bennito l. kelty ('raw story') reports:
Trump's Chief of Staff Susie Wiles will soon quit her high-level White House post, insiders told the Daily Mail.
Wiles is preparing to quit because she was "vehemently" opposed to the promotion of Bill Pulte from the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency to the role of acting Director of National Intelligence, three White House insiders told the Daily Mail.
She perceived it as an "insult" when Trump followed through on the Pulte promotion, and Trump had already been starting to "resent" her opposition, the Mail reported.
"She is loyal to Trump, but he is now basically saying, 'Look, Ma, you are not the boss of me,'" an insider told the Mail.
in a perfect world, susie wiles would appear before congress and bury chump by revealing all of his corruption and crimes.
'general hospital'?
lucas got the photographs of sonny & laura out of sidwell's safe and sonny burned them so it now seems over. sonny wants to kill sidwell now but laura wants to take sidwell down and put him behind bars.
sonny asked what the plan was? laura replied, 'i know what i need to do and i can't wait to do it.'
sidwell and ross talked about britta. they need her to finish the project. or some 1 like her ...
the episode ends with ross kidnapping britt's mother dr. liesl obrecht from the hospital parking lot.
alexis tells brook lyn and chase that she found phoebe's father and he wants a closed adoption and he doesn't want his identity revealed. brook is reluctant to go along with that because gio was supposed to be a closed adoption; however, he found out that she was his mother. but chase agrees to it and brook goes along.
chase's phone rings. it's willow. she's got some government fgure to sign off on chase and brook lyn being named parents. she's bringing the papers over to alexis' office right now.
brook goes out to the hallway and texts lucy that she needs to meet immediately.
brook whines to lucy that willow is trying to steal her husband. lucy told her that she was the master of adultry and she would help brook make willow see how much harm brook lyn can do to her.
ethan talked to ava about the need for her not to repeat what she and alexis learned in nyc - that he is the father of phoebe. ava thinks this is a set up, that ethan's just waiting to blackmail chase and brook lyn for money after they adopt phoebe. but she agrees to keep ethan's secret for now.
let's close with c.i.'s 'The Snapshot:'
Matt Standal:
Just 50 miles from the Canadian border, the town of Froid is home to less than 200 people.
For more than a decade, Roberto Orozco-Ramirez has been one of them.
Marvin Qualley:
Roberto's our neighbor. He's a part of our community.
Matt Standal:
Over the years, Roberto has come to mean a lot of things to a lot of people here. He's a local diesel mechanic, little league coach, and father of four boys.
Sheri Crain:
Great businessman. He's my neighbor, been my neighbor next door for 11 years.
Matt Standal:
But what residents of Froid didn't know until recently is that Roberto is also an undocumented immigrant who had been deported back in 2009.
Keith Nordlund:
Up until six months ago, I didn't know Roberto was illegal.
Matt Standal:
Neighbor Keith Nordlund says Border Patrol vehicles started showing up around town in early January.
Keith Nordlund:
We had -- 24 hours a day, seven days a week, we had at least two Border Patrolmen in our town.
Matt Standal:
Agents staked out Roberto's house and, according to his neighbors, even harassed Roberto's children.
Keith Nordlund:
I personally don't believe that's right. Them four boys are American citizens.
Matt Standal:
Roberto turned himself in on January 25. The government charged him with illegal reentry and immediately took him into detention, telling Montana PBS that this enforcement action represents a community safety priority.
Keith Nordlund:
The beef is donated by local ranchers.
Matt Standal:
Within days, Keith Nordlund found himself organizing the biggest fund-raiser this town had ever seen to help Roberto. More people showed up to the Froid Community Center than the town has residents. They shared a meal. They bid on hay and gravel and tools, raising thousands of dollars for Roberto's family.
A separate legal fund raised thousands more.
Roberto Orozco-Lozcano Jr.:
It's really hard seeing that now he's in jail.
Matt Standal:
Roberto Orozco Jr. is Roberto's oldest son. He says his father fled cartel violence in Mexico as a teenager and came here to build a better life.
Roberto Orozco-Lozcano Jr.:
It's incredible seeing such a hardworking man, I mean, my dad. being in a situation like this. I just don't find it very fair.
Matt Standal:
When Montana attorney Laura Christoffersen heard about Roberto, she says she began studying immigration law and hired an expert thanks to those private donations. And what they found changed everything.
Laura Christoffersen, Attorney:
What we believe is that, even in 2009, at the time of his first deportation, he was not afforded due process, which means he was illegally removed.
Matt Standal:
Christoffersen says she found mistake after mistake in the way federal authorities handled Roberto's deportation and says, since January, ICE agents have repeatedly violated his rights.
