Charlie
Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, has been in the limelight ever since the
former Turning Point USA CEO was assassinated. Some days, it is her
makeup that grabs eyeballs, while other days, it is her intimate hugs
that make headlines. But this time, she has managed to bring TPUSA back
in the headlines. This has happened after a recently fired employee has
made shocking allegations against her.
According
to The Atlanta Black Star, a fired TPUSA employee claimed that nobody
liked Erika. The young woman also revealed that Charlie’s widow is
plotting to take over the company he founded. Not just that, she also
stated that Kirk had once staged an event with paid attendees. The
former employee also opened up about internal workings and power
struggles within the organization. This had hardly ever been openly
described by anyone outside the company’s top leadership.
Another
controversy surrounding Erika arose from Candace Owens‘s allegations.
Charlie’s alleged close friend had earlier claimed that TPUSA’s
All-American halftime show was pre-recorded. The show, which aired at
the same time as the Super Bowl Halftime Show, was apparently recorded
weeks ago. According to Variety, it was confirmed that much of Kid
Rock’s performance was captured in Atlanta.
does anyone want to address the fact that charlie kirk was part of the manosphere and that erika kirk is a woman? does any 1 want to address the fact that her replacing him means turning point is no longer turning point?
'general hospital.'
nathan found out maxi was out of a coma from his mother. she wanted him to call maxi and get back with her. his sister britt told mother to back off. nathan did call felicity and maxi had gone to sleep by then.
will maxi go back to being with nathan?
lucas told marco what he heard and told marco he'd been lying to him all along. marco said he wasn't helpin his father except for getting back at sonny. marco blames sonny for the death of his mother. sidwell has this plan that will work and ... lucas didn't want to hear it. marco cried and told him how much he meant to him and promised that when this was over, it was over and he'd make sure britt was free from his father as well. lucas accepted him at his word.
for now.
elizabeth and ric had a good date.
that's really it oh, britt texted sonny a code and he deciphered it and knew where to meet up with her and did.
Staying with Homeland Security, THE NEW YORK TIMES notes, "The Department of Homeland Security’s funding has lapsed and lawmakers
are deadlocked over a proposal to restore it, with Democrats seeking
restrictions on the federal agents carrying out President Trump’s
immigration crackdown." Brittney Melton (NPR) adds, "The agency shut down after lawmakers failed to meet a Friday deadline to
fund DHS and its workforce of over 260,000 people. The funding lapse
points to a greater issue: Congress's consistent failure to do its job
on time." Sahil Kapur, Scott Wong, Julie Tsirkin and Frank Thorp V (NBC NEWS) explain
that the Democrats and the White House continue to debate what's needed
before funding can be approved, "The two sides have continued to trade
offers, signaling some hope for an agreement. But it remains unclear
which Democratic demands the White House will agree to and Congress left
Washington on Thursday without a deal.
ED
O'KEEFE: We turn now to House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who
joins us this morning from New York City. Leader Jeffries, thank you for
being here.
DEMOCRATIC LEADER HAKEEM JEFFRIES: Good morning. Great to be with you.
ED
O'KEEFE: So as this shutdown continues, I want to remind our viewers
what it is, exactly, congressional Democrats are seeking to reopen the
Department of Homeland Security. You want immigration agents to show
IDs, to wear body cameras, take off their masks, stop racial profiling
and seek judicial warrants to enter private property. Talks between the
White House and congressional Democrats are continuing. Are you willing
to compromise, to let any of these go, to get the government reopened?
REP.
JEFFRIES: Well, our value proposition is simple, taxpayer dollars
should be used to make life more affordable for the American people, not
brutalize or kill them, as we horrifically saw in Minneapolis with the
cold blooded killings of Rene Nicole Good and Alex Pretti. We know, and
the American people clearly know, that ICE is totally out of control and
they need to be reined in. Because the American people deserve
immigration enforcement that is fair, that is just, and that is humane.
And so, we need dramatic change at ICE, including, but not limited to,
the types of things that you laid out before any DHS funding bill moves
forward.
ED O'KEEFE: With the
exception of some flexibility on body cameras, because they're starting
to spend some money to get those out there, some Republicans have
rejected this list of policy reform proposals. You guys still seem miles
apart. So when, conceivably, will we see this resolved? And again, I
ask you, if- are there any of these points that you're willing to let go
in order to get the government reopened?
REP.
JEFFRIES: Well, we're willing to have a good faith conversation about
everything, but fundamentally we need change that is dramatic, that is
bold, that is meaningful and that is transformational. And these are
common sense things. For instance, judicial warrants should be required
before ICE agents can storm private property or rip everyday Americans
out of their homes. We need to make sure that there are actual
independent investigations, so that if state and local laws are
violated, in many cases, violently violated, that state and local
authorities have the ability to criminally investigate and criminally
prosecute anyone who has violated the law. Because we cannot trust
Kristi Noem or Pam Bondi to conduct an independent investigation. We
believe that sensitive locations should be off limits, sensitive
locations like houses of worship, schools, hospitals or polling sites,
and that fundamentally ICE should be targeting violent felons who are
here unlawfully, as opposed to violently targeting law abiding immigrant
families, which is completely inconsistent with what Donald Trump
promised the American people he would do.
ED O'KEEFE: Right. And we, of course, this past week reported that
about 14% of those detained had violent criminal records. About 60% of
them were wanted on criminal records overall. But it was that 14%,
violent criminals. Again, I just- it sounds like this is going to go on a
while, because Tom Homan wasn't terribly flexible on anything,
especially on the issue of warrants and masks. You're not ceding any
ground. So there's a few things coming up here. For example, State of
the Union is scheduled for a week from Tuesday. Should it be held if the
Department of Homeland Security is shut down?
REP. JEFFRIES: Well, we'll cross that bridge when we get to it. It is certainly my hope--
ED O'KEEFE: --Sounds like you're going to get to it, though. I mean--
REP. JEFFRIES:--we can come to a resolution in advance of it. Well,
here's the thing, the administration and Republicans have made a clear
decision that they would rather shut down FEMA, shut down the Coast
Guard and shut down TSA, than enact the type of dramatic reforms
necessary so that ICE and other DHS law enforcement agencies are
conducting themselves like every other law enforcement professional in
the country. For instance, police officers don't use masks. County
Sheriffs don't use masks. State troopers don't use masks. Why is it that
ICE agents who are untrained, are being unleashed on American
communities with this type of lawlessness, violence and brutality.
Unacceptable, unconscionable, and it's un-American.
When an
immigration agent shot Julio C. Sosa-Celis in the leg last month in
Minneapolis, touching off hours of tense protests, the Trump
administration rushed to sell a version of events that demonized the
wounded man and defended the agent.
About
two hours after the gunfire, a Department of Homeland Security
spokeswoman claimed that three people had attacked an agent with a broom
and snow shovel. She said the agent “fired a defensive shot to defend
his life” as he was “being ambushed.” The next day, Kristi Noem, the
homeland security secretary, accused the men of trying to kill the
agent.
But the federal government’s account soon shifted. And by Friday, it had fully unraveled.
When
assault charges were filed days after the shooting against Mr.
Sosa-Celis and one of the other men, Alfredo A. Aljorna, officials
changed their narrative, saying it was not three people who attacked the
agent, but two. Several other details revealed in court records also
differed from the original account.
Then
on Thursday, the top federal prosecutor in Minnesota asked a judge to
drop the case, saying that “newly discovered evidence in this matter is
materially inconsistent with the allegations.” On Friday, the acting
director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Todd Lyons, said two
agents had been placed on leave for providing accounts that appeared to
conflict with video footage of what happened. Those agents, he said,
could eventually face termination and prosecution.
[. . .]
The
collapse of the government’s narrative, which came just as the
administration was ending its more than two-month surge of immigration
agents to Minnesota, was the latest instance of the Department of
Homeland Security providing an account of a shooting that later proved
questionable or outright wrong. For many, especially those already
skeptical of the Trump administration’s deportation agenda, the repeated
emergence of evidence that undermines official accounts has cast doubt
on almost anything the government says about immigration enforcement.
This is absolutely egregious. Two men were accosted by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, and one took a bullet to the
leg. Then the federal government called them murderers and hit them
with heavy charges, all for ICE’s own head to admit that his agents
appear to have been lying under oath—a crime that this administration doesn’t seem to take very seriously.
