Washington Post: Signs popping up around D.C. note: ‘ICE kidnapping happened here’

The signs range in style and mark numerous locations where people have been taken by federal agents.

The signs — nailed to trees or wrapped around electricity poles — have appeared across some of the District’s heavily immigrant neighborhoods, marking the anger in a majority-Democratic city where federal immigration arrests have escalated.

“ICE kidnapped a community member here,” reads one. “Never forget/no nos olvidamos,” says another.

Barbara McCann, a city resident for 25 years, created one in August after she came upon a crowd of shouting people and broken glass on the street in her Columbia Heights neighborhood, where federal law enforcement agents had pulled two men from their car.

“People were kidnapped here this morning by ICE or ?” she wrote on the sign. “BANG pots HERE tonight 8pm.”

McCann said later that she thought of “stumbling stones” in Europe, the brass-topped cobblestones that have been placed in front of the former homes and businesses of those who were killed in the Holocaust.

“They are targeting those who are least able to defend themselves, people without homes and people without documentation,” she said. “In the past, when there’s been great injustice, moral clarity takes a long time.”

D.C. has a long tradition of protesting, including the massive marches during President Donald Trump’s first administration. The recent neighborhood signs, more personal and isolated, follow an older tradition of simply bearing witness — in this case, to the arrests of immigrants who make up the fabric of some neighborhoods.

Since late August, when Trump’s 30-day crime emergency in D.C. was in full effect, more than 11 signs and posters memorializing those arrested have appeared in neighborhoods such as Columbia Heights or Brightwood in Northwest Washington.

It’s unclear how much coordination there is between the different sign makers. Some messages are printed on 18-by-24-inch yard signs or smaller placards; others are drawn ornately by hand on paper or written in chalk. The few who will talk about the signs they created say the urgency of the moment compelled them to act.

White House officials said in a statement last month that of more than 2,600 criminal arrests between Aug. 7 and Sept. 14, more than 1,000 involved “illegal aliens.” Attorney General Pam Bondi said D.C.’s lenient policies toward immigrants, which prohibited police from cooperating in ICE arrests, made the city more dangerous.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told The Post in an email that ICE officers are facing an increase in assaults because of “untrue smears like false claims that they are ‘kidnapping’ people.’ ”

ICE has acted “heroically” and “with the utmost professionalism,” she said, and that those accusing agents of violating civil rights are sympathizing with undocumented immigrants and criminals.

Neighbors on Holmead Place in Columbia Heights say three masked agents in tactical vests tackled a man on the sidewalk in late August. As they struggled, onlookers gathered nearby, some with children dressed for the first day of school. According to five people who said they witnessed the event, the agents loaded the man into one of three unmarked cars with tinted windows and drove away.

In the days that followed, residents say they spotted a poster on Holmead Place NW, fastened by screws into a sycamore tree. It described the Aug. 25 arrest of “Angel H.” and the words “Never forget.”

Jacob Stokes, who witnessed the arrest with his wife that morning, came upon the sign while on a walk. Like McCann, he also thought of the stumbling stones and “remembering and associating an event with a particular place.”

“I’m not on the list of people who they’re coming for now,” he said. “It reminded me that those people are our neighbors.”

He and his family have lived in Columbia Heights since May. And he says it’s been quieter than other D.C. neighborhoods where he’s lived in previous years — until the past few months.

Jessica Loya remembers running down from her Brightwood apartment at the sound of a distressed voice outside her window on the morning of Aug. 22. She found her building’s handyman surrounded by three federal agents.

She said he told her in Spanish that he’d gone to his car to get a tool when he was stopped. She and others questioned the officers to understand why he had been approached.

“You can’t tell us what we’re going to do and what we’re not going to do,” a masked officer told Loya, according to video obtained by The Post. The video shows that officers shoved the handyman toward an unmarked vehicle and handcuffed him, then put him in a car and drove away.

Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, said the handyman had entered the country illegally from Guatemala at an unknown date.

“ICE is not ‘kidnapping’ illegal aliens,” she said in an email. “These smears are leading to our officers facing a 1000% increase in assaults against them including terrorist attacks, cars being used as weapons, and bounties on their heads.”

The next day, Loya said she stared at the spot where the handyman had stood and added that the flashbacks of his disappearance were “unbearable.” She worked late into the night with Julio Obscura, an artist and friend, to design a sign.

At one point, she considered the monarch butterfly symbol often associated with migrant advocacy groups, but felt the positive feeling wasn’t fitting for the moment.

