ReportWire

Tag: drugs

  • 4.6 kilos of fentanyl seized in Durham County drug bust

    The Durham County Sheriff’s Office announced that a drug trafficking investigation resulted in the arrest of a man and the seizure of enough fentanyl to kill more than 2.3 million people.

    On Wednesday night, the sheriff’s office’ Anti-Crime and Narcotics unit, with assistance from the State Bureau of Investigation, executed a search warrant at a home on Newland Place.

    Law enforcement officers say they located several weapons, including an AR-15 and an AK-style assault rifle, a large sum of cash and narcotics. In addition to the 4.6 kilos of fentanyl, authorities said they seized 3.8 kilos of marijuana, 215 grams of cocaine, 12 grams of heroin and 23 grams of mushrooms.

    Rodney Ephraim, 49, faces several charges. Those include trafficking in fentanyl and MSDP a controlled substance within 1,000 feet of a school.

    “Two milligrams [of fentanyl] can be a lethal dose,” said Durham County Sheriff Clarence Birkhead. “According to DEA data, one kilo of fentanyl has the potential to kill 500,000 people. When you consider the population of Durham County is just under 350,000, it’s sobering to think of.”

    Authorities are holding Ephraim in the Durham County Detention Center without bond.

    Source link

  • NYC man accused of stealing hundreds of OTC medications in NH spree

    HUDSON, N.H. — A Staten Island man is being held without bail after police said he carried out a coordinated retail theft operation, stealing 455 containers of over-the-counter medications from Walmart and several Hannaford grocery stores before fleeing from officers.

    The Hudson Police said they arrested 28-year-old Yasin Shearin after Walmart employees on Lowell Road reported a “repeat theft suspect” they wanted removed for trespassing. When officers approached him, Shearin displayed a New York driver’s license on his phone, but the photo did not match him, and he struggled to answer questions about his identity, including his Social Security number, according to a police affidavit.

    Police said they linked him to a prior felony theft at the same Walmart involving nearly $1,500 in merchandise on Oct. 29. According to the affidavit, during that prior incident, the store’s asset protection employee took surveillance of Shearin placing items into a tote and walking past all points of sale. The employee told police Shearin appeared to be attempting the same method again on Dec. 17, concealing Zyrtec inside a closed tote.

    Police said the store’s asset protection employee also alleged Shearin had “numerous open cases around the area regarding past thefts with Walmart.”

    As police moved to arrest him, Shearin allegedly resisted and ran from the store. Officers chased him across the parking lot and apprehended him by the nearby McDonald’s.

    Police said Shearin tried to get into a black 2025 Nissan SUV with New York plates during the chase. The vehicle was seized, and a search warrant allegedly uncovered 455 items of over-the-counter medications — Tylenol, Zyrtec, Nexium, Nicorette, Motrin, Dulcolax, Nexium, Pepcid, Breathe Right nasal strips and more — packed into bags.

    Police said they also found marijuana and what they believe to be butane hash oil.

    The affidavit states GPS data obtained from the vehicle showed it had stopped at several Walmart and Hannaford supermarkets in New Hampshire, including locations in Salem, Bedford, Seabrook, Manchester, Derry, Londonderry and Hudson.

    Surveillance footage from the Hudson store showed Shearin entering alone, heading directly to the vitamin and health aisle, and concealing medications in a blue bag hidden inside a shopping cart before walking out without paying, according to the affidavit.

    Police later matched the blue bag to one allegedly seized from the SUV.

    Shearin was arraigned in the 9th Circuit Nashua District Court on Friday. Court documents state he entered a not-guilty plea to willful concealment, a Class A misdemeanor, and no pleas to receiving stolen property ($1,501 or more), a Class A felony, and organized retail crime enterprise and theft by unauthorized taking ($1,001-$1,501), both Class B felonies.

    A judge ordered him held without bail, citing his risk of flight, multiple open cases in other states, and what was described as a safety risk to himself and the community if released.

    Shearin was appointed a public defender, Alex Charles Fernald, who was not immediately available for comment.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social. 

    Aaron Curtis

    Source link

  • Phan brothers murder retrial set to begin Monday, weather permitting

    LOWELL — The murder retrial of Billy, Billoeum, and Channa Phan is officially ready to proceed.

    Jury impanelment is scheduled to begin in Middlesex Superior Court on Monday morning — or Tuesday if the winter storm forces the Kiernan Judicial Center to close.

    The schedule was set on Friday during the final pretrial hearing, where Judge Chris Barry-Smith also denied a defense motion to dismiss the indictment against one of the three brothers, each charged with first-degree murder for the shooting death of 22-year-old Tyrone Phet outside his Lowell home in 2020.

    Barry-Smith rejected the bid by attorney William Dolan, who represents defendant Channa Phan, ruling that although the Middlesex District Attorney’s Office failed to turn over information tied to a gang-motive theory in a timely fashion, the lapse did not rise to the level requiring dismissal.

    The motion stemmed from the prosecution’s recent attempt to broaden the scope of gang‑related evidence in the retrial, namely introducing details about a Sept. 13, 2020 drive‑by shooting at 478 Wilder St.

    Prosecutors have argued the residence functioned as a stash house for the Outlaws, street gang, which they claim the Phan brothers are members of. Due to the shooting, a search warrant was obtained by the Lowell Police for the Wilder Street home, where officers seized guns, ammunition, 200 grams of cocaine, and 100,000 pressed pills containing methamphetamine.

    The shooting — allegedly carried out by rival gang Crazy Mob Family — triggered a retaliatory motive for the killing of Phet less than 24 hours later.

    Phet was not alleged to be a CMF member, but prosecutors contend he lived in the same Spring Avenue building where a CMF member once resided.

    Phet was shot to death in a hail of gunfire while sitting in his car outside the multi-family residence at 55 Spring Ave. Phet — a 2016 Chelmsford High graduate and captain of the football team his senior year — was struck eight times during the shooting.

    The Lowell Police recovered 21 spent shell casings at the scene from two different caliber guns.

    Barry‑Smith said the prosecution’s decision to pursue a broader gang theory in the retrial “not surprisingly” prompted the defense to seek all information police and prosecutors possessed about the Wilder Street shooting and subsequent search warrant.

    Prior to the first trial — which ended in a mistrial after jurors became deadlocked —prosecutors turned over the police report about the incident but not the underlying investigative materials, Barry‑Smith said. That omission was not a major point of contention at the time because the initial trial’s lead prosecutor — former Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Daniel Harren — had elected not to pursue a wide‑ranging gang theory.

    Once the new prosecution team sought to expand that scope, Barry‑Smith said, they were obligated to produce the full set of Wilder Street information — something they did not do until recent weeks.

    “The Commonwealth’s principal shortcoming is that failure to produce Wilder Street information once it determined Wilder Street was relevant to the case,” Barry‑Smith said, adding that a secondary issue was that prosecutors “were not adequately familiar” with what evidence had been turned over during the first four years of the case, leading to a misunderstanding.

    The judge described the discovery violation as the product of “mistake, inadvertence, misunderstanding, and a failure to be fully familiar” with prior disclosures — not an attempt to ambush the defense.

    “It was not delivered, nor was it designed to spring evidence upon the defense,” Barry‑Smith said.

    The judge reiterated that he has already denied the Commonwealth’s request to expand the scope of gang evidence for the retrial, calling the proposed showing “too thin.”

    The Wilder Street material may be considered for rebuttal, but that will depend on how the trial unfolds.

    Because prosecutors have since turned over the missing materials, and because the expanded gang theory will not be permitted, Barry‑Smith said dismissal was not warranted.

    “I don’t find that the District Attorney’s Office’s conduct was purposeful or egregious,” he said.

    As for jury selection, the expectation is it will take two days to get the needed pool of 16 jurors.

    The trial will run daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day, with an hour‑long lunch break. Barry‑Smith said the case is expected to conclude by the end of the week of Feb. 9.

    Middlesex Assistant District Attorney Thomas Brant told Barry-Smith that the prosecution intends to call more than 40 witnesses.

    Brant also raised a scheduling wrinkle: Feb. 8 is Super Bowl Sunday, and with the New England Patriots still in contention for a spot in Super Bowl 60 as of the hearing, juror availability and the scheduling of witnesses could be affected.

    “I don’t care, and my desire is to move the case as quickly as possible, but …” Brant said.

    “I hadn’t thought of that,” Barry‑Smith replied, adding that he may delay the Feb. 9 start time to as late as 10 a.m.

    “I might delay things on that Monday, but I’m not going to call it off,” he said.’

    The Sun will publish weekly wrap-ups on the trial’s progress, with summaries appearing this Sunday and again on Feb. 8. A final story detailing the verdict will follow shortly after the jury reaches a decision, with the latest possible publication date being Feb. 15.

    Follow Aaron Curtis on X @aselahcurtis, or on Bluesky @aaronscurtis.bsky.social. 

    Aaron Curtis

    Source link

  • Man charged with drug trafficking in Rocky Mount; SBI seizes large amounts of heroin, MDMA

    Rocky Mount police have arrested a man as part of an investigation into the selling and distribution of MDMA (ecstasy) in the city.

    John Johnson was identified as a member of an illegal drug operation. His vehicle was searched on Friday as officers found around 1,000 dosage units of MDMA, 73 dosage units of heroin, 37.45 grams of cocaine, 33.75 grams of marijuana and 10 dosage units of Oxycodone. More drugs were found after searching his home and a hotel room, including around 13,000 dosage units of heroin and 890 grams of MDMA. Investigators also seized 15 guns.

    Johnson was charged with trafficking cocaine, trafficking MDMA, possession with intent to sell/deliver heroin, maintaining a dwelling/vehicle for selling controlled substances and carrying a concealed gun. More charges are possible.

    Source link

  • Maduro didn’t flood the US with fentanyl

    A White House social media post misleadingly links deposed Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro with the U.S. fentanyl crisis. 

    The X post includes a video highlighting parents who lost children to fentanyl overdoses thanking President Donald Trump for capturing Maduro.

    “Angel Families thank President Trump for saving lives & capturing Maduro — the kingpin flooding America with deadly fentanyl,” the White House’s Jan. 5 X post said. “Justice is being served.”

    U.S. troops captured Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, at their Caracas home in the early hours of Jan. 3. The two pleaded not guilty to drug trafficking charges Jan. 5 in New York federal court.

    The White House post isn’t the first time the Trump administration blamed Maduro for trafficking fentanyl to the U.S. Trump has cited the potent synthetic opioid that is responsible for most U.S. drug overdose deaths to justify pressure on Venezuela in the months before Maduro’s capture.

    But neither Venezuela nor Maduro plays a role in smuggling fentanyl to the U.S. The majority of U.S. fentanyl comes from Mexico and is made with chemicals from China, according to U.S. government reports and drug policy experts.

    The White House did not respond to PolitiFact’s request for comment.

    Vice President JD Vance addressed fentanyl in a Jan. 4 X post, the day before the White House’s post, saying cocaine is “the main drug trafficked out of Venezuela,” and, “Yes, a lot of fentanyl is coming out of Mexico. That continues to be a focus of our policy in Mexico and is a reason why President Trump shut the border on day one.” 