This
shooting happened one week after Renee Good was killed, and just over a
week before Alex Pretti was killed. The Trump administration lied to us
about both of those events, as well. Only time will tell just how many more of these ICE shootings were offensive rather than defensive.
On HBO's LAST WEEK TONIGHT WITH JOHN OLIVER last night, John addressed the lies of Homeland Security.
Students in more than three dozen states
have walked out of class to protest the Trump administration’s
deportation tactics in recent weeks, a wave of defiant demonstrations
that continues as some officials have vowed to crack down.
Teenagers
in Utah carried backpacks and bullhorns as they walked out of eight
schools in Salt Lake County. In Maine, students in mittens convened on a
bridge over the Kennebec River. Scores of students were seen stopping highway traffic
in Maryland. Classmates at a high school in Sunnyside, Wash., lined a
parking lot carrying hand-drawn posters. “We are skipping our lesson to
teach you one,” read one.
But in Texas, where more than half of all
public school students are Hispanic, Republican leaders have tried
teaching a very different lesson of their own, threatening students,
teachers and school districts with severe consequences for taking part
in demonstrations.
Gov. Greg Abbott of
Texas has suggested that state funding could be stripped from school
districts and that students who are disorderly during protests should be
arrested. The Texas Education Agency has warned that districts found to
have facilitated walkouts could be taken over by the state.
“Schools and staff who allow this behavior should be treated as co-conspirators,” Mr. Abbott said in a social media post last week, which focused on one walkout in Kyle, Texas, outside of Austin.
Yet
despite the threats from state officials — and the pleas to students
from many school administrators — the protests over immigration
enforcement did not stop.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott threatening to take away state funding from
high schools with students who participate in protests is a restriction
of the First Amendment.
In response to high school students protesting Immigration and
Customs Enforcement on Jan. 30, Abbott argued walkouts are disruptive
and lead to criminal chaos, and the schools allowing this behavior
should be treated as co-conspirators.
But what is so criminal about student walkouts?
This type of political demonstration has been conducted by students
since 1766. The Great Butter Rebellion at Harvard University, where
students protested poor food quality, is considered the first student
protest in the United States.
As Seguin High sophomore Janelle walked to the corner of Silo and
Eden roads in Arlington, a green shirt with a Mexican flag stitched on
the back draped over her shoulders.
Worry, anger and fear all washed over her as she stood next to
classmates and wondered what the consequences would be for walking out
of school to protest recent deportations and deadly shootings related to
immigration enforcement. Then she remembered her grandmother, who
inspired her to attend Thursday’s protest in the first place.
“She came here as an immigrant,” Janelle said. “So I feel like I
should be out here and show her that I can do it, and I can protect
people.”
Janelle was one of many in Arlington and Mansfield who participated
in walkouts this week to protest against the U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement.
Caitlin Leggett (KTXS) reports, "Students from Abilene High School walked out of class and marched to
Abilene City Hall around noon Thursday, staging a student-led protest
centered on concerns about immigration enforcement and what they
described as recent actions by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement." KTAB/KRBC offer a photo essay here. CNN notes, "More than 100 Dripping Springs High School students walked out of
class and marched Tuesday to protest Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, but some participants left the demonstration with traffic
citations. Students carried signs and chanted as they left campus.
One student, asked what they decided to put on their sign, said, 'We
are skipping our lessons to teach you one. ICE out'." Jacob Daniels (KRISTV) adds, "Students at multiple Corpus Christi Independent School District campuses
walked out of classes Thursday afternoon, carrying signs and chanting
in what many described as a powerful statement. The demonstration
sparked debate among community members about student safety and
supervision during the protest." Arthur Clayborn (KLTV) notes, "Kilgore High School students walked out
of classes Thursday morning to protest deportations by Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, or ICE, with organizers saying recent family
separations in their community motivated the demonstration. Student
organizer Kemuel Ondinyo said he was inspired to act after watching
similar protests at other Texas schools and witnessing deportations
affecting people in his community." Bianca Seward (HOUSTON PUBLIC MEDIA) notes,
"More than 50 students from the Houston Academy for International
Studies walked out of school Tuesday protesting Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) operations in the United States. The protest, which
students said they started planning last week, started just after noon.
While chanting 'ICE off our streets, ICE off our streets,' several
students said they were there to call attention to the treatment of
immigrants under the Trump administration."
And on Friday, walk outs continued. Priscilla Rice (KERA) reports,
"Young North Texans continue to protest the federal government’s
anti-immigration policies by walking out of class. More than 200
students walked out of Grand Prairie High School just after 11 a.m. on
Friday. Students told KERA stronger U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement measures have affected not only their community, but
communities nationwide." WBAP notes, "Several dozen students walked out of the Dallas Uplift Williams
Prepatory School Friday morning, hiking into Dallas to protest ICE
immigration activities at the American Airlines Center. Waving flags
from several nations, students say they are protesting immigration and
other federal agent violence, illegal arrests, and illegal deportations
of their teachers and neighbors who have been here for years." Daniel Perreault (KVUE) adds,
"Students at multiple Austin ISD schools walked out of class during the
school day once again on Friday to protest. Students from three Austin
high schools walked out around 1:30 p.m. and then marched to Austin
City Hall." And Matt Mitchell (HOODLINE) notes,
"More than a hundred McNeil High School students walked out of class in
Round Rock on Friday afternoon, marching off campus to the corner of
McNeil Drive and Parmer Lane to protest recent actions by U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The midday demonstration kicked off
shortly after 2 p.m., part of a wave of student-led protests that has
rolled across Central Texas since late January."
On Friday thousands of high school students walked out of Los
Angeles-area schools to protest ICE’s Gestapo tactics, participating in
another national “day of action.” Those who gathered outside the federal
jail in downtown Los Angeles heroically stood up against an attack with
gas and batons by federal agents.
Helicopter video by local television stations show demonstrators
standing their ground near the U.S. Metropolitan Detention Center, many
obviously teenagers, some shoving back and throwing objects at the
federal thugs in self-defense.
[. . .]
In a related retaliatory action, Ricardo Lopez, a history teacher at the
Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Charter Synergy Quantum
Academy in South Los Angeles, was fired for opening a locked gate to
allow students, who were then risking injury by climbing over gates and
fences, to join the walkout, a move school administrators labeled
insubordination. Already almost a thousand signatures have been
collected demanding Lopez’s reinstatement. To date the United Teachers
of Los Angeles (UTLA) bureaucracy has issued no statement in support of
the victimized teacher.
A group of singers gathered in downtown Indianapolis Sunday night to protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The demonstration, which was organized by Indy Singing Resistance,
was held at Monument Circle at 6 p.m. Instead of chanting, protestors
used their signing voices to express themselves.
In a release sent ahead of the protest, Singing Resistance indicated
that a small group of people would lead all who show up for the event.
Those leaders taught demonstrators the songs they planned to sing during
the protest upon their arrival at the event. No singing experience was
required for protest attendees.
In Tennessee, WCYB reports, "Despite rainy conditions,
protesters took to the streets in Johnson City on today to rally against
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations in the region,
saying they are concerned about what they describe as an increased ICE
presence spreading across Northeast Tennessee. Community members
gathered holding signs and chanting, saying they would not stay silent
against what they described as growing enforcement efforts by ICE.
Pandora Burns a protestor said, 'I mean they don't stop deporting people
in the rain either so'."
Meanwhile unhinged Pam Bondi sent out a letter on Saturday announcing that all the Epstein files had been released.
The Epstein Class. A group Chump's protecting. His friends.
Remember the ones that would be hurt by the release of the Epstein
files? He yelled that at Marjorie Taylor Greene, remember? Christopher Lamb (CNN) reports:
Steve Bannon, a former White House adviser to US President Donald Trump,
discussed opposition strategies with convicted sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein against Pope Francis, with Bannon saying he hoped to “take down”
the pontiff, according to newly released files from the US Department
of Justice.
Messages
sent between the pair in 2019, released in the massive document dump
last month, reveal Bannon courted the late financier in his attempts to
undermine the former pontiff after leaving the first Trump
administration.