“What I was trying to capture here in the sign was this terror,” she said.

They settled on the black sign with bold white lettering: “ICE kidnapped a community member here.”

Loya ordered three at a cost of $297.86 and picked them up from a printer three days later. With her landlord’s blessing, she planted one of them next to her building and kept the others in case the first one was damaged or stolen.

Her voice buckled as she talked about the handyman’s family. His wife is terrified, she said, and his three children, who all are younger than 10, don’t understand what’s happened to their father.

Loya said she has been helping the family since he was detained, hoping to show them “not every U.S. citizen believes in what this administration is doing.”

Polling shows Americans overall are split on whether immigrants deported by the Trump administration should have been removed. A majority of D.C. residents oppose D.C. police helping with deportations, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll.

Another man was working as an Uber driver when he was detained by federal agents and D.C. Police on 8th and Tuckerman Street the night of Aug. 26. Council member Janeese Lewis George (D-Ward 4) rushed to the intersection and began live-streaming the arrest.

Lewis George told The Post she couldn’t get information about the man at the time of his apprehension and was unable to locate him in nearby police precincts afterward. His car and phone were left behind, she said, so neighbors were able to make contact with a friend.

“There was a moment where, like, is this really happening to us?” Lewis George said. “I kept thinking, like, Oh, my God, are our neighbors going to have to end up in our basements and attics?”

Former Advisory Neighborhood Commission member Sophia Tekola — who said she spoke to the man in Amharic and has been in touch with his family — learned that he’d been detained in a facility outside Washington and was released the next day.

Loya, who saw Lewis George’s live stream of the arrest, rushed up the street that same night with her extra signs from the incident with her building’s handyman and approached a neighbor lingering nearby.

“I think it’s important to put these up,” Loya told the woman. The neighbor fastened the memorial to a tree in her yard, near the spot where the man had been arrested.

The next day, the council member took to social media and made a six-minute, 34-second video urging her followers to call their representatives. As Lewis George spoke, a photo of Loya’s black and white memorial was visible in the background.

Shows of disapproval and protest of Trump and his administration’s policies haven’t matched the volume seen in Trump’s previous term despite concerns about potential abuse of power. For people like Loya and McCann, who have spent years in a town known for its statues and monuments, the act of remembering those taken away isn’t just an act of empathy — it’s a signal.

McCann said she’s long had an interest in history. This moment in the city has made her reflect on what may lie ahead for it and the country, she said.

“What I always have on my mind is like, well, what’s next?” she said.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/politics/government/signs-popping-up-around-d-c-note-ice-kidnapping-happened-here/ar-AA1OgJh4

Tampa Bay Times: Bondi’s firing of federal prosecutor in Miami threatened to derail big Medicare fraud trial

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi fired a federal prosecutor in Miami last week because he had posted critical blog commentary about Donald Trump during his first term as president — a politically fraught decision that nearly derailed an upcoming trial.

Bondi’s firing of Will Rosenzweig threatened to upend the trial of two Medicare fraud defendants set to start on Monday because he was the lead prosecutor and the U.S. Attorney’s Office said it was not prepared to proceed without him. A fellow prosecutor involved in the case asked a federal judge to delay the start of the trial until early November, saying if he didn’t grant his request, the U.S. Attorney’s Office would consider dropping the healthcare fraud and conspiracy charges against them.

Normally, when federal prosecutors weigh whether to dismiss an indictment before trial, it’s for lack of evidence — not for lack of a prosecutor to try the case — underscoring perhaps the unintended consequences of Bondi’s firing of Rosenzweig on Sept. 23 while he was observing the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, with his family.

At a key hearing on Friday, U.S. District Judge Donald Graham granted part of the prosecutor’s request. Graham kept to his initial schedule to start the trial with jury selection on Monday, but he delayed the opening statements and government’s presentation of evidence until Nov. 3.

Graham’s decision appeared to salvage the Medicare fraud trial, giving the U.S. Attorney’s Office extra time to replace Rosenzweig and bring the new prosecutor up to speed on the case.

Until Friday, it had been touch and go.

In a court filing on Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney David Turken told Graham that if he “denies this motion” for a delay, the prosecutor “may recommend dismissal” of the indictment against the two defendants.

“There is currently no one at the U.S. Attorney’s Office who is sufficiently familiar with the discovery and evidence in this case to refute the expected unmeritorious discovery allegations by defense counsel at trial,” Turken wrote, adding that “the [federal] government shutdown [on Wednesday] is further complicating the government’s ability to prepare this trial.