    Drug experts previously told PolitiFact that Venezuela acts as a transit country for some cocaine trafficking in part because its neighboring country, Colombia, is the world’s main cocaine producer. However, most of the cocaine that enters the U.S. doesn’t go through Venezuela.

    Drug trafficking experts, government reports say fentanyl does not come from Venezuela

    The Drug Enforcement Agency’s annual National Drug Threat Assessment reports for years have pointed to Mexico and China as the countries responsible for illicit fentanyl in the U.S. None of the agency’s reports from 2017 through 2025 list Venezuela as a fentanyl producer or trafficker. 

    Most illicit fentanyl entered the U.S. via the southern border at official ports of entry, and 83.5% of the smugglers in fiscal year 2024 were U.S. citizens.

    “There is no evidence of fentanyl or cocaine laced with fentanyl coming from Venezuela or anywhere else in South America,” David Smilde, a Tulane University sociologist who studies violence in Venezuela, told PolitiFact in September. 

    The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime World Drug Report also points to Mexico as the country of origin for the most fentanyl seized in the U.S. 

    U.S. fentanyl overdose deaths recently have dropped. From May 2024 to April 2025, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 43,000 synthetic opioid deaths, most of which were from fentanyl, down from nearly 70,000 in the previous year.

    “The United States has been suffering an enormous overdose crisis driven by opioids and fentanyl in particular in recent years,” John Walsh, director for drug policy at the Washington Office on Latin America, a group advocating for human rights in the Americas, previously told PolitiFact. “I would say it has zero to do with anything in South America or the Caribbean.”

    Maduro’s indictment on drug-related charges doesn’t mention fentanyl

    The Justice Department first indicted Maduro in 2020 for alleged drug-related actions dating to 1999. A newly unsealed and updated indictment filed in the Southern District of New York charges Maduro and two co-defendants with narcoterrorism conspiracy and he, Flores and the four other co-defendants with cocaine importation conspiracy and possession of machine guns.

    The indictment calls Maduro an illegitimate leader who transported cocaine under Venezuelan law enforcement protection, enriching his family and cementing power. 

    The 25-page document does not mention fentanyl or fentanyl trafficking.

    Our ruling

    The Trump White House described Maduro as “flooding America with deadly fentanyl.”

    Drug experts and official government and international reports point to Mexico and China as the countries primarily involved in producing and trafficking the illicit fentanyl that reaches the U.S. The majority of fentanyl in the U.S. comes from Mexico, is made with chemicals from China, and is smuggled by U.S. citizens via official ports of entry at the southern border.

    The U.S. Justice Department indicted Maduro on charges related to cocaine. The indictment does not mention fentanyl.

    We rate the statement False.

    Source link

  • Bondi says Trump ‘saved countless lives’ in Venezuelan dictator Maduro capture operation

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The capture of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro was “not just about drugs,” U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said in her first interview about the military operation on “Hannity” Monday.

    Maduro and other defendants could face charges in other places, Bondi said.

    “Nothing is off the table,” Bondi told Fox News host Sean Hannity. “These people must remain behind bars. They are responsible for the loss of so many lives, and these aren’t street-level drug dealers. They are narco-traffickers.”

    On Monday, Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, pleaded not guilty to narco-terrorism and other charges in federal court.

    RUBIO DEFENDS VENEZUELA OPERATION AFTER NBC QUESTIONS LACK OF CONGRESSIONAL APPROVAL FOR MADURO CAPTURE

    The Justice Department says Maduro provided “Venezuelan diplomatic passports to drug traffickers and facilitated diplomatic cover for planes used by money launderers to repatriate drug proceeds from Mexico to Venezuela.”

    Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro greets his supporters during a rally in Caracas on Dec. 1, 2025.  (Pedro Mattey/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    A man who had a brief exchange with Maduro in the Manhattan court told Fox News the dictator declared himself a “prisoner of war” and compared himself to Jesus.

    “I am innocent, I am not guilty,” Maduro told the court. “I am a decent man. I am still president of my country.”

    UN AMBASSADOR WALTZ DEFENDS US CAPTURE OF MADURO AHEAD OF SECURITY COUNCIL MEETING

    Some Democrats have criticized the military operation as a violation of state sovereignty, comparing it to former President George W. Bush’s actions in Iraq.

    Meanwhile, Bondi insisted “Operation Absolute Resolve” was “well within” President Donald Trump’s constitutional authority in response to critics.

    Persons escorted out of plane believed to carry Maduro, wife after Operation Absolute Resolve under cover of darkness.

    Persons escorted out of plane believed to carry Maduro, wife after Operation Absolute Resolve under cover of darkness. (WNYW)

    “It was a law enforcement function to arrest indicted individuals in Venezuela,” Bondi explained. “Our military pulled off a flawless, flawless execution of that.”

    MARCO RUBIO CLASHES WITH GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS ON VENEZUELA LEADERSHIP IN HEATED EXCHANGE

    She went on to stress Saturday’s covert operation “saved countless lives.”

    “The president saved thousands, countless lives tonight,” Bondi said. “But he also protected Americans from the TDA [Tren de Aragua] members who Maduro let into our country, forced into our country.”

    Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, appear with their attorneys Barry Pollack and Mark Donnelly at their arraignment in a federal court in New York City on Monday, Jan. 5, 2026.

    Captured Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, appear with their attorneys Barry Pollack and Mark Donnelly at their arraignment in a federal court in New York City on Monday, Jan. 5, 2026. (Jane Rosenberg)

    The attorney general listed several murder victims of Venezuelan gang members, including 22-year-old Laken Riley and 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray.

    “It’s horrific and it is going to stop,” she vowed.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    While Trump has said the U.S. will temporarily “run” Venezuela, Maduro’s allies in the government have contested the claim.

    The Venezuelan dictator and his wife are set to appear in court again March 17.

    Source link

  • Seattle police union condemns new socialist mayor’s drug enforcement approach as ‘suicidal empathy’

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The president of the Seattle Police Officers Guild issued a statement on Sunday slamming the newly elected self-described democratic socialist Mayor Katie Wilson‘s approach to drug enforcement as “suicidal empathy.”

    “The recent naive, ignorant political decision to not arrest offenders for open drug use in the City of Seattle is horrifically dangerous and will create more death and societal decay,” the Seattle Police Officers Guild President, Mike Solan, said. “It embodies an enormous flaw in those in our community who think that meeting people where they are who are in the throes of addiction, is the correct path to lift them up.”

    Wilson responded to Solan’s claims in a statement sent to Fox News Digital that did not confirm the allegation that the city had ordered police to stop arrests of open drug use.

    “You’ll know when I announce a policy change, because I’ll announce a policy change. Several weeks ago I published a vision for public safety, which begins with the commitment that everyone in Seattle, of every background and every income, deserves to be safe in their homes, streets, parks, and places of business in every neighborhood across our city,” Wilson said.

    SEATTLE ABOUT TO GET NY’S HAMMER-AND-SICKLE TREATMENT. SOCIALISM IS COMING YOUR WAY

    The president of the Seattle Police Officers Guild issued a statement on Sunday explaining that police were ordered to halt open drug use arrests and instead redirect such cases away from the criminal legal system to mental health services. (Seattle Police Department / File)

    The confusion on whether there is a change in policy when arresting drug use, appears to stem from an internal email from Seattle Police Chief Shon Barnes. According to KOMO News, the Barnes’ email said, “effective immediately, all charges related to drug possession and/or drug use will be diverted from prosecution to the LEAD program. All instances of drug use or possession will be referred to Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD)—a program designed to redirect lowlevel offenders in King County from the criminal justice system into supportive social services.”

    Seattle Police Chief Barnes also explained that when someone does not follow the requirements of the LEAD program, the case will move forward through normal prosecution. He noted that LEAD has long been used as an alternative to arrest and that this update is consistent with Seattle City Ordinance. He also clarified that the diversion option is limited: it does not apply to people who are not eligible for LEAD or to those arrested for selling or delivering drugs. Only cases involving personal-use quantities may be diverted, not sales or delivery offenses.

    The Seattle police told KOMO News that “nothing has changed when it comes to police continuing to make drug-related arrests in Seattle.” 

    SEATTLE’S SOCIALIST MAYOR MAY BE ‘LESS CONSTRAINED’ THAN MAMDANI, WASHINGTON POST WARNS

    Seattle Police

    Seattle’s Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion seeks to redirect such cases away from the criminal legal system to mental health services. (Fox News Digital )

    Solan criticized Seattle’s Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD), which describes itself as a “replicable model that enhances public safety and equity by diverting people with unmet behavioral health needs away from jail and prosecution and into nonpunitive, collaborative, community-based systems of care.”

    “This is wrong and is commonly referred to as ‘Suicidal Empathy.’ Most cops know that the LEAD program supports this ideology, and they don’t want to refer cases. It is a waste of time. We’ve all seen how our streets can be filled with death, decay, blight and crime when ideology like this infects our city. Now with this resurrected insane direction, death, destruction and more human suffering will be supercharged,” Solan continued. 

    MEET THE SOCIALIST MAMDANI-STYLE MAYOR JUST ELECTED TO RUN WEST COAST’S 5TH LARGEST CITY

    Mayor-elect of Seattle Katie Wilson

    (Katie Wilson was sworn in as Seattle’s mayor during a Friday morning inauguration at City Hall. )

    In her statement to Fox News Digital, Wilson said LEAD’s framework would be implemented. 

    “I remain committed to that vision. Our work now is to carry it out, including enforcement of the possession and public use ordinance in priority situations and ensuring that the LEAD framework and other effective responses to neighborhood hot spots are implemented with an appropriate level of urgency, sufficient resources, and a commitment to results,” she said. 

    Wilson was sworn in as Seattle’s mayor on Friday after she beat then-incumbent Mayor Bruce Harrell.

    The Seattle Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Source link

  • Fact-checking Trump following U.S. attacks on Venezuela and capture of Maduro

    President Donald Trump said a U.S. military assault succeeded in capturing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, both facing U.S. charges related to cocaine trafficking under newly unsealed indictments

    In a Jan. 3 press conference at Mar-a-Lago, Trump said the U.S. would “run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition.”

    Trump also said Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez was sworn in as interim president. Trump said Rodríguez had talked to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and was “essentially willing to do what we think is necessary to make Venezuela great again.”

    However, Rodríguez criticized the U.S. military action as “brutal aggression” on state television and called for Maduro’s immediate release.

    Maduro, an authoritarian, has led Venezuela since 2013, succeeding an ideological ally, Hugo Chávez, who had been in office since 1999. Under both men, U.S. relations with Venezuela frayed over foreign policy, oil and human rights.

    In July 2024, Maduro declared victory following an election that international observers described as fraudulent. The country’s opposition candidate, Edmundo González Urrutia, received about 70% of the vote.