Bannon
had been highly critical of Francis whom he saw as an opponent to his
“sovereigntist” vision, a brand of nationalist populism which swept
through Europe in 2018 and 2019. The released documents from the DOJ
appear to show that Epstein had been helping Bannon to build his movement.
“Will take down (Pope) Francis,” Bannon wrote to Epstein in June 2019. “The Clintons, Xi, Francis, EU – come on brother.”
Pope
Francis was the people's pope so it's only natural that a disgusting
creep like Steve Bannon would want to take him "down." The Epstein
Class is being made uncomfortable and a few are having to find the exit
door. Claire Zillman (FORBES) notes:
On Thursday, Goldman Sachs said general counsel Kathryn Ruemmler will leave the bank
in June after the documents showed she stayed in close contact with
Epstein until 2019, at one point calling him “Uncle Jeffrey” as she
thanked him for high-end gifts. And on Friday, Dubai-based logistics
group DP World named a new chair and new CEO, signaling the departure of Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem
whose emails with Epstein included references to sexual experiences.
Both ousters followed earlier resignations in the U.K. public sector,
namely those of former U.S. ambassador Peter Mandelson from the House of Lords and Morgan McSweeney, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s chief of staff who’d advised on Mandelson’s appointment.
Following an exodus of talent who have left the Wasserman Group talent agency after emails between founder Casey Wasserman and Jeffrey Epstein associate
Ghislaine Maxwell were revealed in the Justice Department's latest
tranche of documents, pressure for the founder to step down came to a
boiling point. On Friday, Wasserman announced that he was selling the
company as he had become a "distraction" to the business he founded 24
years ago.
The latest releases also placed a shadow over the previous accounts
given by allies of President Trump — from Commerce Secretary Howard
Lutnick to Elon Musk — regarding their dealings with Epstein.
There
is no suggestion of criminality around either Lutnick or Musk, but the
latest batch of emails contradicted Lutnick’s earlier assertions of when
he had cut off contact with Epstein and called into question Musk’s
previously emphatic insistence that he “refused” to visit the disgraced
financier’s Caribbean island.
In
one newly released email, the entrepreneur asks Epstein which day or
night might feature the wildest party on the island. It’s unclear if
Musk actually visited.
Beyond all of that, there is the broader fear and anger raised by the nature of the Epstein story.
Specifically,
it stokes the sense of a wealthy and powerful elite hovering above the
rest of society, forming a chummy circle of mutual protection, and
remaining out of reach of the laws and ethical standards to which
everyone else is subject.
At
a time when anti-elitist populism is already one of the strongest
animating political forces in the United States — and in many other
parts of the world — the Epstein story is rocket fuel.
A
Donald Trump insider has been revealed to have been in "regular
contact" with the late child sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein, including in
one email that says "miss u," according to the latest DOJ release.
CBS
News reported on the Epstein files release on Saturday in an article
called, "Trump insider Tom Barrack kept in regular contact with Jeffrey
Epstein for years, files show." Barrack is also an administration
ambassador to Turkey.
"President
Trump's longtime confidant Thomas Barrack, now serving as U.S.
ambassador to Turkey and special envoy to Syria, was in regular, close
contact with Jeffrey Epstein for years after Epstein's 2008 conviction
for soliciting a minor, a CBS News analysis of over 100 texts and email
exchanges from the newly released Justice Department documents shows,"
according to CBS.
The
outlet further reported, "The correspondence places Barrack, a
globe-trotting billionaire, among a circle of wealthy and influential
figures who maintained social contact with Epstein even as his criminal
history became widely known. Their relationship continued even after
Barrack became a prolific fundraiser for Mr. Trump's 2016 campaign, and
later, led his inaugural committee and became a frequent presence in the
White House."
According to an FBI document released by the DOJ, the agency received a tip
in June of 2021 from an individual whose name has been redacted, but is
described as an alleged “victim,” a former member of the Sinaloa Cartel, and a close confidant of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
According
to the document, the individual was formally interviewed by an FBI
agent, and accused Trump of being aware of and having funded “underage
sex parties at the Donald Trump Golf course.”
That
individual went on to claim that they had “recordings of Trump, Epstein
and Maxwell discussing marketing strategies for high profile sex
parties,” according to the FBI official who drafted the document, their
name also redacted. The individual claimed that in one of the
recordings, Trump can be heard stating “he was aware of the underage sex
parties.”
Let's wind down with this from Senator Alex Padilla's office:
Padilla and Wyden sound alarm that IRS errors improperly exposed private taxpayer information to ICE
WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senators Alex Padilla
(D-Calif.), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Immigration
Subcommittee, and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Ranking Member of the Senate
Finance Committee, demanded answers and accountability from the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) after the agency admitted in a court filing that
the flawed system it adopted to transfer people’s home addresses to
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) potentially led to thousands
of records being shared improperly in violation of taxpayer privacy
laws. In a new letter
to Acting IRS Commissioner Scott Bessent and Homeland Security
Secretary Kristi Noem, the Senators also raised grave concerns that the
automated system the Trump Administration created to transfer taxpayer
data to ICE may have misidentified a large but unknown number of
taxpayers — possibly including American citizens — in response to ICE
inquiries, potentially exposing them to immigration enforcement actions
at a time when serious questions are being raised about how such actions
are being carried out.
“The IRS failed to properly verify that the information it disclosed
to ICE belonged to the correct taxpayers. Instead, it used a faulty,
automated verification system to identify the taxpayers whose
information it thought it could disclose under the terms of the agency’s
data-sharing agreement, which it reached last year with the Department
of Homeland Security,” wrote the Senators. “… The IRS
now admits that this system led to exactly the kinds of grave mistakes
our taxpayer privacy laws were designed to prevent, and that Congress as
well as IRS employees previously warned could happen under this
data-sharing agreement.”
Senators Padilla, Wyden, and additional Senate Democrats warned early last year that the data-sharing agreement between the IRS and ICE would result in serious errors and violate taxpayer privacy. They demanded details about the status and potential misuse of the data sharing program as recently as January 30 of this year.
“The risk to innocent people was entirely predictable once
taxpayer data was used for immigration enforcement,” continued the
Senators.
“Because the administration ignored the warnings, we now face the
extraordinarily troubling likelihood that in some significant, unknown
number of cases, the IRS not only provided return information to ICE in
violation of strict taxpayer privacy laws, but it also provided
information about the wrong taxpayers. Those individuals may have been
injured by ICE, improperly detained or imprisoned, or improperly
deported.”
In their letter, the Senators called for explanations of exactly how
many taxpayer records were shared improperly, who was responsible and
what accountability measures will be taken, whether anyone has been
wrongly detained or deported based on shared data, and what steps the
Trump Administration is taking to notify taxpayers whose information was
improperly disclosed. The letter was also signed by Senators Catherine
Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Angus King (I-Maine), Jack Reed (D-R.I.), Adam
Schiff (D-Calif.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and Peter Welch (D-Vt.).
Last spring, Senators Padilla, Wyden, and Cortez Masto condemned the IRS’
plan to provide sensitive taxpayer information to the Department of
Homeland Security to locate suspected undocumented immigrants. The
Senators also led a March 2025 letter to IRS and DHS leadership raising the alarm on reports that DHS and the Department of Government Efficiency illegally requested sensitive taxpayer information from the IRS.
Full text of today’s letter is available here and below:
Dear Acting Commissioner Bessent and Secretary Noem:
We write with alarm following up on our January 29, 2026, letter
to Acting Commissioner Bessent regarding the IRS’s disclosure of 47,289
taxpayers’ return information (including “last known addresses”) to
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials. Validating our
fears expressed in that letter, an IRS court filing made on February 11,
2026, confirms that thousands of these disclosures may have been
improper.
The government has argued that it was permitted to disclose tax
return information with respect to specific taxpayers who were under
active investigation by ICE. That premise is subject to litigation, and
ICE’s initial claim that it had more than a million active
investigations underway is absurd. Furthermore, the IRS failed to
properly verify that the information it disclosed to ICE belonged to the
correct taxpayers. Instead, it used a faulty, automated verification
system to identify the taxpayers whose information it thought it could
disclose under the terms of the agency’s data-sharing agreement, which
it reached last year with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
This agreement was signed by Secretaries Bessent and Noem. The IRS now
admits that this system led to exactly the kinds of grave mistakes our
taxpayer privacy laws were designed to prevent, and that Congress as
well as IRS employees previously warned could happen under this
data-sharing agreement.