Laura Christoffersen:
I think people should understand that this is the person who's been in the U.S. more than 25 years, raised a family with four U.S. citizen children who are contributing members of our community. They pay taxes. They obey the rules. They follow the law. They don't take from our society.
Matt Standal:
In this deep red part of the state, there are mixed feelings about Roberto's legal status. But Keith Nordlund says this ordeal has caused him to question some long-held political beliefs.
Keith Nordlund:
I'm not OK that Roberto was here illegally. I don't believe that's right. However, our system is so broken that a guy like Roberto that's came here, has worked his butt off, has built a business, he's thriving in a niche, and he is a valuable asset to our community, how is there not a way for him to be legal?
His lawyer laid out what was happening. “They are doing this now more and more—moving people without any notice,” he wrote to the family in an email. The transfers, he explained, can block people like Mohamed from speaking with an attorney and make it difficult to file legal petitions in the right jurisdiction, while distressing families. “This is cruelty,” he wrote.
Quick and repeated transfers have become more common in President Donald Trump’s second term, a Marshall Project investigation has found. From the final year of the Biden administration to the first year of Trump’s latest term, the number of people transferred five or more times more than tripled. The number of people transferred out of state within 24 hours more than doubled, according to a Marshall Project analysis of ICE detention data obtained by the Deportation Data Project.
Immigration lawyers say the many transfers not only cause undue suffering for people being detained and their families but have significantly undermined due process protections. Because detainees have limited access to phones while in transit, and ICE’s detainee locator does not always reflect their real-time location, immigration attorneys say rapid transfers can leave people unreachable for hours or even days. Families can lose track of their relatives, while lawyers struggle to locate or speak with clients.
During those gaps, attorneys say, some detainees have been pressured to sign forms affecting their immigration cases before they can speak with counsel.
ICYMI: Murray, Kaptur Asked GAO to Look Into Energy Department’s Decision to Steer Hundreds of Millions of Dollars Away from Wind, Solar in Defiance of Spending Law
Washington, D.C. — Today, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) concluded that the Department of Energy’s (DOE) decision last year to steer hundreds of millions of dollars provided by Congress in fiscal year 2025 for the research and development of clean energy sources toward energy sources favored by Secretary Chris Wright violated the law.
GAO’s investigation into the matter was requested last July by Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development, and Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (D-OH-09), Ranking Member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development.
In a statement responding to the decision, Senator Murray and Congresswoman Kaptur said:
“Today, GAO confirmed what’s been clear from the start: the Trump administration broke the law when it gutted investments in affordable, clean energy. Secretary Wright unilaterally rewrote a spending bill signed into law by President Trump, all so he could benefit handpicked industries at the expense of clean energy research Americans are counting on to lower their energy bills. GAO has made clear that this was not merely a policy choice—it was a clear violation of appropriations law.
“The Department of Energy cannot simply ignore the law because the Secretary has a vendetta against the most affordable energy sources. American families have paid the price for this lawbreaking—in higher energy costs, in canceled university and industry research awards, and in national lab scientists who lost their jobs. The administration must take steps to immediately comply with the law, and we must work on a bipartisan basis to insist the Department follows the law.”
In fiscal year 2024, Congress provided $137 million for DOE to support wind energy and $318 million to support solar energy. The fiscal year 2025 full-year continuing resolution—written by House Republicans and signed into law by President Trump in March 2025—continued those funding levels. However, in a spend plan made public on July 2, 2025, the Trump administration revealed it was steering hundreds of millions of dollars away from congressionally directed clean energy technologies to other, favored industries. Rather than fund wind at the enacted level of $137 million, the administration allocated just $29.8 million – a 78% cut. Rather than fund solar at the enacted level of $318 million, it allocated just $41.9 million – an 87% cut.
On July 28, 2025, Kaptur and Murray formally asked GAO to issue a legal decision on whether DOE’s FY2025 spend plan violated the Purpose Statute—which requires that appropriations be used only for the purposes for which they were provided—and the Antideficiency Act, which prohibits agencies from obligating funds in excess of available appropriations.
On February 25, 2026, as DOE began obligating funds in defiance of the law—including issuing a Notice of Funding Opportunity making $146.5 million in FY2025 funds available for geothermal energy despite Congress providing only $118 million—Kaptur and Murray renewed their GAO referral and called on the Department to immediately reverse course. Today’s GAO legal decision responds to that request.
In its decision today, GAO stated: “DOE is required to obligate and expend its FY 2025 appropriations in accordance with the referenced congressional control point amounts in the FY 2024 explanatory statement. …. To the extent that DOE obligated or expended FY 2025 funds in excess of appropriated amounts—that is the FY 2024 levels described above—DOE should report an Antideficiency Act violation.”
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