    Tensions between Trump and Maduro escalated in September after the U.S. government began attacking vessels off the coast of Venezuela, killing more than 100 people, in what Trump described as an effort to thwart drug smuggling.

    When a reporter asked Trump during the Mar-a-Lago press event whether he’d spoken to Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado following Maduro’s arrest, Trump said Machado “doesn’t have the support or the respect within the country.”

    Machado, who recently won the Nobel Peace Prize for her fight for democracy in Venezuela, had a 72% approval rating from Venezuelans according to a March poll by ClearPath Strategies.

    Trump said without evidence that the United States’ role in governing Venezuela “won’t cost us anything” because U.S. oil companies would invest in new infrastructure in the oil-rich country. “It’s going to make a lot of money,” Trump said. 

    Here, we fact-checked Trump’s and Rubio’s statements from the press conference.

    Rubio: “It’s just not the kind of mission that you can prenotify (Congress about) because it endangers the mission.” 

    The administration’s lack of warning to Congress bucks laws and precedents. 

    Rubio said members of Congress were not notified in advance. Trump said the administration was concerned about Congress potentially leaking news of the administration’s decision to capture Maduro.

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., praised the operation as a “decisive action.”

    But Congressional Democrats said Congress should have been notified in advance. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said, “Maduro is terrible. But Trump put American servicemembers at risk with this unauthorized attack.”

    Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., said Trump and his cabinet were not forthcoming about their intentions for regime change, so “we are left with no understanding of how the administration is preparing to mitigate risks to the U.S. and we have no information regarding a long-term strategy following today’s extraordinary escalation.”

    The U.S. Constitution assigns Congress the right to declare war. The last time that happened was for World War II.

    Since then, presidents have generally initiated military action using their constitutionally granted powers as commander in chief without an official declaration of war. 

    Since Congress passed the 1973 War Powers Resolution, the president has had to report to Congress within 48 hours of introducing the U.S. military into hostilities and terminate the use of the military within 60 days unless Congress approves. If approval is not granted and the president deems it an emergency, an additional 30 days are granted for ending operations.

    In recent decades, congressional consent has usually been granted through an authorization for the use of military force. But an authorization has not been passed for operations in Venezuela. Kaine and other lawmakers have pursued legislation — so far fruitlessly —  to prohibit the use of federal funds for any use of military force in or against Venezuela without Congressional authorization.

    The Trump administration has whittled away at prior notification requirements. Under federal law, eight bipartisan, senior members of Congress must receive prior notice of particularly sensitive covert actions. In June 2025, the administration told Republicans, but not Democrats, about the forthcoming U.S. strike on Iranian nuclear facilities. For the Venezuela operation, it appears no lawmakers were notified in advance.

    Trump: Each U.S. boat strike off the coast of Venezuela saves 25,000 people. 

    Pants on Fire! 

    The Trump administration has struck at least 32 vessels killing about 115 people in the Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific Ocean since September. Trump said previously that the boats were carrying drugs en route to the U.S. and during the press conference he said the drugs on each boat would kill “on average, 25,000 people.”

    However, experts on drugs and Venezuela told PolitiFact the country plays a minor role in trafficking drugs that reach the U.S. And the administration has provided no evidence about the type or quantity of drugs it says were on the boats. This lack of information makes it impossible to know how many lethal doses of the drugs could have been destroyed.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 73,000 U.S. drug overdose deaths from May 2024 to April 2025. That means the drugs on 32 boats would have been responsible for 800,000 deaths, nearly 11 times the number of U.S. overdose deaths in one year. 

    Trump: “Maduro sent savage and murderous gangs, including the bloodthirsty prison gang Tren de Aragua, to terrorize American communities nationwide.”

    There is no evidence Maduro sent members of Venezuelan prison gang Tren de Aragua to the U.S. 

    The U.S. Justice Department indictment against Maduro does not mention Trump’s statement.

    An April report from the federal National Intelligence Council contradicted Trump’s statements about links between Maduro and Tren de Aragua. 

    “While Venezuela’s permissive environment enables (Tren de Aragua) to operate, the Maduro regime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TDA and is not directing TDA movement to and operations in the United States,” the report said.

    Trump: Venezuela “stole” U.S oil in the past.

    This needs context

    In the early 20th century, Venezuela’s long-serving dictator, Juan Vicente Gómez, allowed foreign companies almost exclusive access to the country’s oil resources. 

    In 1975, after decades of seeking greater control of its oil resources, Venezuela nationalized its oil industry.

    “Trump’s claim that Venezuela has stolen oil and land from the U.S. is baseless,” Francisco Rodríguez, a Venezuelan economist at the University of Denver, told The Washington Post. “The U.S. was much more interested in having Venezuela be a provider of oil — relatively cheap oil — than to have a production collapse in Venezuela,” Rodríguez said. As a result, the change was “relatively uncontroversial” at the time.

    U.S. oil companies, including Exxon and Mobil and Gulf, now Chevron, lost about $5 billion each in assets and were compensated $1 billion each, according to news reports, the Post reported.

    But Rodríguez said the companies didn’t push for additional compensation at the time, in part because no forum existed to do so.

    In general, experts have told PolitiFact that invading a country to take its oil would be both illegal and unethical. In 2016, Trump mused about how the U.S. should have taken Iraq’s oil when it invaded to oust Saddam Hussein.

    Experts pointed to the Annex to the Hague Convention of 1907 on the Laws and Customs of War, which says that “private property … must be respected (and) cannot be confiscated.” It also says that “pillage is formally forbidden.”

    “If ‘to the victors go the spoils’ was legal doctrine, then we would have believed that (then-Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein) should have been able to keep Kuwait City after he invaded” in 1990, terrorism analyst Daveed Gartenstein-Ross told PolitiFact in 2016. “But we viewed that — quite rightly — as an act of aggression under the U.N. Charter.”

    Source link

  • A Pill Version of Wegovy Hits Pharmacies

    In the last week of December,  while most of the U.S. was still in holiday mode, Novo Nordisk’s plant in North Carolina was operating at full capacity.

    On Dec. 22, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the company’s oral version of Wegovy, making it the first pill of the popular GLP-1 medications to get the green light for weight loss. People who want to lose weight and are prescribed Wegovy now have the option of taking the tablet daily, versus injecting themselves with the drug once a week. They’ll lose about the same amount of weight with either version: between 16% and 17% of their starting body weight.

    The plant, just outside of Raleigh, is operating around the clock to produce bottles of pills in four different doses. The bottles are bound for retail stores and online pharmacies and will be available starting on Jan. 5.  “Obesity has become a consumer-oriented disease,” said Novo Nordisk’s CEO Mike Doustdar in an interview with TIME. “We’re embracing that.”

    The company’s entire supply of the drug, from start to finish, will be manufactured in North Carolina. Days before the launch of Wegovy pill, TIME visited the plant to watch how the first Wegovy pills are being produced, bottled, and packaged for patients.

    A technician monitors one of many steps in the modification and purification process that produces semaglutide, the main ingredient in Wegovy. Jeremy M. Lange for TIME

    It all starts with yeast

    Wegovy pill begins with a fungus: specifically, the same yeast used to make bread, called Saccharomyces cerevisiae. But instead of fermenting sugars or grains to make bread rise, the yeast cells are genetically engineered at Novo Nordisk’s facility in Clayton, North Carolina to produce a protein that undergoes fermentation in several four-story tall tanks, then multiple purification steps over about a month to produce semaglutide, a compound that mimics a human hormone that regulates appetite by working in the reward center of the brain. It can help people feel full and reduce feelings of hunger.

    Harvesting the main ingredient

     After the fermentation and purification process, semaglutide forms a beige paste with the consistency of pancake batter. In one of the few manual steps in the largely automated production, technicians scrape the paste from large funnels and freeze it at -20°C, where it keeps for up to five years. But given the popularity of Wegovy and the anticipated demand for the pill, the company currently has about a month’s supply of semaglutide in its freezers.

    Taking pill form

    In the final step of the process, the paste is thawed and purified into a liquid at a high temperature. That heated liquid is then spray-dried into a fine white powder, similar to the way snow-making machines turn hot water into snow. That powder, collected in large bags from a funnel that extends through three floors, is then pressed into Wegovy tablets.

    Wegovy pill launch
    The highest dose Wegovy pills are sorted before bottling at the Novo Nordisk Solid Dosage Forms (SDF) facility in North Carolina on Dec. 30, 2025. Jeremy M. Lange for TIME
    Wegovy pill launch
    Bottle caps containing a drying agent to keep tablets from exposure to moisture are transported within the packaging section of the Novo Nordisk Solid Dosage Forms (SDF) facility on Dec. 30, 2025 in North Carolina. Jeremy M. Lange for TIME
    Wegovy pill launch
    Piles of 25mg Wegovy pills await bottling and packaging. Jeremy M. Lange for TIME

    Stiff competition

    Wegovy pill is not the only GLP-1 weight-loss pill on the horizon. Eli Lilly, which makes the injectable GLP-1 drugs Mounjaro for diabetes and Zepbound for weight loss (using the active ingredient tirzepatide) has developed a pill called orforglipron. In December, the company released positive data showing its pill could help people maintain weight loss after using injected forms of GLP-1 drugs for more than a year and submitted a request to the FDA for approval. The agency granted orforglipron a priority voucher in November, meaning the FDA will conduct an expedited review so that pill can come to market much faster than the typical drug.

    Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly have been locked in a GLP-1 competition for years. Some research has found that Lilly’s drug Zepbound leads to greater weight loss—up to 21% of body weight—compared to 15% on Wegovy. “The difference is very largely connected to doses,” says Doustdar; the highest dose tirzepatide is greater than that of semaglutide in Wegovy. For that reason, Novo Nordisk is developing a higher dose of Wegovy in the injectable form that produces comparable amounts of about 20% weight loss. “We will be bringing Wegovy-Plus into the market [in 2026] so it will close the gap with our competitor,” he says.

    Wegovy pill launch
    Final packaging for the 1.5 mg Wegovy pills at the Novo Nordisk Solid Dosage Forms (SDF) facility on Dec. 30. 2025 in North Carolina. Jeremy M. Lange for TIME

    He also sees semaglutide as the company’s “secret sauce” that seems to produce a number of health benefits. It’s the only GLP-1 drug that the FDA allows to claim on its label benefits forthat heart disease and certain liver conditions benefit. While recent research found that the compound did not slow Alzheimer’s disease, as many had hoped it would, the drug’s ability to reduce inflammation could lead to additional health benefits in other metabolic diseases.

    Doustdar, who was appointed to head Novo Nordisk last summer as the company began losing market share in the GLP-1 space to Eli Lilly, sees Wegovy pill as a coup for the company—and a return to focusing on diabetes and obesity. “This is a big disease area. We’re talking about two billion people, and eventually, someone has to produce all the doses for them. We are sitting in the right spot right now [to do that], and still only touching a fraction of the people who are in need.”