Because it is common for multiple taxpayers to have similar or
identical names and because not all ethnic groups follow the same naming
conventions, the IRS needs more than an individual’s first and last
name to ensure it does not disclose information about the wrong taxpayer
in violation of Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 6103.
In its recent court filing, the IRS admits it provided return
information, including the taxpayers’ “last known addresses” (which may
be current addresses unknown to ICE), even in many cases where ICE’s
request for taxpayer information included a name but not a complete or
accurate address.
As an example, if ICE requested the last known address of “John
Doe” at “Unknown Address, 99999” the IRS’s automated system would
disclose the last known address for a person named John Doe to ICE. This
is because the IRS system only looked to see if the address field in
ICE requests was or was not populated, not whether it was populated with
an address that matched IRS records.
The IRS estimates that up to five percent of its 47,289
disclosures to ICE may have involved insufficient address data. In other
words, thousands of taxpayers’ information may have been disclosed in
violation of section 6103, including those who are not targets of
immigration investigations.
The risk to innocent people was entirely predictable once
taxpayer data was used for immigration enforcement. Because the
administration ignored the warnings, we now face the extraordinarily
troubling likelihood that in some significant, unknown number of cases,
the IRS not only provided return information to ICE in violation of
strict taxpayer privacy laws, but it also provided information about the
wrong taxpayers. Those individuals may have been injured by ICE,
improperly detained or imprisoned, or improperly deported.
That would be an unimaginable nightmare for those wrongly
targeted people and their families. Conditions in ICE facilities are
horrific, and 32 people died in ICE custody last year, meeting the
record last reached in 2004, and another 8 have died this year alone.
The Trump administration has deported people to foreign torture prisons,
third countries they have no ties to, or back to their home countries,
despite having pending asylum claims. Exposing people to such risk
because of an improper sharing of tax information is unconscionable.
As noted in our prior letter, penalties for 6103 violations are
severe. IRC section 7213 requires responsible employees to be
terminated, and IRC section 7431 allows a taxpayer to bring a civil
lawsuit for damages.
Injured taxpayers will not know they can sue until the government
informs them of their rights. The government is required by section
7431 to inform the victims when a person is criminally charged with a
violation of section 6103 or when the IRS proposes an adverse action
against an employee.
Accordingly, please respond no later than March 15 to the following questions:
1. Exactly how many taxpayers’ return information was disclosed
in circumstances that the IRS now considers improper or potentially
improper?
a. How and when did you find out about the inappropriate disclosures?
b. Who at the IRS first became aware that the inappropriate disclosures were made?
2. Which officials are responsible for approving, executing, and
supervising the disclosures now considered to be improper or potentially
improper?
3. Has any IRS or DHS employee been investigated, charged,
disciplined, placed on administrative leave, or otherwise held
accountable in connection with any improper disclosures?
a. If not, explain why not.
b. If so, please identify the employee and describe the accountability measure taken.
4. Have DHS or ICE accessed, reviewed, relied upon, copied, or
further disseminated the affected data before remediation efforts began?
5. What specific steps have DHS or ICE taken to prevent further disclosure or dissemination of the data?
6. What specific steps are DHS and ICE taking to dispose of data improperly disclosed by the IRS?
7. Have any of the 47,289 taxpayers whose information the IRS provided to ICE been questioned, arrested, detained, or deported?
a. If so, how many are among the subset of individuals whose information the IRS shared improperly with ICE?
b. What steps are the IRS and DHS taking to make this determination?
c. What plan has the IRS and DHS put in place to remedy any detainments or deportations made in error?
8. Have any affected taxpayers been notified that their information has been improperly disclosed?
a. If not, when will the notification occur?
b. If the IRS has concluded that such notice is not required, provide the legal basis for that determination.
We look forward to your prompt and complete response.
in today's snapshot, c.i. notes sultan ahmed bin sulayen. since the snapshot went up, sultan ahmed bin sulayen has been forced to resign his post due to his relationship with the late jeffrey epstein - specifically, over an e-mail to epstien thanking him for a video of torture that epstein shared. shane croucher ('newsweek') reports:
Democratic
U.S. Representative Ro Khanna took credit, along with his Republican
House colleague Representative Thomas Massie, for the exit of Sultan
Ahmed Bin Sulayem from the global logistics giant DP World, where he was
replaced as CEO and chairman amid scrutiny over his relationship with
Jeffrey Epstein.
Emails between
Sulayem and the late sex offender were in the Epstein investigation
files published by the Department of Justice. The DOJ documents show
that the pair corresponded about sexual experiences, and Sulayem
continued a relationship with Epstein for years after the latter’s
conviction for soliciting an underage prostitute in 2008.
In
one exchange, which prompted Sulayem to be identified as the redacted
recipient by Massie and a DOJ official, Epstein referred to a “torture
video”. The nature of the video is unknown.
Khanna
said in a Friday morning post on X that he and Massie had “called on
DOJ to stop protecting this man & underact his name,” referring to
Sulayem, whose name was redacted in some of the emails released. “They
relented. Then I took to the House floor to name names. Today, he
resigns. We will not rest until there is elite accountability for the
Epstein class.”
Massie, in a separate post on
X, also noted Sulayem’s resignation and linked it to his and Khanna’s
flagging of the “torture video” email.
now for 'general hospital.' maxie is out of coma. she has heard from her kids georgie and james and from her boyfriend spinelli. but mainly from her mother felicia. felicia was the 1 who, at the end of the episode, had to tell her that nathan was back, that nathan was alive. nathan 'died' in 2018. he and maxie were married.
nathan was leaving lulu's when brook lyn - chip on her shoulder brook lyn - showed up and deduced that the 2 had feelings for 1 another. she then lectured - attacked - maxie. you know, brook lyn can't even support her husband chase. she also refuses to adopt a child with chase. maybe it's time brook lynn addressed her own damn problems? their argument was ended when spinelli called to tell lulu that maxie was out of a coma.
lucas told elizabeth that marco wasn't being honest with him. he'd heard marco and his father sidwell talking and he knew that marco was part of something sinister. elizabeth told him that she knew marco loved him. she also told him 'tough love time,' that he needed to move off the island tonight.
marco gave britt her shot and she told him he was destroying whatever he had with lucas by being in business with his father. marco insisted he was only in business with sidwell for this 1 mission. brit told him this 1 mission could be designing a weapon.
later, marco was on the phone leaving a message for ross saying that he wanted to talk and about sonny. behind him, lucas stood. marco saw him when he turned around. he had no idea how long lucas was standing there.
ava went to see nina and told her that she was interested in sidwell but that she had competition from lucy coe. nina told her that she thought it was wrong because of sidwell's bad reputation but admitted ava had a glow and she was happy for her lucy went to sidwell and apologized (as part of her scheme) for demanding he choose between her and ava. sidwell showed up at nina's magazine to ask ava out. ava was thrilled until she learned their dinner was a 3 some with lucy.
Friday, February 13, 2026. The Epstein class suffers a loss at
Goldman Sachs, Pam Bondi lied to Congress, Chump moves his war on
immigrants onto migrants who legally became US citizens, ICE gets caught
in more lies, Senator Patty Murray calls for an end to ICE attacking
our Constitutionally protected rights, Senator Mark Kelly gets a legal
win, and much more.
LE MONDE reported last night, "A top lawyer for Goldman Sachs will leave the Wall Street bank, its
chief executive said Thursday, February 12, after her close ties with
convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were revealed. The firm's general
counsel Kathryn Ruemmler had courted intense scrutiny after the
Department of Justice dumped emails in recent weeks that showed her
extensive relationship with the disgraced financier." The Epstein Class. Ruemmler was part of it. Joshua Franklin and James Fontanella-Khan (FINANCIAL TIMES OF LONDON) note
that she plans to step down June 30th and quote her declaring, "I made
the determination that the media attention on me, relating to my prior
work as a defense attorney, was becoming a distraction." Her prior work
as a defense attorney? She wasn't Epstein's defense attorney. She was
his friend. She gave him free legal advice. THE GUARDIAN notes:
Up until her resignation, Ruemmler repeatedly
tried to distance herself from the emails and other correspondence and
had been defiant that she would not resign from Goldman’s top legal
post, which she had held since 2020.