“Dimissal of this matter would not be in the interest of justice,” added Turken, who has been involved in the case since the defendants were indicted by a grand jury last year.

Immediately after Rosenzweig’s firing by Bondi last week, Turken asked Graham to delay the trial until March of next year. The judge denied it, saying the trial will begin on Oct. 6 with jury selection but allowed for the opening statements and trial evidence to get underway two weeks later, Oct. 20. Turken asked the judge to reconsider, seeking to postpone the trial another two weeks, until Nov. 3, which the judge did in Friday’s hearing.

Millions of dollars in false billing alleged

Prosecutors, who are alleging millions of dollars in false insurance billing for medical equipment, telemedicine and other services, are expected to present more than 40 government witnesses and 400 exhibits. The trial will last more than a month.

Defense attorneys for the two defendants, Michael Kochen and Sandro Herek, opposed a continuation of the trial, noting that the federal prosecutors had already requested a long delay after Rosenzweig’s firing and Judge Graham denied it, though he allowed for a short two-week postponement for opening statements and trial evidence. A third defendant, Marcello Kochen, will be tried separately because of an illness.

“The Government’s position is that it will not be ready for trial, as currently scheduled,” the Kochens’ defense attorneys, Jayne Weintraub, Christopher Cavallo and Jonathan Etra, wrote in a court filing on Thursday. “That was the same position in the original motion. For that reason alone, the motion for reconsideration should be denied.”

Herek’s defense lawyer, David Tarras, said that while he “empathizes with the unexpected termination of Will Rosenzweig and the administrative difficulties this most certainly causes for the Government, Sandro Herek should not have to suffer for it.”

A prominent defense attorney who is not involved in the Medicare fraud case said the turn of events was highly unusual in federal court, but that federal prosecutors should not be allowed to delay the trial any further because of the circumstances of Rosenzweig’s firing.

“The government tells defendants all the time that ‘decisions have consequences,’ “ Miami lawyer David O. Markus told the Miami Herald. “They made their decision with respect to their trial lawyer. The consequence is simple: The trial goes on.

“State court manages prosecutor turnover every day, and federal courts can too,” he added.

Bondi fires prosecutor on Rosh Hashana

Rosenzweig took a short break from his work at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami to observe the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, last week.

But he noticed something was amiss when his office-issued mobile phone wasn’t working. He called the office to find out what was wrong.

Rosenzweig soon learned his phone was shut off because Bondi fired him. He did not see her terse Sept. 23 email dismissing him on Rosh Hashana — making the 39-year-old lawyer the third federal prosecutor in the Southern District of Florida to be summarily fired by the Bondi-led Justice Department since Trump started his second term as president in January.

But Rosenzweig — considered to be among the rising prosecutors in the office — wasn’t fired because he had been associated with the criminal investigations of Trump by the Justice Department’s special counsel during the prior Biden administration. That was why two other respected federal prosecutors in the Miami office were abruptly terminated this year.

Rather, Rosenzweig was fired, according to multiple sources, because of the negative things he said about Trump on a social media blog before he became a federal prosecutor in Miami. When he was working for the prominent law firm Kobre & Kim in Washington during Trump’s first term, Rosenzweig posted criticisms of the president starting in 2017 — posts that were recently brought to the attention of the Justice Department.

Rosenzweig, who obtained his bachelor’s and law degrees from Cornell University, joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami in September 2020 — toward the end of Trump’s first term before he lost the presidential election to Joe Biden.

Rosenzweig worked on dozens of complex cases as a prosecutor in the economic crimes section, which focuses on healthcare fraud, money laundering and other financial schemes. Of late, Rosenzweig was deeply involved in the Medicare fraud case that was scheduled for trial in early October.

His termination shocked several colleagues, who took note of the terrible timing and pettiness of his firing, calling it another “frogmarch.” They also said his loss would be a significant blow to an office that has witnessed a “brain drain” of veteran talent over the past year.

Other firings

In late January, Miami federal prosecutor Michael Thakur, 46, a Harvard Law School graduate who worked on the documents case accusing Trump of withholding top secret materials at his Palm Beach estate, was fired along with dozens of others in the Justice Department who were members of the special counsel’s team.

In addition to Thakur, Anne McNamara, a former federal prosecutor in the Miami office before joining Smith’s team in Washington, was also terminated.