    Wegovy pill launch
    A 25mg Wegovy pill at the Novo Nordisk Solid Dosage Forms (SDF) facility. All Wegovy pills will be bottled and packaged at this facility and the API (active pharmaceutical ingredient) facility producing semaglutide nearby. Jeremy M. Lange for TIME

    Options for the pill

    In coming weeks, Wegovy pill will be available in four doses: a starter dose of 1.5 mg, as well as 4 mg, 9 mg, and 25 mg. As with injectable Wegovy, most patients will start with the lowest dose and gradually ramp up their dosage over a period of months until they reach the maximum dose, which they will continue to maintain their new weight.

    As the company and the White House announced in November, the starter dose will cost $149 for a month’s supply for people paying out-of-pocket and using federal insurance plans. The next-highest dose will be $149 until April 2026, after which it will increase to $199 a month. The two highest doses will cost $299 for a month’s worth of pills. People with insurance plans that cover the pills may pay as little as $24 for a 30-day supply.

    Doustdar says the White House announcement was the result of several months of discussion to reach a mutually agreeable price plan for the drug. “For us to be able to make any deals, it has to not be a zero-sum game, but a win-win situation,” he says. “We needed to explain that the cost of operations in the U.S. is very different from the cost of operations in Europe.” 

    “On the other hand, we also recognize that at higher prices, we will not get access to bigger volumes,” he says—and with hundreds of millions of people around the world who could potentially benefit from a weight-loss drug, Doustdar hopes Wegovy pill will be more convenient, and accessible, for them. 

    Alice Park

    Source link

  • Second front: How a socialist cell in the US mobilized pro-Maduro foot soldiers within 12 hours

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    As the U.S. military carried out a daring operation to capture Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro, a second front opened up within minutes in the United States  an information warfare, psychological and propaganda operation run by a hardened cell of self-described Marxist, socialist and communist leaders.

    For years, this cell has fomented anti-American hate in the U.S. under the cover of “anti-war” protests, rallying activists after the 9/11 attacks to condemn the U.S. response, appropriating “anti-racism” protests after the 2020 killing of George Floyd, marching with Antifa agitators, organizing antisemitic campus encampments after the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel by Hamas and activating “working-class Americans” to support Maduro and his regime in a war against “U.S. imperialism.”

    A Fox News Digital analysis of their minute-by-minute moves overnight reveals how this network activated a coordinated ideological and information warfare campaign, moving through digital social media channels with quickly produced posters to mobilize foot soldiers to the streets for an “EMERGENCY DAY OF ACTION” in New York City; Washington, D.C.; and an estimated 100 other cities, moving with the speed and discipline of an organized military operation.

    Over 12 hours, a network of self-described socialist, communist and Marxist organizations used social media to launch an anti-American propaganda and street campaign in the U.S. to support Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. (@BTNewsroom/X, @manolo_realengo/X, @answercoalition/X, @PeoplesForumNYC/X, @PSLNational/X, @VijayPrashad/X, @CodePink/X)

    At 1:35 a.m., as U.S. special forces teams had just landed in Venezuela, BreakThrough News, a socialist propaganda arm of the network, published some of the first video from the U.S. military strikes, blasting the Trump administration for waging an “illegal bombing campaign of Caracas,” the capital of Venezuela. It was a talking point that was going to stick.

    TRUMP REVEALS VENEZUELA’S MADURO WAS CAPTURED IN ‘FORTRESS’-LIKE HOUSE: ‘HE GOT BUM RUSHED SO FAST’

    Ten minutes later, at 1:45 a.m., one of the key leaders of this network, Manolo De Los Santos, executive director at The People’s Forum, a proudly socialist 501(c)(3) nonprofit based in New York City, echoed the narrative on social media of an “illegal bombing.” 

    Less than an hour later, at 2:29 a.m., the ANSWER Coalition, a nonprofit co-founded by a proud Marxist, Brian Becker, published a red siren alert on the social media platform X with a slick new poster, calling supporters to the streets in Times Square for a protest Saturday to support Maduro.

    “NO WAR ON VENEZUELA! STOP THE BOMBINGS,” the poster screamed, on brand.

    EXPLOSIONS HEARD IN VENEZUELAN CAPITAL OF CARACAS: REPORTS

    Minutes later, at 2:34 a.m., The People’s Forum shared the call-to-action, screaming: “EMERGENCY PROTEST”

    Soon after, at 2:43 a.m., the Party for Socialism and Liberation shared the poster on X, saying, “Stop the bombings…!” 

    Congressional lawmakers are already investigating this socialist network for its ties to Neville Roy Singham, a United States-born technology executive who relocated to Shanghai after selling his software firm and starting work that critics say is aligned closely with interests of the Chinese Communist Party. Singham didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    MADURO MET CHINESE ENVOY HOURS BEFORE US CAPTURE FROM CARACAS AS BEIJING SLAMS OPERATION

    By 3:21 a.m., Vijay Prashad, director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, a research institute chaired by Singham that examines issues through the lens of “national liberation Marxism,” posted a message, denouncing the military action, declaring, “Down with US imperialism.”

    Within a few hours, at 6:09 a.m., CodePink, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit founded by Singham’s wife, Jodie Evans, condemned the “terrorist United States…”

    MADURO JAILED AT NEW YORK DETENTION CENTER THAT HELD DIDDY, GHISLAINE MAXWELL, AND SAM BANKMAN-FRIED

    From a military intelligence perspective, experts say the overnight sequence bears the hallmarks of a pre-positioned influence network executing a rapid-response operation. The synchronization of messaging, the staggered release of content across aligned platforms and the immediate transition from online agitation to physical mobilization point to an ecosystem designed not for spontaneous protest, but for ideological warfare.

    In this framework, experts say, the nonprofit leaders are foot soldiers in Maduro’s war on the United States, acting as civilian operatives advancing the strategic interests of a foreign ideological project. Their role is not to fight with weapons, but to contest legitimacy, shape public perception, apply internal pressure on U.S. decision-making during moments of external conflict and further the cause of communism, experts say.

    At the center of this domestic front is an international coordination structure known as the International Peoples’ Assembly, which functions as an umbrella organization and political command-and-control hub linking communist parties, socialist movements, activist organizations and state-aligned media outlets worldwide. 

    One of its media arms, the People’s Dispatch, has explicitly framed its mission as mobilizing global resistance against “American imperialism,” including repeated calls to action on behalf of Venezuela. It lists Singham’s Tricontinental as one of its “partners.” The North America members of its “coordinating committee” include CodePink; the Popular Education Project, an initiative of The People’s Forum; and the Party for Socialism and Liberation. Its Venezuelan member is a group called Francisco de Miranda Front, which works closely with its U.S. allies.

    At 7:49 a.m., the International People’s Assembly shared the poster for the “EMERGENCY DAY OF ACTION.”

    It quickly published a statement condemning the U.S. military action as reflective of the country’s “increasingly militaristic and hyper-imperialist orientation” and calling on members to “resist this pursuit of hegemony by any means necessary.”

    TRUMP VOWS US WILL ‘RUN’ VENEZUELA UNTIL ‘SAFE’ TRANSITION OF POWER

    The assembly operates in close alignment with Tricontinental, the SIngham organization that functions as an ideological production center, generating narratives, research and messaging disseminated through aligned media platforms and activated through street-level organizations. Singham’s wife, Evans, sits on the International People’s Assembly, tightening the operational loop between messaging, mobilization and leadership.

    Experts say the ideological doctrine guiding this network is shaped in part by Prashad, who also serves as editor of People’s Dispatch. 

    On the operational side, De Los Santos, executive director at The People’s Forum, has emerged as a visible field organizer. He is listed as a researcher at Tricontinental and has repeatedly appeared at regime-aligned events in Venezuela, functioning as a liaison between the ideological center and street-level mobilization abroad and at home.

    MADURO GAVE STATE TV ADDRESS AS US STRIKES IN VENEZUELA BEGAN: REPORT

    In 2003, Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez backed a new group in Venezuela, the Francisco de Miranda Front, laying the groundwork for an international solidarity apparatus that joined the International People’s Assembly, working with U.S. groups. That infrastructure matured over time into a durable support system for Maduro when he was elected president in 2013.

    By March 2019, that relationship was well-entrenched when De Los Santos organized a pro-Maduro protest outside Venezuela’s consulate in New York, physically denying opposition figures access to the building.

    TRUMP CASTS MADURO’S OUSTER AS ‘SMART’ MOVE AS RUSSIA, CHINA ENTER THE FRAY

    That month, the Party for Socialism and Liberation’s Claudia De la Cruz jetted to Venezuela for a four-day conference of the International Peoples’ Assembly in Caracas, urging socialists to “collectivize” their efforts to fight the “capitalist crisis” in the world, according to a video shared from the meeting with the hashtag #HandsOffVenezuela..

    “Venezuela is the epicenter,” she declared. “Venezuela is the personification of the anti-imperialist struggle.”

    The next month, The People’s Forum hosted Venezuelan Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza during a talk in which he demanded the U.S. end sanctions on the country, according to an article in “Fight Back! News,” a publication by members of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization. “The evening concluded with Arreaza thanking the crowd and urging people to keep fighting and protesting,” the article noted. “Manolo de los Santos, the executive director of The People’s Forum, took up Arreaza on his request and called the crowd to action.”

    WHAT IS DELTA FORCE AND WHAT DO THEY DO? INSIDE THE ELITE US ARMY UNIT THAT CAPTURED MADURO

    In May 2019, when a coup attempt failed, De Los Santos appeared on teleSUR, the state-funded TV network in Caracas, saying he’d organized a press conference with religious leaders in New York City to “engage in the battle of ideas” against “imperialist aggression.”

    socialist leaders

    Two leaders in the global socialist network, Vijay Prashad and Manola De Los Santos, stand with Nicolás Maduro on election day in 2021. They emerged as outspoken leaders in the pro-Maduro protests after Maduro’s arrest by U.S. military forces. (@VijayPrashad/X, @manolo_realengo/X)

    Two years later, in November 2021, Prashad and De Los Santos shared a photo with Maduro, all of them flashing a thumbs-up, with Prashad writing, “Elections in Venezuela today!” He noted that he stood with De Los Santos and Maduro, supporting “sovereignty against imperialism.” 

    The next month, De Los Santos participated in a Caracas conference livestreamed on Maduro’s X account, speaking at the 59-minute mark and holding up a manifesto, “Plan para salvar la humanidad,” or “Plan to save humanity.”

    He returned to Caracas in April 2022 for the International Anti-Fascist Summit, posting a photo with Eugene Puryear, a senior figure in the Party for Socialism and Liberation, further reinforcing the operational linkage between U.S.-based activists and foreign political structures.

    HOUSE DEMOCRAT CALLS TRUMP’S MADURO CAPTURE ‘WELCOME NEWS’ AS LEFT ACCUSES HIM OF ‘ILLEGAL ACTIONS’

    The pattern intensified the next year when De Los Santos and De la Cruz attended a conference sponsored by the Maduro government to explicitly preserve the ideological legacy of “Comandante Chávez,” their term of reverence for Chávez.