While
Ruemmler has called Epstein a “monster” in recent statements, she had a
much different relationship with him before he was arrested a second
time for sex crimes in 2019 and later killed himself in a Manhattan
jail; Ruemmler called Epstein “Uncle Jeffrey” in emails and said she
adored him.
She educated him
on how the law differentiates between underage victims of sex crimes and
adult prostitutes. “I think the point is that if she was underage, she
could not legally consent to engaging in prostitution,” Ms. Ruemmler
wrote to Mr. Epstein in 2015.
She
offered advice on how to knock down the credibility of one of his
accusers, writing in one email that Mr. Epstein’s lawyer could push the
woman into a “perjury trap.”
Ms.
Ruemmler signed some emails “xoxo” and swapped photos. She joked with
Mr. Epstein about the weight of visitors at New Jersey rest stops and
speculated about the sexual orientation of a well-known hedge fund
billionaire.
And over a series of
meetings, she sought his advice on personal and professional matters,
(“men aren’t interested in women my age,” one email lamented).
In
2019, while interviewing for the job at Goldman, Ms. Ruemmler told Mr.
Epstein that she was wearing gifts from him. “Am totally tricked out by
Uncle Jeffrey today!” she wrote.
She lied
about her relationship with Epstein. But let's grasp that she knew what
she was doing. She knew she was lying about her relationship with
Epstein. But she also knew what he was doing. Note this paragraph
again:
She educated him on how the law
differentiates between underage victims of sex crimes and adult
prostitutes. “I think the point is that if she was underage, she could
not legally consent to engaging in prostitution,” Ms. Ruemmler wrote to Mr. Epstein in 2015.
Wow.
What a concerned and moral authority the woman was. Ruemmler was
advising a man convicted of child prostitution "on how the law
differentiates between underage victims of sex crimes and adult
prostitution." She wrote, "I think the point is that if she was
underage, she could not legally consent to engaging in prostitution."
And Goldman Sachs think they can wait until June 30th for her to exit?
Former Baylor President Kenneth Starr invited disgraced New York
financier Jeffrey Epstein to visit Baylor’s campus in July 2012,
according to newly released files.
The initial visit took place on July 30, 2012, inside Pat Neff Hall
and was organized by Starr’s then-assistant Jennifer Jarvis and
Epstein’s assistant Lesley Groff. Epstein was picked up from the Texas State Technical College-Waco airport by two assistants — Jeff Wittekiend and Angela Gray Oliver.
According to the files, after Epstein’s initial visit, Starr invited him to return to share a meal at the Allbritton House.
“It was great having Jeffrey here,” Starr wrote in his email.
“He’s a prince. Next time, he is warmly welcome and encouraged to
‘break bread’ with me at the Allbritton House. His menu, my pleasure.”
They continued to remain in contact and Starr defended him:
In November 2018,
the Miami Herald began investigating Epstein’s 2008 plea deal, under
which he was sentenced to 18 months in jail on one count of soliciting
prostitution and one count of soliciting prostitution from a minor.
Epstein had to then register as a sex offender.
The Herald reached out to the Lanier Law Firm for a written statement
from Starr about Epstein’s past conviction. Director of Marketing and
Communications Johnny D. Cargill emailed Starr, who responded with a
preliminary quote, with an official comment “forthcoming,” he said.
“Since paying his debt to society, Jeffrey has led a truly exemplary
life and has moved on from this chapter over ten years ago,” Starr’s email reads. “He was a valued client of my former firm and remains to this day a trusted personal friend.”
The College of Dental Medicine has “taken action” against two
officials affiliated with Columbia who maintained relationships with
convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, the Office of Public Affairs
announced in a Wednesday statement.
College of Dental Medicine administrators helped Karyna Shuliak, Dental ’15, gain admission in 2012 after she was initially rejected
earlier that year. Epstein referred to Shuliak as his girlfriend in at
least one email released by the Department of Justice on Jan. 30.
College
of Dental Medicine administrators had also solicited donations from
Epstein. On Aug. 16, 2012, three months after Shuliak was admitted to
the school, Epstein advanced $100,000 to a fund named after Ira Lamster,
then-dean of the College of Dental Medicine. Lamster served as dean
from 2001 to 2012 and was another administrator involved with Shuliak’s
acceptance. He left the University voluntarily in 2017.
Lamster
acknowledged alerting the admissions team to Shuliak’s “interest” in a
Columbia dental training program for international students after
Epstein asked him to. “At that time we were pursuing a major gift from
JE, and it was logical to agree to JE’s request,” Lamster wrote in a
statement to Spectator. “It was made clear to the admissions director,
however, that she should be judged on the merits of her application.”
Dr.
Thomas Magnani, Dental ’80, has been officially removed by Columbia as
part of this action. A former College of Dental Medicine professor and
admissions review committee member, he helped admit Shuliak and
solicited funds from Epstein. Magnani, who was Epstein’s dentist,
appears earlier in a 2011 correspondence
as a point of connection between Epstein’s assistant, Lesley Groff, and
Columbia administrators. In April 2011, Groff and senior administrators
arranged a special tour of the College of Dental Medicine for Shuliak
as a “favor” to Magnani, according to the emails.
The
other College of Dental Medicine official Columbia claims to have taken
actions against is Letty Moss-Salentijn, the Edward V. Zegarelli
Professor of Dental Medicine.
Moss-Salentijn,
the vice dean for curricular innovation and interprofessional
education, “will step down from her administrative roles,” Wednesday’s
statement reads. The University did not state whether Moss-Salentijn
will continue teaching at Columbia.
Attorney
General Pam Bondi falsely claimed in her sworn testimony to Congress
Wednesday that Jeffrey Epstein’s partner in child *** trafficking was
not transferred to a “lower-level” prison, even though her Justice
Department moved Ghislaine Maxwell to a “Club Fed”-type facility last
summer.
Days after meeting with
Bondi’s deputy and former Donald Trump defense lawyer Todd Blanche,
Maxwell was transferred from Tallahassee, Florida, to the Federal Prison
Camp in Bryan, Texas. Tallahassee is a low-security prison, but FPC
Bryan is an even more relaxed “minimum-security” facility and is
typically meant for nonviolent, white-collar criminals in their final
months of captivity.
Bondi, like
all witnesses who appear before Congress, began her testimony by
agreeing to answer questions truthfully “under penalty of perjury” at
the start of her appearance before the House Judiciary Committee.
So Pam's accidentally outed an undercover FBI agent
and she's betrayed the survivors by releasing their names and
additional information and on top of that? She perjured herself
Wednesday when she appeared before the House Judiciary Committee.
She also outed herself as spying on members of Congress. As we noted yesterday:
Attorney General Pam Bondi at a House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday seemed to have a printout of Rep. Pramila Jayapal’s history of searches of the Department of Justice’s database of documents related to the notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Photos
of a black binder that Bondi had at the hearing showed the words
“Jayapal Pramila Search History” and a list of documents whose numbers
coincide with the number of Epstein files.
Jayapal,
a Washington state Democrat who sits on the Judiciary Committee, and
other members of Congress have visited the DOJ in recent days to view
documents related to Epstein that are not available to the public.
Jayapal blasted Bondi in a post on X on Wednesday evening.
“It
is totally inappropriate and against the separations of powers for the
DOJ to surveil us as we search the Epstein files,” Jayapal wrote.
“Bondi showed up today with a burn book that held a printed search
history of exactly what emails I searched,” the congresswoman said.
“That is outrageous and I intend to pursue this and stop this spying on members.”
House
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., when asked by MS Now if Bondi’s alleged
action was appropriate, at first said, “I’m not going to comment on an
allegation that is unsubstantiated. I don’t know anything about it.”
“I haven’t seen or heard anything about that, but that would be inappropriate if it happened,” Johnson said.