The Justice Department’s rolling purges of lawyers and employees who participated in the two federal criminal cases against Trump — which Smith dismissed after Trump won the 2024 presidential election — are expected to continue in Washington and other regions of the country.

https://www.tampabay.com/news/florida/2025/10/03/bondi-florida-prosecutor-fired-medicare-fraud


So which was more important? Prosecuting two major Medicare fraudsters, or getting revenge on behalf of King Donald for a blog post that was written sometime in 2016-2020?

King Donald’s suck-up, the bimbo bitch Bondi, opted for the revenge and fired the prosecutor just before the trial was to start.

The criminal weaponization of our Department of Justice continues.

Washington Post: Prosecutors push toward charging other Trump foes after Letitia James

With the president pressuring the Justice Department to swiftly prosecute his rivals, federal prosecutors in at least five jurisdictions are pursuing possible cases.

President Donald Trump’s unprecedented efforts to pressure the Justice Department into prosecuting his perceived enemies have, so far, netted swift results — and more may be on the way.

In a matter of only two weeks, his handpicked U.S. attorney in Alexandria, Lindsey Halligan, obtained indictments against two frequent targets: former FBI Director James B. Comey and, on Thursday, New York Attorney General Letitia James.

Federal prosecutors across the country are pursuing several other investigations, many of which Trump has personally called for. Those include investigations into a sitting U.S. senator, former top leaders of the FBI and CIA and the Georgia prosecutor who charged Trump in a massive 2020 election conspiracy case.

The next set of charges could be coming quickly. Under pressure from senior Justice Department officials, federal prosecutors in Maryland are preparing to ask a grand jury to indict John Bolton, Trump’s first-term national security adviser, in a classified documents case. Charges could come as soon as the coming week, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the investigation.

Many of Trump’s targets, including Comey, charged with lying to Congress, and James, indicted on allegations of mortgage fraud, have derided the cases against them as baseless and driven by political retribution.

Here’s what to know about where investigations of Trump’s other perceived foes stand:

John Bolton, former Trump national security adviser

Federal authorities in Maryland have been investigating Bolton, a veteran diplomat turned fierce Trump critic, since earlier this year on allegations he illegally retained classified material after his 2019 resignation.

Multiple people familiar with the evidence against him have described the case as generally stronger than those against James and Comey. Court records unsealed last month indicate that FBI agents recovered documents marked classified while searching Bolton’s downtown Washington office.

In seeking a warrant to search the facility, investigators revealed they believed they would find classified records there in part because of information they learned through a foreign adversary hacking into Bolton’s AOL email account years ago.

Kelly O. Hayes, acting U.S. attorney in Maryland, a veteran federal prosecutor whom the Trump administration elevated to the office’s top job this year, is overseeing the case. The prosecution is being led by Tom Sullivan, who heads the national security and cyber divisions in Hayes’s office. Sullivan was previously part of the special counsel team that investigated former president Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents in 2023.

Bolton’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, has said the documents marked classified found in Bolton’s office stem from his time in the administration of George W. Bush and had been cleared for his use decades ago.

“An objective and thorough review will show nothing inappropriate was stored or kept by Amb. Bolton,” Lowell said in a statement.

Sen. Adam Schiff (D-California)

Schiff, a vocal Trump critic who led the House investigation that resulted in Trump’s first impeachment, is facing investigation on mortgage fraud allegations similar to those lodged Thursday against James.

Both inquiries were initiated by criminal referrals from Bill Pulte, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, and pursued by Ed Martin, a former interim U.S. attorney in Washington turned Justice Department official.

In recent weeks, Martin has met with Hayes, the Maryland U.S. attorney, who is also overseeing the investigation of the senator, to discuss the progress of the investigation.

The inquiry is centered on Pulte’s assertion that Schiff misled lenders while buying a second home in Potomac in 2003 by claiming the property would be his primary residence.

Schiff and his lawyer — former Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara — dismiss Pulte’s claims as politically motivated, “transparently false, stale and long debunked.” Bharara privately wrote to the Justice Department in July arguing there was “no factual basis” for those claims and provided documentation to exonerate the senator.

Schiff’s mortgage lender was aware from the start that he and his wife were buying the Maryland house so his family could live there when he was working in Washington, Bharara wrote, according to a copy of the letter reviewed by The Washington Post. To convict Schiff of mortgage fraud, prosecutors would have to prove that Schiff intended to deceive.

Still, after James’ indictment this week, Schiff is now bracing for the prospect that he could be indicted within a matter of weeks, according to two people familiar with his thinking who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.

“Those of us on the president’s enemies list — and it is a long and growing list — will not be intimidated, we will not be deterred,” the senator told reporters Thursday. “We will do our jobs. We will stand up to this president.”