    In late April 2024, Maduro even recognized De Los Santos as he thanked attendees of a conference of the “Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America,” established by Cuba and Venezuela in 2004 to unite communist economic interests.

    This past fall, a wide network that included the Communist Party USA, the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party and the Struggle for Socialism Party supported an “urgent call for a week of coordinated protests” to support Maduro. Last month, the network took action again, organizing “NO WAR ON VENEZUELA” protests.

    RUBIO TO CUBA: ‘I’D BE CONCERNED’ AFTER US MILITARY ARRESTS VENEZUELAN LEADER MADURO

    The newest overnight campaign to support Maduro will likely send foot soldiers into the streets to support Maduro and his wife during any trials they face, not just as an expression of protest but as a continued campaign of information warfare on the domestic front. 

    Experts say the network that spent decades legitimizing and defending communist regimes abroad and now functions as a rapid-response influence force inside the United States is a new threat matrix that amounts to something the FBI and intelligence agencies investigate as malign foreign influence.

    Its members operate as ideological foot soldiers, advancing a foreign-aligned narrative during moments of conflict, seeking to fracture public consensus, delegitimize U.S. action and apply pressure from within.

    SEE PICS: VENEZUELANS WORLDWIDE CELEBRATE AS EXILES REACT TO MADURO’S CAPTURE

    attack criticism

    Over the 12 hours of activation to support Maduro, politicians endorsed by the Democratic Socialists of America echoed criticism of the U.S. action as illegal, and socialist pro-Maduro organizations in the U.S. activated members to join street protests. (@PeopleAssembl_/X, @RepRashida/X, @AOC/X, @AnswerCoalition/X)

    By daylight Saturday morning, at 8:49 a.m., CodePink invoked a slogan used last year as a theme in anti-Trump protests, declaring, “HANDS OFF VENEZUELA,” and issuing a statement dismissing criminal proceedings against Maduro as a “sham” prosecution. 

    By 8:57 a.m., the Democratic Socialists of America, which just saw its star politician, Zohran Mamdani, inaugurated as mayor of New York City, shared a message from U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a member of the organization, condemning the U.S. strike as “illegal.” 

    At 10:29 a.m., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, another member of the Democratic Socialists of America, chimed in, saying, “It’s about oil and regime change.”

    On cue, at 1:06 p.m, Mamdani repeated the refrain established overnight by the socialist network that brought him to the mayor’s office in New York City, blasting the U.S. for the “military capture” of Maduro, calling it an “act of war” and “blatant pursuit of regime change.” 

    The talking points of politicians, activist groups and foot soldiers in the socialist, communist and Marxist network in the U.S. echoed the statements that the two strongest communist powers in the world expressed about their ally, Maduro. China issued a statement saying it opposed the “blatant use of force” by the U.S. in Venezuela. Russia called the news an “act of aggression” against Venezuela.

    By afternoon, within 12 hours of first hearing about the military operation in Caracas, the pro-Maduro network started churning out fast clips of its information war on the Trump administration.

    MADURO-BACKED TDA GANG’S EXPANSION INTO US CITIES EMERGES AS KEY FOCUS OF SWEEPING DOJ INDICTMENT

    At 1:34 p.m., the social media team at the ANSWER Coalition posted a closely cropped video of protesters, holding the ANSWER Coalition’s distinctive yellow-and-black signs and chanting in front of the White House, “Stop the war machine!” The Party for Socialism and Liberation immediately shared the video.

    A little over an hour later, at 2:42 p.m., The People’s Forum shared a video of Becker, the co-founder of the ANSWER Coalition, from Times Square in New York City, a camera filming him from behind, as he declared, “This is a capitalist war! It’s a rich man’s war! The kidnapping of Maduro is an imperialist war for a capitalist class!”

    MS Now, the new name for MSNBC, reported from the Times Square protest and its reporter only shared a throwaway line about the ANSWER Coalition having a “speakers’ program going on behind us,” without cluing viewers into the group’s proud Marxist politics. 

    Online, at 3 p.m., wearing a black-and-white checkered collared shirt, the Party for Socialism and Liberation’s Puryear hosted a YouTube livestream, joined by Tricontinental’s Prashad and others. BreakThrough News promoted the livestream with a new piece of graphic propaganda, showing Trump with a mouth gaping open and Maduro with his chin high, appearing stoic and regal.

    IRAN AND MADURO TIES SUFFER MAJOR BLOW FOLLOWING US OPERATION AND CAPTURE OF VENEZUELAN DICTATOR

    At 3:02 p.m., The People’s Forum shared a video clip on its X account of De Los Santos at the Times Square protest, a microphone in his hand as he scanned the crowd and railed against the U.S., calling the Trump administration a “criminal enterprise” for “kidnapping” Maduro.

    “Shame!” the crowd responded, in a typical refrain for the group’s protests.

    Back on the BreakThrough News livestream, Puryear asked Becker about the “quick turnaround” on organizing the protests.

    NYC MAYOR STRONGLY CONDEMNS TRUMP’S CAPTURE OF VENEZUELAN LEADER MADURO AS ‘ACT OF WAR’

    Becker spoke about the night before like a field marshal. 

    “A few of us stood up all night last night when we heard the news, conferring with each other, conferring with other organizers and, by 3:30, 4 o’clock this morning, we put out the call for demonstrations to happen today, Saturday, Jan. 3,” he said. 

    Between 10 a.m. and 11:30 a.m., he said, leaders of anti-Trump groups, including 50501, which organized “HandsOff” and “TakedownTesla” protests, reached out to the pro-Maduro organizers to join their protests, and the protest numbers swelled with the “entrance” of the groups more closely aligned with the Democratic Party.

    Now, he bragged, the results were protests in “100-plus cities.”

    As the jet with Maduro and his wife touched down in the U.S. at Stewart Airport in New Windsor, New York, agents with “DEA” across their jackets boarding the plane, the caption on the livestream said proudly: “ANTI-WAR PROTESTS SWEEP U.S.”

    “We should be raging!” Becker declared, stoking the “working class” to join the “class war, global war, anti-imperialist war.” 

    The protests today, he warned, “are a harbinger of what’s coming.”

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    Source link

  • Durham County traffic stop leads to arrest, seizure of stolen guns and drugs

    Durham County deputies seized two stolen guns and drugs
    after stopping a man driving a car with a fictitious tag.

    It happened before midnight on Monday near the intersection
    of South Alston and Linwood avenues in Durham, the sheriff’s office said.

    The sheriff’s office said the car turned onto Linwood Avenue
    and deputies performed a traffic stop. Fredrick Mayo, the driver, pulled over
    and tried to walk away from the location, according to the sheriff’s office.

    Deputies arrested him about 30 yards from the parked car.

    Mayo, 36, of Durham, is charged with:

    • Possession of a firearm by a felon
    • Possession stolen firearm
    • Possession with intent to deliver cocaine
    • Possession of a controlled substance with the intent to
      manufacture, sell or deliver methamphetamine
    • Possession with intent to sell/deliver marijuana
    • Conspiracy to sell/deliver sch ii
    • Fictious/altering registration car/tag
    • No operator’s license

    Authorities are holding Mayo at the Durham County Detention
    Center.

    Source link

  • A Fort Collins family is trying to raise millions to test gene therapy that could help kids trapped in bodies they can’t move

    At first, Everly Green’s parents didn’t understand why her doctors wanted genetic testing. Their daughter was behind on her milestones at 18 months, but was gradually making progress, and they expected that to continue.

    Then, when she turned 2, the seizures started. She suddenly began to lose skills. Three months later, Everly needed a feeding tube. Now, at 8, she can only move her eyes, allowing her to communicate via a screen.

    Everly, whose family lives in Fort Collins, has a rare mutation in a gene called FRRS1L, pronounced “frizzle,” which affects how cells in her brain communicate. Her parents, and other members of the tiny community of children with the condition, have worked with researchers and small-scale manufacturers to develop a treatment that could restore some of her ability to move — but only if they can raise $4 million to develop and test it.

    Everly clearly understands what happens around her and loves school, where she learns in a mainstream classroom with support and has several best friends, said Chrissy Green, Everly’s mother. Still, she wants to do things she can’t, such as holding toys on her own or going on the occasional family trip with her brothers, Green said.

    “These kids are in there, they want to play like other kids, they just can’t move,” she said.

    Green is co-president of the foundation Finding Hope for FRRS1L, which is collecting funds for the next stage of drug development. Children with FRRS1L gene disorder, the foundation’s website says, “are trapped in a body they can’t move, however still retain high cognitive function, understanding, communication and awareness.”

    Worldwide, only a few dozen children currently have a diagnosis of the same mutation in FRRS1L, meaning there’s little interest from drug companies. Families are on their own to fund research and, if all goes well, convince the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that the treatment is safe and effective enough to go on the market.

    And, even if they succeed with the FDA, they’ll still face a battle with insurance companies that may not want to pay the steep price for a drug to correct a faulty gene. (Even though the families aren’t looking to make a profit, these types of treatments are expensive, and the company under contract to do the manufacturing isn’t doing it for free.)

    Chrissy Green sits with her daughter Everly, 8, as her two boys Colton, 9, left, and Ryle, 4, play at their home in Fort Collins on Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    Gene therapy involves replacing a faulty gene with a healthy one, usually via a harmless virus engineered to insert a specific snippet of genetic code. It has offered a new way to treat infants born without functioning immune systems, who previously relied on bone marrow transplants. Trials have also shown good results with a liver problem causing ammonia to build up in the body, and one form of inherited deafness.

    The technology also carries risks. Patients have died after receiving gene therapies, with liver problems emerging as a potential risk.

    Normally, drug companies take on the financial risk of turning basic research that’s often publicly funded into treatments, with the hope of eventually making a profit. For gene therapies, that model can break down because of the small number of patients. Green’s FRRS1L foundation knows of about three dozen patients worldwide, though other children with unexplained seizures could have the mutation.

    A drug that treats so few patients will never be profitable, so parents are largely on their own in trying to fund research and development, said Neil Hackett, a researcher who has worked with families on gene therapies and advised the FRRS1L foundation. Usually, they can’t do it unless they happen to have one or more business-savvy parents with the time and resources to run a foundation while caring for a child with complex needs, he said.

    “They need specific expertise, which is not easy to find, and they need massive amounts of money,” he said.

    Steve Green supports his daughter Everly's head as the family plays with toys together at their home in Fort Collins on Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
    Steve Green supports his daughter Everly’s head as the family plays with toys together at their home in Fort Collins on Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    When they first received Everly’s diagnosis, her doctor told the family to make the most of the time they had left, because medicine couldn’t offer anything to extend her life or reduce her symptoms, Green said. She didn’t initially question that, but focused on loving her daughter and trading tips for daily life with other families via Facebook.

    Green connected with a mother in London who had a child the same age as Everly. Viviana Rodriguez was exploring whether researchers had found any evidence to suggest they could repurpose existing drugs to reduce FRRS1L symptoms.