Washington, D.C. (February
11, 2026)—Today, Rep. Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the House
Committee on the Judiciary, issued the following statement after
photographs revealed that Attorney General Pam Bondi has tracked the
search history of Members of Congress who have reviewed the unredacted
Epstein files at a satellite office of the Department of Justice:
"The
Department of Justice has required Members of Congress who wish to
review the slightly-less-redacted Epstein files to travel to a DOJ
annex, sit at one of four DOJ-owned computers, use a clunky and
convoluted software system provided by DOJ, and search for and read
documents while DOJ staffers look over our shoulders. It is the perfect
set up for DOJ to spy on Members’ review, monitoring, recording, and
logging every document we choose to pull up.
“Today, photographs of Attorney General Bondi’s ‘burn book’
confirmed my suspicions. These photos show Bondi came to our hearing
with a document entitled ‘Jayapal Pramila Search History’ and then
listed the documents my colleague, Rep. Jayapal, reviewed while at DOJ,
apparently to prepare the Attorney General for any questions Rep.
Jayapal might ask.
“Not only has the
Department of Justice illegally withheld documents from Congress and
the American people. Not only has Attorney General Bondi failed to bring
a single indictment against a single co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein
and Ghislaine Maxwell. But now Bondi and her team are spying on Members
of Congress conducting oversight in yet another blatant attempt to
intrude into Congress’s oversight processes.
“It
is an outrage that DOJ is tracking Members’ investigative steps
undertaken to ensure that DOJ is complying with the Epstein File
Transparency Act and using this information for the Attorney General’s
embarrassing polemical purposes. DOJ must immediately cease tracking any
Members’ searches, open up the Epstein review to senior congressional
staff, and publicly release all files—with all the survivors’
information, and only the survivors’ information, properly redacted—as
required by federal law. I will also be asking the DOJ Inspector General
to open an inquiry into this outrageous abuse of power. Let us use this
humiliating disclosure about the Attorney General's work ethics to do a
complete reset on the Epstein coverup.”
INSKEEP: What are your thoughts about that paper with your search history in the attorney general's hand?
JAYAPAL:
Well, I think it's completely against the separation of powers. We are
supposed to be able to, as lawmakers, go in, review the files, take
whatever we want from there, not be surveilled and spied on by the
Department of Justice. And it's - that was my search history. It was
much more extensive than that, but that was the first page. And she
clearly came in prepared with that information. In fact, I think she
probably opened it up to us on Monday, two days before the hearing, so
she could see what we were going to search and ask her about. Totally
unacceptable. And we've asked for, immediately, a change in the process
so that the DOJ is not spying on us.
INSKEEP: House Speaker
Mike Johnson was asked about this. He said, I know nothing about it.
Not going to comment on it. But if it happened, it's inappropriate. Are
you getting any support from Republicans on that?
JAYAPAL:
Yeah. I actually spoke to Mike last night about this, and I do think
that there is bipartisan agreement that we should be able to review
those files without the Department of Justice surveilling us. And that's
exactly what she was doing, and I think she was doing it in preparation
for the hearing. But also, I think they want to know what we're going
to - what we're pulling up so that they can use it in some way. That was
in her Burn Book. That's what we call that binder with all the
opposition research against us that she kept trying to insult different
members of Congress with. And I think that she - you know, I think there
is bipartisan support to say this cannot continue to happen, and we
need a whole new process for how we review these files and who tracks,
you know, any of this.
INSKEEP: Just so I understand - and
he'll speak for himself - but did you understand Speaker Johnson to be
on board with taking some kind of action here?
JAYAPAL:
Well, I think I'll just - I won't say what he said to me, but I'll just
say what he said in the public quote. And I showed him and told him
exactly what had happened and that the search was my search, and it
clearly was surveilling.
INSKEEP: Now, you raised in the
hearing the failure to redact the names of victims and then the
redaction of other people who are in the files, one of them a man named
Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem. As far as I could tell, you didn't get an
answer about that particular case, but you brought it up in any case.
What draws that particular redaction to your attention?
JAYAPAL:
Well, the point I was trying to make is that the Transparency Act that
we passed in Congress specifically said you have to redact the private
information of survivors and you have to not redact the private
information, the personal information of any potential predators or
co-conspirators. And that's clearly what that email indicated, is that
there was a powerful person who was being protected. He happened to - as
I mentioned in my remarks, he happened to also be somebody with
financial ties to Donald Trump and personal ties to Steve Bannon. And so
I wanted to get her answer about why she was violating - allowing the
violation of the law in both these instances, the nonredaction of that
personal information of survivors and then the redaction of powerful
people that she seemed to be protecting. She didn't want to answer that
question.
The most important thing to me was getting her to
turn around to the survivors and apologize to them because the harm is
irreparable. That information is out there now. Nude photographs are out
there. Even if the Department of Justice redacts that, that does not
bring justice to the survivors. And, you know, it was just stunning to
me that she refused to turn to them and take responsibility for what her
Department of Justice had done to re-traumatize these survivors.
A powerful photo is circulating on social media that many are saying
is a stark symbol of the administration’s lack of concern for the
Epstein victims.
The photo shows a group of Epstein survivors raising their hands
after Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D) asked who had not had the opportunity to
meet with the Justice Department. Attorney General Pam Bondi, who was
being questioned during a bizarre and combative House Judiciary
Committee hearing, keeps her head down and her back turned to the
victims, refusing to look at them.
[. . .]
To many, the photo has become representative of Bondi’s attitude
throughout the hearing – and of the administration’s attitude toward the
Epstein controversy overall.
U.S. officials made new disclosures from the
Epstein files on Monday, naming who they believe was the recipient
behind a disturbing email sent by the deceased financier and sex
criminal Jeffrey Epstein, in which he referenced a supposed “torture
video.”
That name is Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, one of the
Emirates’ most powerful business figures, who, for years, maintained a
relationship with Epstein, with the communications often including
explicit content, according to documents recently released by the U.S.
Justice Department.
The
latest revelation comes after Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky. and Rep. Ro
Khanna, D-Calif. reviewed unredacted documents at the Justice Department
on Monday.
Massie posted a screenshot of the email on the social
media platform X. In the email, Epstein wrote to a redacted recipient:
“where are you? Are you ok, I loved the torture video.” The
reply stated: “I am in china I will be in the US 2nd week of May.”
Additionally, the two often appeared to be discussing in-person meetings. On several occasions,
Sulayem corresponded with Epstein about Little St. James,
Epstein’s private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands, which prosecutors
allege was used as a base for sex trafficking.
Moving over to Chump's war on immigrants, Rhian Lubin (INDEPENDENT) reports on Chump's latest immigration move -- removing citizenship from naturalized citizens:
The
Trump administration is moving ahead with plans to strip some
foreign-born Americans of their citizenship, with a target of 200 cases a
month, according to a report.
In December
2025, guidance was provided to offices of U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, the agency within the Department of Homeland
Security, requesting that they “supply the Office of Immigration
Litigation with 100-200 denaturalization cases per month” in 2026.
The plans are now in motion, according to NBC News.
Experts with the immigration agency have reportedly been carrying out
visits to offices around the country and reassigning staff to review
whether some citizens processed there could be denaturalized, people
familiar with the plans told the outlet.
It is
rare to strip someone of their citizenship. Between 1990 and 2017, there
were only 11 denaturalization cases on average each year, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.
Individuals
may only be legally stripped of their U.S. citizenship for a few
specific reasons, such as if they committed fraud during the citizenship
application process.
Trump
has long been preoccupied with the notion of citizenship — who gets to
be an American and who doesn’t — and has expressed displeasure with
immigrants from what he calls third world nations. He is separately
seeking the power to strip citizenship from those born to foreigners in
the U.S., though “birthright citizenship” appears in the Constitution.
The Supreme Court is weighing his argument.
Trump’s
Truth Social message to Americans on Thanksgiving Day last year was
that he would remove anyone who wasn’t a “net asset” to the U.S. “or is
incapable of loving our Country, end all Federal benefits and subsidies
to noncitizens of our Country, denaturalize migrants who undermine
domestic tranquility, and deport any Foreign National who is a public
charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western Civilization.”
Roughly
800,000 people become naturalized citizens every year, according to
DHS. To become a naturalized citizen, a candidate must be over 18,
already be a legal permanent resident, speak English, know U.S. history
and social studies and have “good moral character,” according to the
Immigration and Naturalization Act.
