of New York City lost power for entirely different reasons.)

Here’s the front page of our Sunday paper, the Sunday Review from Opinion and our crossword puzzles. Our news quiz will be back next Sunday.

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Credit...Mark Abramson for The New York Times

2. Large-scale ICE raids are expected to begin today.

Our reporters have fanned out across the dozen or so cities where ICE agents are expected to try to detain some 2,000 undocumented immigrants.

The fear among migrants is pervasive. Many are lying low; some have gone into hiding. (President Trump is committed to counting noncitizens, but he has given up trying to do it via the 2020 census.)

A report released on Friday at an emotional House committee hearing on family separations said that at least 18 children younger than 2 years old were separated from their parents for at least 20 days.

Overcrowding was obvious at two facilities Vice President Mike Pence toured on Friday. Watch the video.

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3. Jeffrey Epstein, the New York financier arrested on charges of sex trafficking, has a bail hearing on Monday. He’s offering his $56 million Manhattan mansion and his private jet as bond, and prosecutors are fighting back.

The impact of Mr. Epstein’s fall is still unfolding. Several states are looking into how lightly he got off after being labeled a sex offender in Florida in 2010 — which didn’t appear to faze his powerful friends in New York. The sweetheart plea deal he got then has created such a furor that the prosecutor who oversaw it — Alexander Acosta — is stepping down from his current job, U.S. labor secretary.

Did Mr. Epstein run into trouble even earlier? Our reporters spoke to students from his time at Dalton, an elite Manhattan prep school where he taught in the ’70s.

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Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

4. House Democrats are postponing two hearings with Robert Mueller, above, until July 24.

The delay allows the House to schedule more time with the former special counsel than it would have had next week, a victory by junior representatives who wanted to be sure they’d have the chance to ask questions.

The back-to-back hearings are expected to be a pivotal moment for the House’s investigation of possible obstruction of justice and abuse of power by President Trump, but they will now come just before Congress’s summer recess.

The House also approved a dozen new subpoenas for Mueller witnesses.

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5. Looking ahead to 2020:

Our politics team reported on Bernie Sanders’s reluctance to update his stump speeches; the entry of the billionaire Tom Steyer into the presidential race and of Dante de Blasio into the campaign of his father, Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York; and Amy McGrath’s flood of donations after she announced a bid to unseat Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republicans’ congressional leader.

And we look at the long path of Pete Buttigieg, above as a senior at Harvard in 2004, from life as an undergraduate who once had a girlfriend to a presidential candidate who travels the country with his husband in tow.

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Credit...Pool photo by Toby Melville

6. It’s been a wild Wimbledon.

Simona Halep, above, became the first Romanian to win a singles title there, frustrating Serena Williams in her bid to claim a record-tying Grand Slam title.

Halep called it “the best match of my life,” a speedy 6-2, 6-2 victory in 56 minutes on Saturday.

The defending champion Novak Djokovic won the men’s singles title on Sunday, edging out Roger Federer with the tournament’s first fifth-set tiebreaker.

The tournament’s enduring highlight: the amazing play and uncommon court sense of 15-year-old Coco Gauff.

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Credit...Stephen Lam/Reuters

7. Internationally, it’s clear that U.S. companies have become the targets of increasing regulation in Europe and outright interference in China.

France and Britain are close to imposing new taxes on tech giants, many of them American, setting off new waves of trade hostilities.

Regulators and lawmakers in Europe and in countries including Canada have begun multiple investigations and are proposing new restrictions against Facebook. Domestically, the Federal Trade Commission approved a $5 billion fine for Facebook’s failure to protect users’ data.

And fear of harassment in China is spreading among American businessmen after an executive with Koch Industries was prevented from leaving the country for days.

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Credit...Indian Space Research Organization, via Associated Press

8. In space news, Japan’s Hayabusa2 robotic probe landed on an asteroid that it had blown a crater in, to collect chunks of (hopefully revealing) rock.

And India is about to become the latest country to try to launch a probe, above, to the moon.

China landed one this year, and Russia and the E.U. have plans for missions. For the U.S. and NASA, the moon is now an obvious stop along the way to Mars, and rocket companies like Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin are ready to help with landers.

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Credit...Johannes Eisele/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

9. It’s that time of year again — Prime Day (O.K., days).

Monday and Tuesday are summer’s version of Black Friday, a shopping frenzy that can turn into a hangover of spending regret.

Wirecutter, a New York Times company that reviews and recommends products, will be scouring Amazon’s Prime Day lists (as well as the sales of other retailers trying to capitalize on the shopping fever) to find true deals on the things worth buying. To get you started, here are five things to avoid, including the bundle blunder.

By the way, Amazon’s warehouses are becoming so automated that the company is planning to retrain about 100,000 workers by 2025.

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10. Finally, what’s a Weekend Briefing without our Best Weekend Reads?

One is actually a video: Our team went on the hunt for the roughly 1,000 artworks the TV artist Bob Ross created for his show, “The Joy of Painting.” It’s a hoot.

The roundup also has a voyage to the Oracle of Delphi, a review of Aziz Ansari’s latest Netflix special and the story of a philanthropist with a $13 billion checkbook.

And our editors recommend these 10 new books, a playlist of 10 new songs and a range of options for the small screen.

Have a great week.

Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6 a.m. Eastern.

You can sign up here to get our Morning Briefings by email in the Australian, Asian, European or American morning, or here to receive an Evening Briefing on U.S. weeknights.

Browse our full range of Times newsletters here.

What did you like? What do you want to see here? Let us know at briefing@nytimes.com.

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