10 Things

10 things to know today

Here's your daily look at late-breaking national and international news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Tuesday, May 07, 2013 Here's your daily look at late-breaking national and international news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Tuesday, May 07, 2013

1. 'I'M FREE NOW', SAYS MISSING WOMAN FOUND AFTER A DECADE A neighbor found the three women who went missing separately in a Cleveland home where police said they were likely tied up for years. Three brothers were arrested.

2. KERRY TO MAKE CASE FOR TOUGHER RUSSIA STANCE ON SYRIA The secretary of state is meeting with President Vladimir Putin with Assad's powerful ally after Israel's weekend airstrikes.

3. NEW THREATS FROM NORTH AHEAD OF US-SOUTH KOREA SUMMIT North Korea warned it may retaliate against joint naval drills as the president planned to meet with South Korea's new leader today.

4. SENATE PASSES BILL TO END TAX-FREE INTERNET SHOPPING But retailers and cash-strapped states will have a tough time selling the same proposal to the House, where some view it as a tax hike.

5. WHERE A BOSTON BOMBING SUSPECT MIGHT BE BURIED Out-of-state cemeteries have offered to take Tamerlan Tsarnaev's remains, but his mother wants the body returned to Russia.

6. SANFORD BIDS FOR REDEMPTION The disgraced ex-South Carolina governor faces the sister of Stephen Colbert in a special election today that could send him to Congress.

7. SURVIVOR QUESTIONS LIMO DRIVER AFTER FIERY DEATHS OF 5 Nelia Arellano says driver Oliver Brown could have done more to save her friends who perished in the burning limousine on a San Francisco Bay bridge.

8. 'BROOD II' EMERGES That's what scientists are calling the invasion of cicadas that will crawl from the soil on the East Coast. But relax, they're harmless.

9. GRAMMY WINNER SENTENCED TO 3 MONTHS IN PRISON Lauryn Hill paid back more than $900,000 in taxes, but still owes interest and penalties.

10. REFS SAY THEY GET NO RESPECT Pete McCabe, whose skull was fractured by an angry football player four years ago, says a UTAH referee's death proves a decline in sportsmanship.