Foreign-born
Americans were generally stripped of citizenship only if they were
found to have committed fraud during their application processes. In
past decades, those cases focused on ferreting out former Nazis who fled
to the U.S. after World War II under false pretenses. Both Democratic
and Republican administrations have sought to increase investigations,
but it’s still rare for a reason, a former USCIS official said.
ICE lies. Never forget that fact. Jem Bartholomew (GUARDIAN) notes one of their imploding lies, "Marimar
Martinez, a US citizen, was shot five times by a border patrol agent in
October while in her vehicle. She was charged with a felony after
officials at the Department of Homeland Security accused her of trying
to ram agents with her vehicle. But the case was dismissed after video
evidence emerged showing that an agent had steered his vehicle into
Martinez’s car." David Edwards (RAW STORY) notes,
"President Donald Trump appeared personally supportive of an
immigration agent who shot an innocent immigrant five times, according
to evidence provided by her attorneys. At a press conference on
Wednesday, attorneys for Marimar Martinez announced that their client
was suing the U.S. government for shooting her last October after a
border patrol agent's SUV allegedly swerved into her vehicle. Agents
later claimed that Martinez had rammed them." Evan Williams (TAG24 NEWS) notes
that "Former Border Patrol commander-at-large Gregory Bovino reportedly
emailed his congratulations to the Customs and Border Protection
officer who shot a woman five times in Chicago. 'Good afternoon. I'd
like to extend an offer for you to extend your retirement beyond age
57,' a leaked email sent by Bovino to Charles Exum, the agent who shot Marimar Martinez five times on October 4, 2025." Renee Hickman (REUTERS) explains,
"Video, text messages, emails and other records were released by the
U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago late on Tuesday after a district court
judge said that the government had shown 'zero concern' about
Martinez's reputation even after the government dropped the case in
November."
Lawrence O'Donnell did a great segment on Marimar last night as he spoke with her attorney Christopher Parente.
On social media, Barack Obama said
the repeal will leave Americans “less safe, less healthy and less able
to fight climate change – all so the fossil fuel industry can make even
more money”.
The former secretary of state John Kerry called the new rule “un-American”.
“Repealing
the Endangerment Finding takes Orwellian governance to new heights and
invites enormous damage to people and property around the world,” said
Kerry, who also served as Joe Biden’s climate envoy. “Ignoring warning
signs will not stop the storm. It puts more Americans directly in its
path.”
The final rule removes the government’s
ability to impose requirements to track, report and limit
climate-heating pollution from cars and trucks. Transportation is the
largest source of climate pollution in the US.
Meanwhile,
defeat for Chump and his nimby pamby boy Pete Looselips Hegseth. Their
attempt to curtail the free speech of Senator Mark Kelly received a set
back. Elena Moore (NPR) reports:
A federal judge in Washington, D.C., has granted Sen. Mark Kelly's
request for a preliminary injunction against Pete Hegseth, in a lawsuit
filed by the Arizona Democrat accusing the defense secretary of trying
to punish him for his political speech.
Kelly, a former Navy
Captain, sued Hegseth in January, one week after the defense secretary
moved to formally censure him for participating in a video where he and several Democratic lawmakers told U.S. servicemembers they can refuse illegal orders.
"Our rules are clear. You can refuse illegal orders," Kelly says in the video.
Hegseth’s speech-suppressive campaign against Kelly is extraordinary,
and Judge Leon met the moment by clearly outlining its breathtaking
consequences for those of us who served our nation in uniform. He noted
that it “threatened the constitutional liberties of millions of military
retirees.”
In early January, Hegseth issued a formal “letter of censure”
against Kelly, a Navy combat veteran and astronaut who honorably
retired in 2011 after decades of active-duty service. Hegseth claimed
that Kelly’s various public critiques of the Pentagon last year —
including his appearance in a video with five other military veteran lawmakers
urging service members to disobey unlawful orders — constituted conduct
both prejudicial to good order and discipline plus conduct unbecoming
an officer. Both crimes are unique to the military.
Hegseth’s letter, in addition to characterizing Kelly’s speech as
violative of military law, directed Pentagon proceedings to revisit
Kelly’s retired rank, even though federal law does not allow administrative rank reduction
based on postretirement conduct. Hegseth also threatened criminal
prosecution if the senator continued making public comments, a dangerous
turn given that the military criminal code extends to retirees (thanks to Civil War-era federal law that needs to be excised) and contains speech crimes with no analog in the civilian world.
Notably, Hegseth pursued this military administrative action solely
against Kelly, and not the five other military veterans in the so-called
seditious six
video, because of Kelly’s status as a retiree. Like all military
retirees with at least 20 years of honorable active-duty service, Kelly
earns a pension based on his last rank while on active duty and remains
subject to military criminal jurisdiction.
Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:
Murray: “The
American people need us to meet this moment. We need to rein in ICE and
CBP. We need to call out the avalanche of lies. And most importantly, we
need to stand up for our communities—because they are being terrorized
by their own government.”
Murray: “If
Republicans want Democratic votes to fix that—then they need to
understand half-measures will not cut it. What Democrats are demanding
is reasonable and it is necessary. None of what we are asking for is
extreme for local law enforcement—so why don’t those basic standards
apply to ICE. There’s no good answer. Sorry—but I don’t care if Stephen
Miller wants a special force that’s empowered to beat up and detain or
shoot whomever he doesn’t like. In America, we believe in due process.
We believe in our Constitution. We believe in law and order—safe
streets, law enforcement we can trust. If you don’t like that? Go to
Russia.”
Murray: “If
ICE and CBP do not want to be called secret police—then they should not
be wearing masks and should be carrying identification 24/7. If they do
not want to be accused of kidnapping people—then they should not be
dragging people out of cars and houses without warrants. And if they do
not want to be accused of being lawless—then they need to start
following the law.”
Murray: “Democrats
have made abundantly clear: we cannot continue funding a rogue
Department without substantial reforms. Accountability at DHS must be
written into law… We’ve put forth incredibly reasonable reforms… But we
cannot kick the can down the road as Republicans want us to do. The time
to rein in these rogue agencies is right now.”
Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray
(D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, took to the
Senate floor to speak about ICE and CBP’s flagrant abuses of Americans’
basic constitutional rights—and the imperative for Congress to take
action to rein in the agencies. She made clear that while she remains at
the table to negotiate key reforms the American people are demanding,
she will not support a stopgap funding bill to continue the unacceptable
status quo, and she underscored that Republicans and the White House
need to work with Democrats to finalize a bill that reins in ICE and
CBP.
Senator Murray’s remarks, as delivered, are below:
“What we have seen over the last many months is downright un-American:
masked federal agents trampling people’s First, Second, and Fourth
Amendment rights and more, breaking into people’s cars, teargassing
protestors, using children as bargaining chips, and of course, killing
American citizens in broad daylight.
“It is clear to just about everyone in every part of this
country that—ICE and CBP are out of control—and must be reined in. Clear
to everyone that is except maybe some Republicans in Congress.
“You know, for years, my colleagues on the other side of the aisle
have warned of government overreach and rogue federal agencies trampling
Americans’ constitutional rights. They’ve gone to great lengths to
speak out against ‘government tyranny’ when we ask mega corporations not
to pollute. And you can bet they will scream to high heaven about
‘injustice’ and ‘government thugs’ when we ask billionaires to pay their
fair share in taxes. Seriously! They will raise a racket for
billionaires!
“But the truth is, the government tyranny Republicans long
warned about is here—and many of them are just silent, they enabled it
by cutting a $140 billion blank check for Secretary Noem to deploy
masked ICE and CBP agents to terrorize our communities. ICE was spending
beyond their funded level, so last summer Republicans handed Kristi
Noem enough cash to fund an army.
“And she is using that blank check to send masked men going
door-to-door asking for papers, charging into houses without a warrant,
breaking car windows without a reason, staking out school zones, and
dragging citizens and legal residents hundreds of miles away without so
much as confirming their immigration status, or charging them with a
crime.
“If Republicans are serious about their warnings on
government tyranny, they must work with us to put an end to the insane
attacks we’ve seen, including on Americans’ most basic rights. But right
now, we still have some Republicans—who are seriously insisting masks
have to stay on Trump’s secret police, and who are insisting DHS cannot
be required to get judicial warrants before breaking into your home.
