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Tag: FBI

  • Former Chief of Staff For Governor Gavin Newsom Indicted – LAmag

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    Dana Williamson, a longtime political consultant, was the subject of a “multiyear investigation,” by the FBI for a slew of corruption-related crimes, prosecutors say

    A former Chief of Staff for Governor Gavin Newsom was arrested Wednesday after what federal prosecutors call a “multiyear investigation” into pilfered campaign cash that allegedly propped up a lifestyle of “private jet travel, luxury hotel stays, home furnishings, and designer handbags, as well as deductions for no-show jobs for friends and family.”

    Dana Williamson, 53, of Carmichael, was charged by a federal grand jury with conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States and obstruct justice, subscribing to false tax returns, and making false statements, U.S. Attorney Eric Grant for California’s Eastern District announced Wednesday. The 23-count indictment was unsealed following Williamson’s arrest.

    Prosecutors say Williamson, who served as the governor’s top aide from 2022 until 2024, is accused of helping funnel around $225,000 from a dormant campaign account apparently belonging to former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra to Becerra’s former chief of staff Sean McCluskie. McCluskie appears to be cooperating with federal prosecutors, as is Sacramento lobbyist Greg Campbell, who was part of the alleged scheme.

    According to the indictment, Williamson and another unnamed co-conspirator transferred money from Becerra’s state campaign account to Campbell’s firm for purported consulting services. Then, according to court documents, Campbell’s firm sent thousands of dollars a month to a third-party payroll provider, which paid McCluskie. The payments were disguised as pay for a no-show job supposedly performed by McCluskie’s spouse, according to the indictment.

    “This is a crucial step in an ongoing political corruption investigation that began more than three years ago,” Grant said. That timeline puts Williamson as a top executive in the Governor’s office as federal investigators were probing her for corruption.

    Williamson is also accused of cheating on her taxes by putting roughly $1 million in luxury expenses on her returns as business appropriations, prosecutors say. Those bogus business expenses include an HVAC system for her house, a $15,000-plus Chanel handbag and ring, a $10,000 payment to one of her relatives, a $21,000 private jet trip, and a watch worth more than $9,000 for a close friend, according to the indictment. She also deducted an $11,000 yacht rental along with luxury hotel stays during a birthday trip in Mexico, according to the indictment.

    Prosecutors say Williamson lied to FBI agents about the scheme involving Becerra’s campaign money. She is also suspected of feeding inside information to a company regarding a lawsuit by the state of California.

    “Disguising personal luxuries as business expenses—especially to claim improper tax deductions or to willfully file fraudulent tax returns is a serious criminal offense with severe consequences,” said IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Oakland Field Office Special Agent in Charge Linda Nguyen. “IRS-CI will pursue charges against those who deliberately exploit their business for personal enrichment.”

    When Williamson left Newsom’s office, while under investigation, the Governor released a statement praising her as a “fighter” with a “big heart.”

    Gov. Gavin Newsom’s former Chief of Staff was indicted after “multiyear” FBI investigation, prosecutors say
    Credit: (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images)

    “I greatly appreciate Dana’s counsel and her service to the state and the people of California over the last two years,” Newsom said in 2024. “Her insight, tenacity, and big heart will be missed.”

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    Michele McPhee

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  • Arctic Frost Is the Democrats’ New Baseline | RealClearPolitics

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    To conservatives, Arctic Frost is a scandal. To Democrats, it’s their new baseline. And the only way to stop it is to punish them.

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    Rachel Bovard, The Federalist

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  • FBI urges ICE agents to identify themselves after string of impersonators commit crimes

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    Ever since the Trump immigration raids began in Los Angeles in June, local leaders and community activists have criticized agents for sometimes making it difficult to identify them as federal law enforcement officials or refusing to identify themselves at all.

    Now, an unexpected new group has expressed its own concerns: the FBI.

    Citing a string of incidents in which masked criminals posing as immigration officers robbed and kidnapped victims, the FBI recently issued a memo suggesting agents clearly identify themselves while they’re in the field.

    The FBI explained its reasoning in a three-page document sent to police agencies across the country last month.

    In the memo, the FBI says that criminals impersonating law enforcement “damages trust” between them and the community and that law enforcement has an “opportunity” to better coordinate with their local, state and federal partners. It calls for informational campaigns to educate the public about impostors and for agents to show their identification when asked while out in the field.