    Everly Green, 8, lies next to her mother, Chrissy Green, as she reads to her at their home in Fort Collins on Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
    Everly Green, 8, lies next to her mother, Chrissy Green, as she reads to her at their home in Fort Collins on Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    Through a “providential” series of events, one of Rodriguez’s contacts knew a doctor at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center who worked on gene therapies. That doctor had read a paper from a German researcher who bred mice with the FRSS1L mutation so he could study it. The German scientist had given the mice a gene therapy as part of his experiments, but his work wasn’t focused on the clinical applications, Green said.

    Green and Rodriguez, along with a small group of other parents, formed the foundation to raise $400,000 for the UT Southwestern researchers to breed their own group of FRSS1L mice and give them a gene therapy in a study that was set up to show results. The mice that received the gene therapy had near-normal movement after it took effect, she said.

    “We saw major recovery in the animals, so we’re really hopeful for our kids,” she said.

    The next step was testing for toxic side effects, then finding a manufacturer who could do the complicated work of inserting the corrected gene into a harmless virus, Green said. If they can raise the necessary money and all goes as expected, children could receive their doses through a clinical trial starting in September, she said.

    Colton Green, 9, pushes his sister Everly, 8, into the family's living room at their home in Fort Collins on Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
    Colton Green, 9, pushes his sister Everly, 8, into the family’s living room at their home in Fort Collins on Dec. 18, 2025. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)

    Meg Wingerter

    Source link

  • Officers seize 67,000 fentanyl pills, other drugs in Adams County; 2 men face felony charges

    Two men face multiple felony drug charges following searches of Adams County apartments and the seizure of what authorities said were an estimated 67,000 fentanyl pills, 521 grams of methamphetamine, 45 grams heroin and 667 grams of cocaine.

    Oscar Serrano Romano and Enrique Delgadillo Ruiz were arrested Dec. 18.

    As part of the investigation, the Northern Colorado Drug Task Force and the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Front Range Task Force executed search warrants for apartments in Thornton, Aurora and Westminster. During the search of the Thornton apartment, officers found several duffel bags containing bundled packages of suspected methamphetamine, cocaine and fentanyl, according to an affidavit from the 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

    Officers reported finding bags they believed were being used to distribute drugs. They also found a parking pass for an apartment in Thornton where Ruiz was staying, according to the affidavit.

    Investigators obtained a search warrant for the second apartment on Dec. 18. They said they found a duffel bag containing suspected counterfeit fentanyl pills, cocaine, methamphetamine and heroin. Officers also found clear bags of suspected cocaine, an undetermined amount of money and a notebook that appeared to be handwritten daily logs of drug sales.

    Source link

  • SD Sheriff’s Crime Lab receives $585K grant to combat impaired driving

    San Diego County Sheriff’s Department crime lab. (Photo courtesy of the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department)

    The San Diego County Sheriff’s Office announced Tuesday that its Regional Crime Laboratory has received a $585,000 state grant to aid in its continuing efforts to combat impaired driving.

    The funding is provided by a California Office of Traffic Safety grant funded by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and runs through September 2026.

    The grant will be used to fund two full-time crime lab toxicology criminalists specializing in the analysis of biological samples for the presence of alcohol and drugs.

    A criminalist is a hands-on forensic scientist analyzing physical evidence including DNA, fingerprints and ballistics. The grant will assist them in maintaining current forensic alcohol testing operations while working to expand services offered and training on testing methods and interpretation of results, officials said.

    Previously, the crime lab has utilized OTS grant funding to expand drug toxicology testing in DUI case, purchase new equipment, and increase both staffing and training for the crime lab’s toxicology section.

    Since 2017, the average blood alcohol concentration of samples tested by the crime lab’s toxicology section has been above 0.17%, more than twice the legal limit, according to officials.

    From January through September 2025, more than 75% of the blood samples tested for drugs had at least one drug detected. The most commonly detected drugs in DUI drivers were marijuana, methamphetamine, cocaine, Xanax and Fentanyl.

    The Crime Lab’s Toxicology section also saw a dramatic increase in requests to test for inhalant substances used by DUI drivers including drugs commonly known as NOS/whippets/laughing gas and dust-off.

    The Sheriff’s Crime Lab provides forensic science services to more than 30 law enforcement agencies in San Diego County, processing more than 7,000 traffic safety cases per year.


    Source link

  • Legalization of ‘magic’ mushrooms back in the running

    BOSTON — More than a year after voters rejected a plan to legalize “magic” mushrooms, advocates have renewed the push on Beacon Hill for the use of psychedelic drugs again.

    The Joint Committee on Public Health voted to advance bipartisan legislation that would decriminalize the drug for adults 21 and older for treatment of post-traumatic stress and other ailments for veterans, law enforcement officers or others who are “professionally diagnosed” with a “qualifying” condition.

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm%96 s6>@4C2E:44@?EC@==65 A2?6= 2=D@ 2AAC@G65 2 3:== E92E H@F=5 2FE9@C:K6 “E96C2AJ” 46?E6CD H96C6 AD:=@4J3:? 4@F=5 36 8:G6? E@ A2E:6?ED F?56C >65:42= DFA6CG:D:@?] x7 2AAC@G65[ E96 >62DFC6 H@F=5 2FE9@C:K6 2 A:=@E AC@8C2> H:E9 7:G6 D:E6D 24C@DD E96 DE2E6[ :?4=F5:?8 @?6 @? E96 }@CE9 $9@C6[ 244@C5:?8 E@ E96 =68:D=2E:@?]k^Am

    kAm%96 ?@?AC@7:E 8C@FA |2DDw62=:?8[ H9:49 25G@42E6D 7@C ADJ49656=:42DD:DE65 E96C2AJ[ AC2:D65 E96 4@>>:EE66 7@C 25G2?4:?8 E96 AC@A@D2=D[ D2J:?8 :E >2C6 E92E 2 q624@? w:== A2?6= 92D 2AAC@G65 =68:D=2E:@? E@ =682=:K6 E96 5CF8D]k^Am

    kAm“{2H 6?7@C46>6?E @77:46CD[ 7:CDE C6DA@?56CD[ 2?5 G6E6C2?D 42CCJ C62= EC2F>2[ 2?5 E@@ >2?J CF? @FE @7 @AE:@?D[” $2C<@ v6C86C:2?[ 2 (:?E9C@A A@=:46 =:6FE6?2?E H9@ DFAA@CED FD6 @7 DF49 5CF8 E96C2AJ[ D2:5 😕 2 DE2E6>6?E] “%9:D 6G:56?4632D65 AC@A@D2= 9@?@CD E9@D6 H9@ D6CG6[ 25G2?46D D4:6?46[ 2?5 7C66D FA A@=:46 C6D@FC46D 7@C H96C6 E96J 2C6 ?66565 >@DE]”k^Am

    kAmx? E96 a_ac 6=64E:@?D[ |2DD249FD6EED G@E6CD C6;64E65 “F6DE:@? c[ H9:49 42==65 7@C =682=:K:?8 “>28:4” >FD9C@@>D 2?5 @E96C ADJ49656=:4 4@>A@F?5D 7@C E96C2A6FE:4 AFCA@D6D 2?5 2FE9@C:K:?8 9@>6 8C@H:?8] %96 >62DFC6 72:=65 3J 2 G@E6 @7 dfT E@ cbT[ 244@C5:?8 E@ 6=64E:@? C6DF=ED]k^Am

    kAm%96 32==@E BF6DE:@? H2D 324<65 3J E96 (2D9:?8E@?[ s]r]32D65 }6H pAAC@249 A@=:E:42= 24E:@? 4@>>:EE66[ H9:49 DFAA@CE65 D:>:=2C :?:E:2E:G6D 😕 ~C68@? 2?5 r@=@C25@[ H96C6 AD:=@4J3:? 😀 =682=] %96 8C@FA C2:D65 2?5 DA6?E >:==:@?D @7 5@==2CD @? 25G6CE:D:?8 E@ DH2J G@E6CD]k^Am

    kAmq24<6CD @7 =682=:K:?8 E96 5CF8[ H9:49 :?4=F56 >:=:E2CJ G6E6C2?D 2?5 7@C>6C A@=:46 @77:46CD[ 2C8F6 E96C6 😀 8C@H:?8 6G:56?46 E92E AD:=@4J3:? 2?5 @E96C ADJ49656=:4 DF3DE2?46D 42? 96=A 😕 EC62E:?8 ADJ49@=@8:42= 5:D@C56CD DF49 2D A@DEEC2F>2E:4 DEC6DD 5:D@C56C 2?5 2?I:6EJ]k^Am

    kAm%96 &]$] u@@5 2?5 sCF8 p5>:?:DEC2E:@? C646?E=J 2FE9@C:K65 2 “3C62A2?:6D]k^Am

    kAmqFE AD:=@4J3:? 😀 DE:== :==682= F?56C 7656C2= =2H[ 4=2DD:7:65 2D 2 $4965F=6 ` 5CF8 F?56C E96 &]$] r@?EC@==65 $F3DE2?46D p4E[ 2=@?8 H:E9 {$s[ 96C@:? 2?5 @E96C 5CF8D[ H:E9 ?@ 2446AE65 >65:42= FD6D]k^Am

    kAm|65:42= 6IA6CED 42FE:@? 282:?DE =682=:K:?8 2 5CF8 E92E 42? =625 E@ ADJ49@D:D[ D2J:?8 :E H@F=5 ;6@A2C5:K6 AF3=:4 962=E9 2?5 D276EJ]k^Am

    kAm%92E 92D?’E DE@AA65 2 92?57F= @7 |2DD249FD6EED 4@>>F?:E:6D[ :?4=F5:?8 $2=6>[ p>96CDE 2?5 r2>3C:586[ 7C@> 2AAC@G:?8 A=2?D E@ 564C:>:?2=:K6 D>2== 2>@F?ED @7 AD:=@4J3:? 2?5 2FE9@C:K6 :ED FD6 7@C E96C2AJ]k^Am

    kAm%96 ADJ49656=:4 AC@A@D2=D 7246 =@?8 @55D @? q624@? w:==[ H96C6 =68:D=2E:G6 =6256CD 92G6 366? C6=F4E2?E E@ E2<6 FA AC6G:@FD D:>:=2C >62DFC6D] q@E9 3:==D H@F=5 ?665 E@ 36 2AAC@G65 3J E96 7F== DE2E6 w@FD6 @7 #6AC6D6?E2E:G6D 2?5 $6?2E6 367@C6 =2?5:?8 @? v@G] |2FC2 w62=6J’D 56D< 7@C 4@?D:56C2E:@?]k^Am

    kAmk6>mr9C:DE:2? |] (256 4@G6CD E96 |2DD249FD6EED $E2E69@FD6 7@C }@CE9 @7 q@DE@? |65:2 vC@FAUCDBF@jD ?6HDA2A6CD 2?5 H63D:E6D] t>2:= 9:> 2E k2 9C67lQ>2:=E@i4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>Qm4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>k^2m]k^6>mk^Am

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

    Source link

  • The Weight-Loss Drug Wegovy Now Comes in a Pill

    People turning to injectable GLP-1 treatments—a class of drugs that mimics that hormone to control diabetes and promote weight loss—now have another way to take the medication.