“We have a few Republicans acknowledging that the violence we’ve seen
from ICE and CBP that must end, But we need to see more real, tangible
progress to rein these agencies in through legislation—basic constraints
upheld in law.
“Democrats are not asking for the moon—we are not trying to
overhaul immigration laws. We are insisting on basic measures to protect
our constitutional rights and hold these agencies accountable to some
of the basic standards as local police.
“After all, if ICE and CBP do not want to be called secret
police—then they should not be wearing masks and should be carrying
identification 24/7. If they do not want to be accused of kidnapping
people—then they should not be dragging people out of cars and houses
without warrants. And if they do not want to be accused of being
lawless—then they need to start following the law. But they have been
ignoring law after law, and court after court.
“In a recent decision, a Bush-appointed judge—a former Scalia
clerk!—in Minnesota appended a list of 96 court orders that ICE has
violated. What else do you call that—except a rogue agency.
“The American people need us to meet this moment. We need to
rein in ICE and CBP. We need to call out the avalanche of lies. And most
importantly, we need to stand up for our communities—because they are
being terrorized by their own government.
“It is not ‘targeted law enforcement’ when Trump sends 8,000 federal
agents into one city—and has them go door-to-door. Especially not when
agents literally tell people they are asking for papers solely because
of how someone looks or speaks.
“It is not about our immigration laws when Trump is grabbing
people who are following the law, people who have green cards in the
mail, and even people who are U.S. citizens. It is not about stopping
violent criminals when ICE is staking out schools and grabbing parents
during pick up. In fact, just this week, we saw that the
administration’s own data shows that only a tiny fraction of people they
have detained are violent criminals.
“They have also taken military spouses, taken parents of Marines,
they have even taken veterans. In fact, last week—they deported a
veteran. Do my colleagues hear me here? Trump deported a veteran! Think
about that. Sit with that. We cannot look away from what is happening in
this country. Men who fought for our freedom—are being denied theirs. Being exiled from the country they risked their life for.
“Meanwhile, children—kids who have done nothing wrong—are having
their parents snatched away from them or are being snatched up
themselves in a cruel ploy to use them as leverage.
“Given how outrageous, how lawless, how heartlessly un-American,
Trump’s crackdown has become, it’s clear why people across the country
are demanding action. And I don’t just mean in opinion polls—though the
polls do actually overwhelmingly support action to rein in ICE, and even
Republican voters think ICE has gone way too far.
“But, I also mean people are demanding action in that great
American way— protesting! Using their voice. Speaking out. Putting a
spotlight on what ICE and CBP are doing to their friends and to their
neighbors. And the Trump Administration’s response to that great
American tradition—the First Amendment in action—has been about as
unhinged, and un-American as it gets.
“The level of wanton violence and lawlessness we are seeing out of
ICE and CBP is without comparison in recent U.S. history. This is the
kind of stuff you expect out of Putin’s Russia. Agents are saying things
to protestors like, ‘I will put a bullet in your head if you don’t shut
up,’ or ‘You raise your voice… I erase your voice.’ And, Mr. President,
the actions are even worse than the words.
“How many peaceful protestors have been tear gassed before
Republicans think it’s a problem? How many children? Wasn’t the video of
a drive-by gassing bad enough? What about the photo of the man pinned
to the ground, getting sprayed in his face? How many car windows have to
be shattered, and people dragged from their cars? No warrant—no
nothing!
“Were you not outraged to see that woman on the way to a doctor’s
appointment—dragged out of her vehicle for no reason? Were you not
appalled to learn agents shattered a glass car window, dragged away a
mother, and left a one-month-old baby in the back of the vehicle,
blanket covered in glass shards? Were you not alarmed—to watch an agent
point a rifle at the car window of someone sitting in their own driveway
and bust out the window with a gun?
“How many people does ICE have to detain before Republicans stop
sitting on their hands? How many kids do they have to tackle—like the
young man at the Target that they slammed to the ground, marched off
with, and then dropped him off miles away with no charges once they
realized he was a U.S. citizen. There’s also the time they tackled a
pregnant woman, or the time they marched a citizen out of his house in
his underwear—in freezing weather.
“Agents have recklessly caused car accidents, only to arrest the
person they ran into and then make things up. Agents have even tried to
round up witnesses of their crimes and rush them out of state, and
through deportation, before they can testify at a trial.
“How many people have to be murdered by federal agents in
cold blood—until Republicans join us to stop this tyranny? And how many
lies will Republicans tolerate? Because we have witnessed brazen, and
dangerous, lies from this administration. They lied about Alex Pretti
brandishing a gun—when he clearly never touched it. They lied about
Renee Good trying to target agents with her car—when she was clearly
just trying to drive away.
“They lied about a young woman ramming CBP agents before they shot
her—only to drop the case against her. Newly released body cam footage
shows the agent turned his wheel toward her vehicle. They said that an
L.A. man was shot after he ‘weaponized his vehicle and began ramming law
enforcement’—but body cam footage shows an agent’s gun go off by
accident as he switched hands. They said someone in detainment died from
suicide—when an autopsy found it was a homicide. They said someone got
eight fractures in his skull from running into a wall on purpose—the man
says he was beaten. Greg Bovino said he deployed tear gas on a crowd
after someone threw a rock at him—only to admit the truth in court when
confronted by video evidence.
“Mr. President, the list goes on, and on. And that’s just the lies we know about! Enough. Law
enforcement cannot be lawless—but that’s exactly what we are seeing
from ICE and CBP. And us Democrats have made abundantly clear: we cannot
continue funding a rogue Department without substantial reforms.
Accountability at DHS must be written into law.
“Now, my Democratic counterparts and I have been at the table
the whole time. We’ve put forth incredibly reasonable reforms. Reforms
that would increase accountability and transparency and compliance with
constitutional rights. Reforms that do not impact DHS’s ability to
detain convicted, violent criminals. And we remain committed and ready
to land a funding bill that enshrines those reforms into law—and ensures
FEMA, TSA, and other important functions get funded.
“But we cannot kick the can down the road as Republicans want
us to do. The time to rein in these rogue agencies is right now. We
cannot waste another moment—and if Republicans refuse to make the
changes the American people are demanding, they are forcing a Republican
shutdown of DHS.
“The chaos, the brutality—all of it has happened at the
explicit direction of this President and a Republican Congress that
wrote him a blank check for ICE and CBP.
“If Republicans want Democratic votes to fix that—then they
need to understand half-measures will not cut it. What Democrats are
demanding is reasonable and it is necessary. None of what we are asking
for is extreme for local law enforcement—so why don’t those basic
standards apply to ICE. There’s no good answer. Sorry—but I don’t care
if Stephen Miller wants a special force that’s empowered to beat up and
detain or shoot whomever he doesn’t like.
“In America, we believe in due process. We believe in our
Constitution. We believe in law and order—safe streets, law enforcement
we can trust. If you don’t like that? Go to Russia.
“So, Democrats are focused on getting a bill—but it has to be a bill
that reins in the abuses we are seeing from ICE and CBP. And until a
bill is negotiated, we cannot kick the can down the road and give
license to Noem to continue the chaos with another CR that continues
funding for ICE and CBP.
“Americans are demanding accountability, and we will settle for nothing less.
“And so, Mr. President, given the track record of lawlessness
from ICE and CBP—which seems to be growing longer every single day. I
will be voting no on the procedural vote today—and on Republicans’
inadequate proposal.
“The alleged withdrawal from Minneapolis is long-overdue—but
it is not nearly enough to end the chaos and the violence we are seeing
nationwide.
“We need real reform. We cannot let the Trump Administration act like
things are business-as-usual when it is tear gassing peaceful
protestors, detaining people in a complete violation of their rights,
and even murdering citizens in cold blood. We cannot trust the same
people who are lying about what is happening, to be truthful about
accountability. We cannot trust the same administration that is
purposefully trampling our rights, and causing this chaos—to end it.
“Late last night, we received more details on the White
House’s proposal—and what’s clear at this point: it does not come close
to addressing Americans’ grave concerns about how ICE and Border Patrol
are operating. So, Mr. President, we need to see a lot more movement to
rein in these rogue agencies.
“So, Congress has to do its job—and I will continue to
negotiate in good faith to deliver the reform and accountability we need
to see. But we have to stop this outrageous tyranny.”