Lisa Cook, Federal Reserve governor

Federal prosecutors in Georgia are also pursuing a mortgage fraud investigation targeting Cook, the Biden-appointed Federal Reserve governor whom Trump is seeking to fire from the central bank.

Last month, investigators issued subpoenas as part of the inquiry, which began with a referral from Pulte, and Martin has conferred with law enforcement officials in the state. Pulte has accused Cook of claiming both a home in Michigan and a condominium in Georgia as “primary residences” on mortgage applications.

Cook’s lawyers deny she committed a crime and have suggested in court papers that she “mislabeled” her homes in her mortgage applications.

John Brennan, former CIA director

The Justice Department acknowledged in July that it had opened an investigation into Obama-era CIA director John Brennan, one of many targets the president has said should be prosecuted for involvement in the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign.

John Ratcliffe, the current CIA director, and Trump’s Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, referred Brennan and others, including Comey, to the Justice Department. They alleged that Brennan and others manipulated a 2017 intelligence assessment to wrongly tie the Trump campaign to Moscow’s efforts and later lied about it to Congress.

In recent weeks, federal investigators in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania have conducted some interviews as part of the investigation, though its full scope remains unclear, one person familiar with its progress said.

One other current and one former official familiar with the matter suggested Gabbard may have undermined the investigation’s progress. Earlier this year, she publicly revoked the security clearances of 37 people who had been drafting the 2017 intelligence assessment, accusing them of politicizing intelligence and failing to safeguard classified information.

Her comments may have damaged their credibility as witnesses in any potential case against Brennan, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss details of the ongoing investigation.

FBI officials under former director Christopher A. Wray

In a separate investigation centered on the 2016 election, federal authorities in the Roanoke-based Western District of Virginia are investigating claims that senior bureau officials under former FBI director Christopher A. Wray mishandled or sought to destroy documents related to the Russia investigation.

That inquiry appears to have been sparked by allegations first floated by current FBI Director Kash Patel, who said in July he had discovered thousands of pages of records in “burn bags” at the bureau’s headquarters in Washington. He has suggested they were placed there to cover up wrongdoing by his predecessors at the FBI.

Some of those records — linked to an investigation by special counsel John Durham about the origins of the Russia investigation — have since been released by the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Current and former national security officials have questioned the premise of Patel’s allegations, noting that many of the records he claims to have uncovered had also been stored on government computer servers for years.

Fani T. Willis, Fulton County, Georgia, district attorney

The New York Times reported last month that the Justice Department had issued a subpoena for travel records of Willis, the Atlanta-area prosecutor who brought a sprawling racketeering case against the president and more than a dozen allies, accusing them of illegally seeking to overturn the results of the 2020 election in Georgia.

The investigation of Willis is being overseen by Theodore S. Hertzberg, the acting U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Georgia. But the scope of the inquiry remains unclear — including which records were subpoenaed and from whom.

The Times reported that the subpoena sought information tied to overseas trips Willis took around the time of the 2024 election. But Willis had not personally received a subpoena, her spokesman Jeff DiSantis said.

Trump has railed against Willis since her office charged him in 2023, calling his prosecution a “witch hunt.” The case remains the only remaining criminal matter in which Trump is charged, though Willis and her office are no longer leading the prosecution.

Last month, the Georgia Supreme Court denied Willis’s appeal of a lower court decision that removed her and her office from the proceedings after she was accused of an improper relationship with an outside attorney she appointed to the lead the case.

A state agency is now looking for a new prosecutor to take on the case. Willis has acknowledged she would likely continue to be a target of the president and his supporters.

“I am fully aware that there will be people in power over the next four years who may seek to use that power to lash out at those who are working to uphold the rule of law,” Willis told The Post in January. “I will not be intimidated by threats or acts of revenge.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/prosecutors-push-toward-charging-other-trump-foes-after-letitia-james/ar-AA1OgMRK

USA Today: ‘Keep your mouth shut.’ Tempers flare in the Capitol with no shutdown solution in sight

The House minority leader yelled at a Republican congressman to “keep (his) mouth shut.” And that’s just the start of it.

Two weeks into a government shutdown with no end in sight, tensions are high and getting hotter among the people with the power to the end it.

At the U.S. Capitol this week, two Democratic senators confronted the Republican speaker of the House outside his office, accusing him of “covering up for pedophiles” by avoiding a vote to release more information on the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

On the same day, the Democratic House minority leader separately yelled at a Republican congressman to “keep your mouth shut.” And that’s just the start of it.