    On Dec. 22, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Wegovy pill from Novo Nordisk. The pill will contain 25 mg of semaglutide—the same compound in the injectable version of Wegovy—to treat overweight or obesity, either for people who use the pills to start a weight-loss program or for those who use them to maintain weight loss. People prescribed the pill will take one a day. (By comparison, people using the pen versions of the medication inject themselves once a week.)

    “I am excited to launch the pill because I’ve recognized that so many people right now are in need of weight loss but are still not going forward with [medications like Wegovy] because there is a taboo with injections,” Novo Nordisk’s CEO Mike Doustdar tells TIME. “They want to swallow a pill without being judged if someone sees them injecting [a medication]. We waited and waited to make sure that when the pill comes out, it’s the right one and the most efficacious one.”

    In the studies the company submitted to the FDA, people who took the daily Wegovy pill lost about the same amount of weight—around 16.6% of their body mass—as those who gave themselves weekly Wegovy injections for just over a year.

    Read More: How a Nobel-Winning Researcher Transformed Cancer Treatments With His Lifesaving Curiosity

    A safe and effective weight-loss pill has been a holy grail for pharmaceutical companies. One of the main challenges with developing one is that medicines often have a hard time surviving harsh stomach acids. The new pill incorporates proprietary technology used at Novo Nordisk to temporarily alter the specific area of the stomach where the pill lands and prevent it from getting degraded by the digestive enzymes too quickly, says Andrea Traina, medical director at Novo Nordisk. “That results in a bioavailability of the daily Wegovy pill with an efficacy and safety that is consistent with what we see with the injectable formulation of Wegovy,” she says. “At the end of the week, the average exposure levels of the two formulations are consistent.”

    Wegovy pill is not the first oral GLP-1 that Novo Nordisk has launched. Rybelsus is a semaglutide pill that the FDA approved in 2019 to treat diabetes. Doustdar says that Rybelsus and the Wegovy pill will differ in dose and in the conditions they treat. Wegogy pill contains about double the highest dose of Rybelsus, which is what studies showed is necessary to achieve a meaningful weight loss.

    Since both the injectable and pill versions of Wegovy contain the same main ingredient, semaglutide, the pill’s label also notes it can lower the risk of heart disease.

    Wegovy pill is the first oral GLP-1 approved by the FDA to treat obesity. On Dec. 18, Novo Nordisk’s competitor Eli Lilly submitted an FDA request for approval of its GLP-1 pill, orforglipron, to help people maintain weight loss after completing a year-long series of using an injectable GLP-1. In November, Lilly received a Commissioner’s Priority Voucher, which means the review process for the drug could be shortened from months to weeks.

    Both Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly joined with the White House to make GLP-1 drugs, including the pills, more affordable. The maintenance dose of the pills will cost $149 for a month’s supply for people who don’t use insurance or who obtain them through government programs.

    Novo Nordisk plans to launch the Wegovy pill in January.

    Alice Park

    Source link

  • State touts progress keeping drugs out of prisons

    BOSTON — Massachusetts corrections officials say they’re making progress curbing the amount of illegal drugs being smuggled into the state’s prisons.

    A report released Wednesday by the Massachusetts Department of Correction said a multiagency task force created to intercept contraband in state correctional facilities investigated 26 cases that led to arrests and the seizure of millions of dollars worth of synthetic cannabis, heroin and opioids.

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm%96 E2D< 7@C46[ H9:49 :?4=F56D DE2E6 2?5 7656C2= 286?4:6D[ D2:5 2D @7 s64] a :E 925 @A6?65 ae 42D6D 😕 H9:49 2CC6DED H6C6 >256 @C 492C86D H6C6 7:=65[ >@DE :?G@=G:?8 E96 56=:G6CJ @7 5CF8D @C 4@?EC232?5 :E6>D E@ :?42C46C2E65 A6@A=6] pFE9@C:E:6D 2=D@ D6CG65 `d DE2E6 2?5 E9C66 7656C2= D62C49 H2CC2?ED C6=2E65 E@ E9@D6 :?G6DE:82E:@?D]k^Am

    kAm“!C6G6?E:?8 52?86C@FD 5CF8D 2?5 4@?EC232?5 7C@> 6?E6C:?8 DE2E6 AC:D@?D 😀 6DD6?E:2= E@ AC@E64E:?8 E96 D276EJ 2?5 962=E9 @7 2== H9@ =:G6 2?5 H@C< 24C@DD s~r 724:=:E:6D[” !F3=:4 $276EJ 2?5 $64FC:EJ $64C6E2CJ v:?2 zH@? D2:5 😕 2 DE2E6>6?E]k^Am

    kAm“%96 C6DF=ED @7 E9:D ;@:?E 677@CE =65 3J E96 s~r 2?5 |2DD249FD6EED $E2E6 !@=:46 56>@?DEC2E6 H92E 😀 A@DD:3=6 H96? =2H 6?7@C46>6?E A2CE?6CD 4@>3:?6 6?7@C46>6?E[ :?E6==:86?46 2?5 E649?@=@8J E@ 5:DCFAE :==682= 24E:G:EJ[” D96 25565]k^Am

    kAm$J?E96E:4 42??23:?@:5D >256 FA 2 >2;@C:EJ @7 E96 D6:KFC6D[ 3FE 2FE9@C:E:6D 2=D@ :?E6C46AE65 $F3@I@?6 DEC:AD – @?8 :?>2E6D – 2D H6== 2D 76?E2?J= 5@D6D[ 96C@:? 2?5 @IJ4@5@?6 A:==D[ 2FE9@C:E:6D D2:5] s~r :?G6DE:82E@CD D2:5 E96 D6:K65 42??23:?@:5D 2=@?6 925 2 G2=F6 @7 >@C6 E92? Sh >:==:@?]k^Am

    kAmx? |2J[ :?G6DE:82E@CD 2=D@ 42F89E 2? |rx}@C7@=< :?>2E6 😕 A@DD6DD:@? @7 2 =2C86 BF2?E:EJ @7 za DJ?E96E:4 42??23:?@:5D 9:556? :?D:56 323J A@H56C 4@?E2:?6CD] x? E9:D 42D6[ :?G6DE:82E@CD 6DE:>2E65 E96 G2=F6 @7 E96 za E@ 36 ?62C=J Sad_[___[ E96 C6A@CE’D 2FE9@CD D2:5]k^Am

    kAmpE |rx$9:C=6J[ :?G6DE:82E@CD D2:5 E96J :?E6C46AE65 2 56=:G6CJ 😕 ~4E@36C E@ 2? :?42C46C2E65 :?5:G:5F2= 2?5 7@F?5 2 >282K:?6 H:E9 ?F>6C@FD A286D E92E E6DE65 A@D:E:G6 7@C DJ?E96E:4 42??23:?@:5D[ 244@C5:?8 E@ E96 C6A@CE]k^Am

    kAms~r r@>>:DD:@?6C $92H? y6?<:?D D2:5 E96 E2D< 7@C46 92D :?E6C46AE65 “92C>7F= DF3DE2?46D” 7C@> 6?E6C:?8 DE2E6 AC:D@?D H9:=6 6?24E:?8 ?6H A@=:4:6D[ D276EJ >62DFC6D 2?5 E649?@=@8J “E92E DFAA@CE @FC 23:=:EJ E@ 56E64E 2?5 56E6C :==682= 24E:G:EJ]”k^Am

    kAm“%96D6 2CC6DED F?56CD4@C6 @FC 4@>>:E>6?E E@ 9@=5:?8 244@F?E23=6 E9@D6 H9@ 5:DC682C5 E96 962=E9 2?5 D276EJ @7 @FC 4@==628F6D 2?5 E9@D6 😕 @FC 42C6[” 96 D2:5]k^Am

    kAmr9C:DE:2? |] (256 4@G6CD E96 |2DD249FD6EED $E2E69@FD6 7@C }@CE9 @7 q@DE@? |65:2 vC@FAUCDBF@jD ?6HDA2A6CD 2?5 H63D:E6D] t>2:= 9:> 2E k2 9C67lQ>2:=E@i4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>Qm4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>k^2m]k^Am

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

    Source link

  • From prison to pardon: How President Trump gave me back my life

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Leaving prison after almost 20 years felt like waking from a nightmare. I had been sentenced to life for a first-time, nonviolent drug offense. My two brothers were locked away too, and while we served out our terms, both of our parents passed away. That loss hurt more than the sentence ever could. 

    We weren’t there to support them in their final days. We couldn’t comfort them, or each other. We couldn’t say goodbye. And knowing that when it mattered most, we were locked behind bars … it crushed us. 

    So, when I finally came home — thanks to President Donald Trump granting me clemency from what would have been an unimaginably harsh life sentence — all I wanted was to stand with my brothers, the only family I had left, and scatter our parents’ ashes together. It wasn’t just about honoring them. It was about closing one of the most painful chapters of our lives. It was about being a family again. 

    But even after our release, we couldn’t grieve together.  

    ‘REAL HOUSEWIVES’ STAR JEN SHAH FREED EARLY FROM PRISON SENTENCE FOR WIRE FRAUD SCHEME

    Here’s the problem. We were placed on federal supervised release. That meant we needed permission to see each other, even though our cases were nonviolent, and we had no further violations. The government denied us the chance to mourn our parents in the way families should. 

    (L. to R.) Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, Charles Tanner Jr. (Duke’s son), President Donald Trump, Charles ‘Duke’ Tanner, and legendary college football coach Lou Holtz. (Courtesy of Charles ‘Duke’ Tanner)

    That moment opened my eyes to how broken supervised release is. It wasn’t meant to be this way. The system is supposed to help people rebuild their lives, find work, reconnect with family safely reenter society with support and stay crime-free (as my brothers and I did). Instead, in many cases, it becomes another punitive sentence. It hinders rehabilitation rather than supports it.

    But there’s hope. Members of Congress introduced the Safer Supervision Act, a bill designed to fix what’s broken. Because a system that wouldn’t allow me and my brothers to mourn our parents together is not a system that advances safety or rehabilitation. 

    GHISLAINE MAXWELL PLANS TO ASK JUDGE TO FREE HER FROM PRISON, AND SHE’LL REPRESENT HERSELF, LAWYER SAYS

    Supervised release often feels like a trap. The rules are so strict and unforgiving that even people doing the right things are constantly under threat of being thrown off track, despite years of progress. Travel bans across state or county lines without permission. Required frequent meetings with probation officers, ignoring work or family commitments. A blanket ban on being with anyone else who has a criminal record, even your own brothers.   

    I defy you to find how any of that keeps society safer or helps someone rebuild. It prolongs punishment, undercuts redemption and blocks genuine second chances. Meanwhile, it distracts law enforcement from focusing on people who are truly dangerous. That doesn’t make sense.   

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION

    It doesn’t have to be this way. If the Safer Supervision Act becomes law, it restores fairness and balance. It will allow people who meet strict safety criteria to earn their way off supervision, so authorities can focus on the real threats, as they should.