    Undocumented immigrants and U.S. citizens have been detained by masked people on city streets, in hospitals, courthouses, and outside schools and places of worship over the last several months. California has banned the use of masks among law enforcement agencies, but on Tuesday a cadre of masked agents gathered in an offsite Dodger Stadium parking lot while carrying out more raids.

    A man seeking asylum from Colombia is detained by federal agents as he attends his court hearing in immigration court in New York City.

    (Michael M. Santiago / Getty Images)

    The FBI’s memo, obtained through a records request by the national security transparency nonprofit Property of the People, was prepared by the New York field office and first reported by Wired magazine. It details several instances where people impersonated immigration agents.

    In Florida, a man pretending to be an ICE agent kidnapped a woman who was in the process of becoming a U.S. citizen. The suspect approached the woman on April 21, claimed he was there to pick her up and showed her his shirt that read ICE, the FBI said. The woman got in the suspect’s car and he drove her to an apartment complex, but she was able to escape.

    In August, three men in black clothing and wearing vests robbed a New York restaurant and stole from their ATM. The suspects also beat the employees and tied them up. One of the employees willingly surrendered to the suspects when they heard them identify themselves as immigration agents, the FBI said.

    The FBI also pointed to an April social media post where a man wearing a black jacket with an ICE patch stood outside a hardware store to intimidate day laborers. An image circulating on social media matching the description of the incident showed the man also wearing a red Trump hat.

    “I don’t know if there is federal law that requires a standard police uniform,” David Levine, a professor of law at UC San Francisco said. “It’s good practice to have a distinguishing uniform. Because when you have federal agents dressing as ruffians, with scarves over their faces and glasses in a paramilitary fashion, then it’s so much easier for people to impersonate them.”

    The FBI’s national press office did not respond to requests for comment, citing the government shutdown in an automated email response.

    U.S. Border Patrol march to the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building

    U.S. Border Patrol march after a show of force outside the Japanese American National Museum where Gov. Gavin Newsom was holding a press conference on Aug. 14 in Los Angeles.

    (Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Times)

    The FBI’s memo arrives several months after masked agents descended on Los Angeles and other cities across the country at the behest of the Trump White House. Multiple undocumented immigrants have died while trying to flee masked agents during immigration raids, while others have come under gunfire in their vehicles and many more have been beaten by masked agents who did not immediately identify themselves.

    Levine says it’s a person’s constitutional right under the 4th Amendment to ask a masked, federal agent to identify themselves.

    “It takes a cool head under a tense moment to ask someone, ‘What’s your name? I can’t see your badge? Can you identify yourself?’” Levine said. “It’s practically impossible to ask all of that when you’re being thrown to the ground. But you do have the right to ask.”

    There are plenty of examples of people impersonating law enforcement in California in recent years.

    In April 2018, Luis Flores-Mendoza of Santa Ana was sentenced to eight months in prison for posing as a federal immigration officer in an attempt to extort $5,000 from a woman, who reported him to the police. The following month, Matthew Ryan Johnston of Fontana was sentenced to two years in federal prison for impersonating an ICE agent. In 2023 and 2024, police in Southern California announced arrests in two separate cases where men were accused of impersonating police to conduct traffic stops.

    State officials have sounded the alarm as well because of the Trump administration’s approach.

    Earlier this year, after federal immigration raids in the Central Valley, two Fresno men were accused of posing as federal immigration agents and recording themselves harassing local businesses. The Fresno Police Department said the pair, who wore wigs and black tactical vests with letters deliberately covered up so they read “Police” and “ICE,” confronted people at nearly a dozen businesses. The department said the men appeared to have done it for social media purposes and declined to release their names.

    a man places a sign on part of a "No Ice" mural

    Raymond Cruz, 56, places a sign on part of a “No Ice” mural in Inglewood on July 1.

    (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

    In March, Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta issued a warning to Californians about the rise of ICE impersonators and scammers looking to take “advantage of the fear and uncertainty created by Trump’s mass deportation policies. “

    “Let me be clear: If you seek to scam or otherwise take advantage of California’s immigrant communities, you will be held accountable,” Bonta said.

    In June, two additional local cases popped up that weren’t included on the FBI memo.

    In one, Huntington Park police arrested a man who they suspected of posing as a Border Patrol agent. Police said the man possessed an unlicensed handgun and copies of U.S. Homeland Security removal notices and a list of radio codes for U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

    Huntington Park Police Chief Cosme Lozano speaks as he joins officials in a press conference

    Huntington Park Police Chief Cosme Lozano speaks at a press conference after a 23-year-old man from Los Angeles was arrested by Huntington Park Police on suspicion of impersonating a law enforcement officer.