The testy scenes underscore an increasingly bitter rapport between America’s two major political parties, as the first government shutdown in seven years approaches the start of a third week. Lawmakers were making little effort to resolve their differences in public. The House of Representatives has not taken a vote in more than three weeks and the Senate has yet to work through a weekend since funding lapsed at the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.

At the same time, the stakes of the shutdown are rising. On Wednesday, Oct. 15, military service members will miss their first paycheck since the shutdown crisis began. Funding for a key food aid program relied on by millions of mothers and infants will likely run out of money in the coming days. And key economic data needed to calculate Social Security payments for more than 70 million Americans next year doesn’t seem to be coming anytime soon.

Members of Congress say they are starting to feel the pressure. “I’m trying to muster every ounce of Christian charity that I can,” Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, said of dealing with the Democrats.

“It’s bare knuckles in this fight,” added Rep. Jimmy Gomez, D-California.

Senators confront speaker

On Wednesday, Oct. 8, two Democratic senators from Arizona were complaining about Johnson outside his office.

That’s when the speaker emerged and walked toward the senators, Ruben Gallego and Mark Kelly, who then criticized him over refusing to swear in a new Democratic congresswoman from their state during the shutdown.

Once Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva officially takes office, they pointed out, she’ll likely deliver the final vote needed to pass a measure forcing the Justice Department to publicly release more Epstein files.

The senators accused Johnson of keeping members of the House of Representatives away from the Capitol in order to delay the Epstein vote.

“We’re going to do that as soon as we get back to work. But we need the lights turned back on,” Johnson told them, according to video from the news outlet NOTUS. “You guys are experts in red herrings … This has nothing to do with Epstein.”

“You just keep coming up with excuses,” Gallego fired back.

The fiery exchange drew the attention of security guards, staffers and reporters, many of whom stood nearby, phones drawn, watching intently. It ended with all three politicians talking over each at the same time. Video of the encounter spread online.

Johnson drew even more heat when he took calls on C-SPAN the next morning. A rotation of frustrated Americans criticized him for failing to negotiate a solution to the shutdown. One caller in particular, a woman who said she was a military wife in northern Virginia who lives paycheck-to-paycheck, told the speaker of the House that her “kids could die” if troops go without pay.

Top Democrat to congressman: ‘Keep your mouth shut’

In another acrimonious scene the same day, a conversation between a Republican congressman and the leader of House Democrats devolved into a shouting match.

Rep. Mike Lawler, R-New York, confronted House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-New York, about his refusal to support a one-year extension of expiring health insurance subsidies, which are at the center of the shutdown fight.

“It’s sad,” Lawler said, holding up a copy of a proposed bill to continue the subsidies, which come in the form of tax credits.

“Why don’t you just keep your mouth shut,” Jeffries said.

The ruckus drew a gaggle of onlookers, many of whom filmed the interaction, which went viral afterward. Talking to reporters after the fracas, Lawler said Democrats are “so full of (expletive), it’s not even funny.”

At a Cabinet meeting in the White House the next day, President Donald Trump weighed in on the shutdown with a series of jabs at the political oppoisiton. “We really don’t know who the hell is leading the Democrats,” Trump said.

Glimmers of bipartisanship

There are still some glimmers of bipartisanship in the halls of the Capitol.

Senators on both sides of the aisle are still talking to each other. Back-channel conversations continue among lawmakers on a potential health care deal that could help bring Democrats around to voting to reopen the government, though Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Oklahoma, described those negotiations this week as “stalled.”

Likewise, Gallego gave the GOP some credit. “I’ve been talking to my Republican friends,” he told reporters. “They do want to figure out a way out.”

http://usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/10/11/government-shutdown-trump-democrats/86608206007/

Today: John Bolton to Be Charged With Federal Crimes, Sources Say [Video]

Two federal officials tell NBC News that President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton is expected to be charged with federal crimes soon. Bolton would be the third prominent Trump critic to face federal charges, after former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/john-bolton-to-be-charged-with-federal-crimes-sources-say/vi-AA1Ohbn3


The Department of Justice (DOJ) is now officially the Department of Presidential Revenge (DOPR).

Knewz: Conservatives turn on Trump over pledge to defend country that protects terrorists

President Donald Trump is facing criticism from conservatives after signing an executive order pledging U.S. military protection for Qatar — a Gulf state accused of sheltering Hamas leadership. 