    Former boxer Charles "Duke" Tanner and his son Charles Tanner Jr.

    Former boxer Charles ‘Duke’ Tanner and his son Charles Tanner Jr. (Courtesy of Charles ‘Duke’ Tanner)

    Trump, though known for being tough on crime, also understood this: that people who’ve paid their debt deserve a shot at rebuilding. That’s why I’m profoundly grateful to him. His decision didn’t just give me back my freedom; it gave me back my hope. 

    He brought me home to my son, my family, my brothers and my community. He saw the humanity in someone the system had too often ignored. I stand with the president in supporting others like me, and our families will remember his act of compassion for decades.    

    If we build on his example and pass the Safer Supervision Act, we can make sure that our federal supervision system truly supports second chances.  

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    I share my story not out of bitterness, but in gratitude for a president who believes in redemption, and for the chance to speak as a free man. 

    My family still carries the weight of the years we lost. But we also carry hope — hope that America can learn from stories like mine and ensure no other family endures what mine did. 

    Source link

  • A Pill for Sexual Desire Reaches a New Group of Women

    On Dec. 15, Sprout Pharmaceuticals received approval to use its pill, Addyi (flibanserin), to treat low sexual desire in women who are past menopause.

    Addyi works by addressing neurotransmitters like dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin in the brain, balancing them to stimulate sexual desire signals while suppressing inhibitory ones. The pill has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) since 2015 to treat hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD) in pre-menopausal women, and the expanded approval includes women under age 65 who are past menopause, a time when hormone levels drop and libido changes.

    The FDA required an additional review of data on women after menopause to ensure the drug’s safety and efficacy in the larger age group—a requirement that Cindy Eckert, Sprout’s CEO, says represents a double standard and stigma against addressing sexual desire in women, since that data was part of the company’s original submission for approval and included women 18 to 80 years old. Eckert discussed with TIME the company’s long road to the approval and the larger issues facing certain medicines for women.

    This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

    What does finally receiving FDA approval for Addyi in post-menopausal women mean for women’s health?

    I might not have fully processed yet how big this win is. It’s an historic first in women’s health. I think this signifies not only scientific recognition of a medical condition that affects millions of women that had been previously discussed only with stigma, not science, but also a cultural recognition that we value sexual health as part of women’s overall wellness, their longevity, and their well-being. And that their sex life doesn’t end at menopause. To me, we played the long game, and culture caught up.

    Why did Sprout have to file a separate request to treat decreased libido in women past menopause?

    I built a male sexual health company at a time when there was only long-acting testosterone treatment for men. Now there are 26 FDA-approved treatments for some form of male sexual dysfunction, but there were none for women. I watched the big guns not do anything about the science, and that was a commentary on the perspective they had on women’s health: they don’t value sexual health in women the same as they do in men. We left women out of the conversation.

    So Sprout took it on. And I should have anticipated that the first-ever drug for women’s sexual pleasure would not follow a straight line. To me, it’s about the science. HSDD was characterized in 1977. Medicine has understood it for some time now, but what crept in was social commentary, a societal bias that questions whether pleasure matters for women.

    Read More: What to Know About Early Menopause

    In the end, Addyi was approved [in 2015 for pre-menopausal women] on the basis of science, with clinical trials involving 13,000 women, which was three times the size of the trials conducted on Viagra at the time of its [FDA] submission. Granted, erectile dysfunction is different from HSDD in women, but the FDA took six months to approve Viagra, and by contrast it took us six years to earn approval for Addyi.

    Addyi works on neurotransmitters in the brain. If you think of other drugs that work in the central nervous system, we don’t separate populations by age in the same way. But that was the FDA mandate. It’s the same molecule, and the same dosage as Addyi that was approved for HSDD. But there is a pattern in women’s health where we lead with a skewed point of view on the importance of factors—including the desire for sex—that are societally conditioned. The world wasn’t ready for a female Viagra.

    Why did it take so long to earn FDA approval for Addyi in the first place?

    Not only do we rule out anything a woman is experiencing as probably emotional and not medical, if there is a medical solution, we lead with its risk. The reason for that is that we have already dismissed that there is any benefit in addressing her symptoms.

    Read More: How to Fight Hair Loss During Menopause

    When Addyi first came out, there were discussions about the risks when taken with alcohol. Studies showed that some women experienced side effects including dizziness, sleepiness and nausea, and less than 2% had to discontinue Addyi because of them. So if you have one or two drinks in the evening, wait a couple of hours before taking Addyi at bedtime. Or if you have more than three drinks, then skip Addyi that night. It’s common sense.

    We [as a society] talk about the risks of Addyi and alcohol in every article. But it’s not our call, it’s every woman’s call. She gets to weigh the benefits—more desire for sex, more interest in sex, more satisfying sexual events, and less stress over her condition.

    What challenges have you faced in bringing a pill for women in menopause to market?

    More women experience sexual dysfunction than men globally. The expansion to post-menopausal women is long overdue. As a female founder in health, even when raising money for this product that has a higher prevalence than erectile dysfunction, we weren’t getting any money from Sand Hill Road [a part of Silicon Valley rife with venture capitalists]. 

    I had built a successful company in men’s sexual health. I had seen what the standard was there. When the same standard wasn’t applied for women, I questioned it and pushed back. I had a six-hour, very public conversation with the FDA about this, and there was a lot of manufactured controversy—because of how we feel about women and sex.

    Why do you think sexual desire in women is not treated seriously by the medical community?

    The fact is that 50% of the population goes through menopause, and we’re told, “Just relax, take a bubble bath; it’s just a transition period.” It’s literally a biological phenomenon, and we treat it by telling people to just calm down.

    There’s a concept in medicine that women’s symptoms are considered more likely to be psychosomatic and more likely based in emotions. It shows up in the way we treat women’s heart attacks, and that it takes longer to prescribe pain medication for women than for men.

    To me, the basis of that is that we believe women are entirely psychological creatures rooted in emotion, while men are biological creatures. That gives us as a society extraordinary permission to dismiss what women are experiencing, because once we decide that women are emotional, any symptom women report, they’re patted on the shoulder and told to relax. We’ve created a culture of dismissal.

    What does this approval mean for other women’s health products?

    To me, this is a litmus test for what this conversation is going to be like. Now we are saying half of the population goes through this thing called menopause. Now we are taking it, I hope, a little more seriously. It will be fascinating if this conversation is fundamentally different this time around. Addyi is a case study for whether things have actually changed.  

    Finally, Addyi is a pink pill, and you often dress in pink. How did that start?

    Pink is a bit of active defiance to me. When people were patting me on the shoulder, saying, ‘Oh the little pink pill,’ I recognized that in that was dismissiveness and trivialization, and that was the very conversation I wanted to have: you perceive [women’s loss of sexual desire] as weakness or unimportant, but I see it very differently. I was criticized for wearing pink and was told people wouldn’t take me seriously. But I believe you always get two choices. You either lean back away from it and distance yourself, or you lean right in toward it. I always loved pink, and never saw it as a sign of weakness. I see it as a strength to show up exactly as you are.

    Correction, Dec. 16

    The original version of this story mischaracterized how the drug was approved for post-menopausal women. The FDA required an additional review of data Sprout had already provided; new studies were not conducted.

    Alice Park

    Source link

  • Arrest log

    The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.

    BILLERICA

    • Michael Parker, 50, 67 Salem Road, Billerica; assault with dangerous weapon, intoxicated licensee carrying firearm.

    • Katherine Marie Main, 41, unknown address; fugitive from justice on court warrant.

    LOWELL

    • Brian Cooper, 29, 17 Yarmouth Drive, Nashua, N.H.; warrant (unlicensed operation of motor vehicle), operating motor vehicle without license.

    • Luis Oliveras, 65, 144 High St., Apt. 2, Lowell; operation under influence of alcohol.

    • Emily Rogers, 33, homeless; warrant (shoplifting), trespassing.

    • Kosall Deth, 44, 73 Fort Hill Ave., Apt. 2, Lowell; warrant (failure to stop/yield).

    • Kenneth Eng, 21, 27 Hastings St., Lowell; warrant (operation of motor vehicle with suspended license), failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.

    • Kevin Sok, 32, 21 Main St., Dunstable; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.

    • Nicholas Powell, 36, 301 Old Marshall Road, Dracut; warrant (failure to appear for unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).

    • Daniel Ramos-Vallejo, 23, 35 Temple St., Apt. 19, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, failing to submit motor vehicle for inspection.

    • Thomas McGrath, 34, homeless; shoplifting, trespassing after notice.

    • Mason Cruz, 30, 619 Gorham St., Apt. 2, Lowell; assault and battery on police officer, resisting arrest.

    • Mary Foley, 45, 93 Berkeley St., Billerica; breaking and entering motor vehicle, disturbing peace.

    • Teddy Buckley, 36, homeless; trespassing.

    • Betsy Bettencourt, 60, homeless; two counts of trespassing.

    • Peter Gichuhi, 44, homeless; public drinking.

    • Kristen Butler, 25, 205 Farrwood Drive, Haverhill; warrants (failure to appear for two counts of trespassing, and shoplifting by asportation), trespassing.

    • Bryant Dottin, 28, 18 Morton St., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for unregistered motor vehicle, and suspended license).

    • Divine Morse, 25, 271 E. Eighth St., No. 410, Boston; warrant (uninsured motor vehicle).

    • J’Lohn Moro, 33, 590 Market St., Apt. 325, Lowell; shoplifting.

    • Khaisone Sinlong, 30, 189 Walker St., No. 5, Lowell; operating motor vehicle without license, failure to stop/stop sign, warrant (malicious damage to motor vehicle).

    • Michael Picardi, 38, homeless; warrant (possession of Class E drug).

    • Joshua Rivera, 37, 57 Mount Vernon St., Lowell; warrant (distribution of Class A drug), trafficking in 18 grams or more of cocaine.

    • Jeffrey Breitwieser, 38, homeless; assault on emergency medical technician or health care provider, trespassing.

    NASHUA, N.H.

    • Nathaniel Ciardelli, 32, no fixed address; criminal trespassing, theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).

    • Dagoberto Vasquez Bamaca, 20, 46 Ledge St., Nashua; simple assault.

    • Jack Pearson Smith, 20, 56 Furber Lane, Wolfeboro, N.H.; driving under influence.

    • Trisha Morin, 40, no fixed address; nonappearance in court.

    • Jorge Lewis Curet, 40, 92 Ledge St., Apt. 2, Nashua; stalking.

    • Marion Smith, 49, no fixed address; theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000), nonappearance in court.

    • Cara Kulingoski, 48, no fixed address; warrant.

    • Darryl Hudson, 43, 7 Van Buren St., Nashua; out of town warrants.

    • Cameron Joseph Sousa, 21, 24 Gillis St., Nashua; nonappearances in court, suspension of vehicle registration, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension, unregistered motor vehicle, operation of motor vehicle without valid license.

    Staff Report

    Source link