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    In the other, police in Los Angeles County arrested a man driving a decommissioned police cruiser with control lights and a siren. Authorities allege he had cocaine, a forged Homeland Security investigator’s badge and a pellet gun in his car.

    In a statement, Property of the People Executive Director Ryan Shapiro said, “It’s rich the FBI thinks ICE has a PR problem in immigrant communities because of impersonators, while masked and militarized ICE agents are waging a daily campaign of terror against those very communities.”

    “Anyone caught impersonating a federal immigration agent will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” a senior Homeland Security official said.

    “Anyone who comes into immediate contact with an individual whom they believe is impersonating an immigration officer, or any law enforcement officer, should immediately contact their local law enforcement agency,” the official said.

    Kash Patel, President Trump and Pam Bondi stand next to each other

    Kash Patel, director of the FBI, left, President Trump, center, and Pam Bondi, U.S. attorney general, during a news conference in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 15.

    (Jo Lo Scalzo/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    In a statement to The Times, the office of Mayor Karen Bass said it’s unacceptable for law enforcement officers to operate without properly identifying themselves.

    “The Mayor has been supportive of state legislation that would require immigration officers to identify themselves as well as make it a crime for law enforcement officers to wear a face covering while performing their duties, except for specific circumstances such as protection from hazardous smoke.”

    Los Angeles Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez, whose district includes MacArthur Park, Cypress Park and Pico Union, said the FBI’s memo simply confirms what locals have known all along, even as they create “confusion, fear, chaos and real danger.”

    “Now even the FBI, under an administration that has aggressively expanded unconstitutional immigration enforcement, has confirmed that when agents don’t clearly identify themselves, it opens the door for violent impersonators to prey on vulnerable families,” Hernandez said in a statement. “That’s exactly why I co-authored the council motion requiring the LAPD to verify the identity of anyone claiming to be a law enforcement officer, and to strengthen penalties for impersonating an officer. When even Trump’s FBI is warning that unidentified agents put us at risk, it’s a clear sign that this problem can’t be ignored any longer.”

    Still, not everyone thinks agents will heed the FBI’s advice. Even if agents were to begin identifying themselves during sweeps, the distrust stemming from the raids in the summer will stay with community members for some time, advocates say.

    “I don’t expect them to all of a sudden start walking around with no mask or start walking around and identifying themselves,” said Leo Martinez of VC Defensa, a coalition of local groups dedicated to protecting the immigrant and refugee populations of Ventura County. “More than anything, I think it’s a way for the FBI to put a little bit of distance between themselves and the ICE agents in the public relations sphere, but not really on the ground.”

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    Nathan Solis, Ruben Vives

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  • All leads into finding Broward girl last seen in June ‘exhausted,’ detectives say

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    Gabrielle Patricia Terrelonge

    Gabrielle Patricia Terrelonge

    FBI Miami

    Detectives with several agencies, along with FBI agents, say all leads into the whereabouts of a 10-year-old Broward girl last seen over the summer are “exhausted.”

    Police arrested her mother Tuesday on child neglect charges, jail records show.

    The biological father of Gabrielle Patricia Terrelonge reported her missing Oct. 29 after he discovered her mother and sole custodian, Passha Davis, 34, was in jail after being arrested Oct. 17 on charges of giving law enforcement a false ID and resisting without violence charges.

    READ MORE: FBI joins search for missing 10-year-old girl last seen in South Florida in June

    The missing persons report sparked a multi-agency search for Terrelonge, that included the Miami field office of the FBI.

    What most concerned law enforcement is that the “last proof of life” for the little girl was when she was seen leaving a Walmart in Hollywood on June 21, according to Davis’ arrest paperwork.

    Passha Davis, 34, is the mother of Gabrielle Patricia Terrelong, who was reported missing Oct. 29, 2025. Terrelonge was last seen by anyone other than Davis in June. Margate police arrested Davis Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025, a felony child neglect charge.
    Passha Davis, 34, is the mother of Gabrielle Patricia Terrelong, who was reported missing Oct. 29, 2025. Terrelonge was last seen by anyone other than Davis in June. Margate police arrested Davis Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025, a felony child neglect charge. FDLE

    When police spoke with Davis at the Paul Rein Detention Facility on Oct. 31 to ask about her daughter, she told them she “had no knowledge” of the little girl’s disappearance and that she should be with her father, Margate Detective Antoine Kahlyl wrote in his report.