The Order

Trump’s executive order states, “Over the years, the United States and the State of Qatar have been bound together by close cooperation, shared interests and the close relationship between our armed forces. … In recognition of this history, and in light of the continuing threats to the State of Qatar posed by foreign aggression, it is the policy of the United States to guarantee the security and territorial integrity of the State of Qatar against external attack.”

‘Threat to Peace’

The order goes a step further, declaring the United States will treat an attack on Qatar as a direct threat. “The United States shall regard any armed attack on the territory, sovereignty or critical infrastructure of the State of Qatar as a threat to the peace and security of the United States,” it continued.

Outrage 

The latest defense agreement has outraged many on the right, who argue that backing Qatar undermines American values. One critic of the decision, Fox News host Mark Levin, expressed his skepticism, referring to “our new protectorate, Qatar.”

Conservative backlash 

Levin warned the agreement could drag the U.S. into unnecessary conflict. “If the leadership of Hamas in Qatar is killed by Israel, are we going to war with Israel? Wouldn’t it have been better to condition any military defense of Qatar on some basic requirements? For example: turnover the Hamas leaders; no more funding of terrorists worldwide: no more funding of Marxist-Islamist groups in the United States. This is the bare minimum.” The Fox News host continued his criticism, this time directing it at conservative commentator Tucker Carlson. “I’m sure Qatarlson and the other Qatarites and assorted grifters and bigots will denounce a deal that ostensibly commits our children to fight for Qatar.”

https://knewz.com/conservatives-turn-on-trump-over-pledge-to-defend-qatar


What do you expect after Trump accepted a 747-sized bribe from Qatar?

Slingshot News: ‘I’m Right Here’: Trump’s Mental Decline Catches Up To Him As He Struggles To Find Foreign Leader Sitting In Front Of Him During Meeting [Video]

During a multilateral meeting with European leaders several weeks ago, Donald Trump struggled to find Finnish President Alexander Stubb, who was sitting right in front of him. 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/i-m-right-here-trump-s-mental-decline-catches-up-to-him-as-he-struggles-to-find-foreign-leader-sitting-in-front-of-him-during-meeting/vi-AA1Oe11H

HuffPost UK: Nobel Peace Prize Chief Hits Back After White House Condemns Decision Not To Give Trump Award

A president’s communications director said they had “placed politics over peace”.

The head of the Nobel Committee has hit back after the White House condemned its decision not to award this year’s peace prize to Donald Trump.

Jorgen Watne Frydnes was forced to respond after the president’s top spin doctor said they had “placed politics over peace”.

Trump has been openly campaigning to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, claiming to have stopped as many as eight wars since returning to the Oval Office in January.

However, Watne Frydnes announced on Friday morning that the committee had awarded this year’s peace prize to Venezuelan democracy campaigner María Corina Machado.

In a post on X, they said Machado “has spent years working for the freedom of the Venezuelan people”.

“The Venezuelan regime’s rigid hold on power and its repression of the population are not unique in the world,” the committee said. “We see the same trends globally: rule of law abused by those in control, free media silenced, critics imprisoned, and societies pushed towards authoritarian rule and militarisation.”

Their remarks have been interpreted by some as an indirect criticism of Trump, who has been criticised over his legal pursuit of his political enemies and decision to send the national guard into cities run by Democratic politicians.

Writing on X after the Nobel announcement, White House director of communications Steven Cheung hit out at the committee.

He said: “President Trump will continue making peace deals, ending wars, and saving lives. He has the heart of a humanitarian, and there will never be anyone like him who can move mountains with the sheer force of his will.

“The Nobel Committee proved they place politics over peace.”

On Sky News, Watne Frydnes said: “Our response is we hope as many people around the world should support the important work of Machado.

“This is work that we believe is desrrving and we hope that both political leaders, countries and people would support the mass movement that wants democracy in Venezuela and works for a free and fair transition from a brutal dictatorship to democracy.”

Asked about Trump’s campaign to win the award, he said: “We read the news as everyone else and this year there has been quite a lot of focus on that, but I must also say that in the long history of the Nobel peace prize, we have seen all kinds of campaigns, lobbying, pressure.

“Every year we receive thousands and thousands of letters, emails, people who want to express their opinion about who should receive the prize and also what actually leads to peace, so that’s something we’re quite used to.”

https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/nobel-peace-prize-chief-hits-back-after-white-house-condemns-decision-not-to-give-trump-award_uk_68e8f9a3e4b0a0b11bf26315

Markets Insider: The trade war is back: Stocks plunge on Trump’s ‘massive’ tariff threat

  • Stocks plunged on Friday after Trump revived fears of the trade war with China.
  • The president said he would consider a “massive increase” in tariffs on China.
  • Investors are concerned that a trade deal with Beijing could be in jeopardy.

US stocks sold off on Friday as President Donald Trump threatened to revive the trade war with China. The S&P 500 saw its steepest loss since April.

In a post on Truth Social, the president said he believed China was “becoming very hostile” in trade talks, and that there now seemed like there was “no reason” to speak with China’s President Xi Jinping in South Korea as planned later this month.

The day was a painful reminder for investors that tariffs are still a threat to the market and the economy. Oil prices cratered in line with stocks, with brent and US crude prices down 4% on fears of weaker economic activity hitting energy demand. The 10-year Treasury yield dropped nine basis points to 4.05%.

“One of the Policies that we are calculating at this moment is a massive increase of Tariffs on Chinese products coming into the United States of America,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social, adding that there were “many other countermeasures” that were under “serious consideration” in the US.

Trump added that China’s desire to impose export controls on items like rare earth minerals would “clog” markets and “make life difficult for virtually every Country in the World.”

A finalized trade deal with China, one of the US’s largest trading partners, has been at the top of investors’ wish list after tariff anxieties sent markets plummeting earlier this year.

“President Trump is sparking risk-off sentiments in markets,” José Torres, a senior economist at Interactive Brokers, said in a note on Friday. “Investors are clamoring for safe havens as a heavy levy increase could weigh on corporate earnings and the economic outlook.”

“Trump’s actions against China this morning were the excuse the market needed to begin correcting,” Tom Bruni, the head of markets at Stocktwits, wrote in a note.

Stocks got a boost after Trump first reached a preliminary trade agreement with China in mid-May, which involved both nations lowering tariffs for a 90-day period that has since been extended. In the last extension, the US agreed to lower its tariff rate to 30% on goods from China, while China is levying a 10% tariff on US goods through November 10.

https://www.businessinsider.com/stock-market-today-trump-china-tariffs-threat-sp500-dow-nasdaq-2025-10

Tampa Free Press: Chief Border Patrol Agent Dares New York Democrat Rep To Walk Streets Of Chicago

Chief Border Patrol Agent Greg Bovino dared Democratic Rep. Dan Goldman of New York on Thursday to walk on the streets of Chicago after Goldman dismissed violence against federal immigration enforcement officers.

United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facilities in Chicago and Portland, Oregon, have been the scene of multiple riots as opposition to the agency’s operations targeting illegal immigrants has intensified. “America Reports” co-host John Roberts played a clip from Goldman’s Wednesday appearance on “CNN NewsNight,” where the Democratic congressman dismissed the violence before asking Bovino for his thoughts.

“You know, that congressman is flat-out blind. You know, there was that 12k hit on myself. Thankfully, I’m still with the living, perhaps the congressman doesn’t want us to be with the living,” Bovino said.

“So how about him coming down here and walking some of the streets with us and maybe pick up [Democratic] Gov. [J.B.] Pritzker, and we’ll take a walk and see what violence really looks like, because it happens every single day to our ICE and Border Patrol agents,” Bovino continued. “We just had another incident this morning, John. A Border Patrol agent was rammed by a vehicle and someone was taken into custody. It happens every single day, perhaps he needs to come out here and we’ll show him a thing or two.”

“I have not seen… a thousand percent upswing and all this stuff. I haven’t seen examples of that,” Goldman said in the clip Roberts played.

Juan Espinoza Martinez, an illegal immigrant who was a member of the Latin Kings gang, was arrested and charged with offering $10,000 for Bovino’s death and $2,000 for information on the Border Patrol chief, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Some of the rioters in Chicago called for the ICE agents to be arrested or shot in a video posted online during one of the riots.

Two people were killed during a shooting at an ICE office in Dallas on Sept. 24, with the gunman taking his own life. In Texas, there were two previous incidents where shots were fired at ICE or Border Patrol facilities since July 4, with ten people being charged with attempted murder in connection with the former incident.

https://www.tampafp.com/chief-border-patrol-agent-dares-new-york-democrat-rep-to-walk-streets-of-chicago


The major problem in Chicago right now is ICE thugs behaving badly. Ransacking a 130 unit apartment building, shooting an alderwoman in the face with pepper munitions, and shooting an innocent woman 5 times with real ammo haven’t helped matters any. The ICE thugs have to go; they are the catalyst for the current issues.

As far as walking around Chicago is concerned, Bovino is a clown with his head up his ass.