    The name of Gabrielle’s father was redacted from the report.

    Family members interviewed by police say that while Davis has been the only person to have custody of Terrelonge since birth, she has a history of mental health, substance abuse issues, per Kahlyl’s report. She’s also listed as homeless.

    Terrelonge’s extended family said they had not seen her since December.

    “At this moment, the whereabouts of [Terrelonge] remain unknown, despite Law Enforcement exhausting all family members, locations, associations and areas that the victim was known to be while with the defendant,” Kahlyl wrote in his report.

    Regarding the arrest of Davis, Kahlyl wrote:

    “The Defendant failed to provide any reasonable explanation as to the whereabouts of her minor child. [Davis] has also failed to provide adequate services and supervision necessary to maintain her physical and mental health.”

    Davis is being held in jail on a $100,000 bond, records show.

    Gabrielle stands four feet, eight inches tall and weighs about 100 pounds. With shoulder-length hair, she was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, black pants and white Crocs.

    Anyone who has information on Gabrielle’s disppearance should call 1-800-CALL-FBI or go to tips.fbi.gov. Calls can also be made to the Margate Police Department at 954-972-7111

    David Goodhue

    Miami Herald

    David Goodhue covers the Florida Keys and South Florida for FLKeysNews.com and the Miami Herald. Before joining the Herald, he covered Congress, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy in Washington, D.C. He is a graduate of the University of Delaware.
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    David Goodhue

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  • UPS cargo plane engine fell off before fiery Kentucky crash that killed 12; FBI investigating

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    The left engine of the UPS cargo plane involved in the fiery crash at Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport (SDF) in Kentucky Tuesday fell off during takeoff, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) confirmed Wednesday. 

    UPS Flight 2976 crashed with three crew members on board and more than 200,000 pounds of fuel into the Kentucky Petroleum Recycling building after departing from SDF at about 5:15 p.m. ET Tuesday, according to Gov. Andy Beshear. 

    At least 12 people are dead, including the three crew members onboard and a young child, and 11 others on the ground were injured, Beshear said.

    Though the cause of the crash has not yet been released, NTSB officials said the left engine detached from the plane and was found on the airfield.

    HONG KONG CARGO PLANE SKIDS OFF RUNWAY, KILLING TWO

    CCTV footage from a Kentucky business showed the moment a UPS wide-body cargo plane went down Nov. 4, 2025.  (Kentucky Truck Parts & Service)

    Preliminary information indicates the flight was not delayed, and no immediate maintenance work was performed before takeoff, officials said. There are no known airworthiness directives tied to the aircraft or its engines.

    The NTSB confirmed the FBI is assisting with the investigation “under a longstanding Interagency agreement.”

    It is unclear if criminal intent was suspected or what the plane was carrying at the time of the crash.

    NTSB officials said shipments that travel through the Louisville UPS hub daily contain “life-saving drugs, postal products, food, supplements, you name it.”

    A fireball erupts near airport property.

    A fireball erupts near airport property after a UPS plane crashed at Louisville International Airport Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025. (Jon Cherry/AP Photo)

    LOUISVILLE UPS PLANE CRASH CAUGHT ON CCTV FOOTAGE

    Investigators on Wednesday afternoon recovered the aircraft’s cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder commonly known as the “black box,” which the NTSB said was exposed to heat but appeared intact.

    They will be analyzed at the NTSB’s lab in Washington, D.C.

    Several specialized groups have been established by the NTSB, including an operations group to review the flight history and crew duties leading up to the crash; a structures group to document the wreckage, impact angles and aircraft trajectory before impact; a power plants group to examine the engines and related accessories; a systems group to investigate hydraulics, electrical, instruments and flight controls; and a maintenance group to review maintenance records and history of work performed on the aircraft.

    Smoke rises from the site of a UPS cargo plane crash

    Smoke rises from the site of a UPS cargo plane crash near the UPS Worldport at Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport in Louisville, Ky., Nov. 4, 2025. (Leandro Lozada/AFP via Getty Images)

    UNITED PLANE AT SAN FRANCISCO AIRPORT COLLIDES WITH ANOTHER JET WHILE PULLING BACK FROM GATE

    Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) records showed the plane was in service for nearly 35 years, according to a report from Reuters.

    The agency said it is balancing investigative thoroughness with the need to reopen runways at the airport, which it said is critical for essential supply chain operations.

    The Louisville airport is home to UPS Worldport, a global hub for the shipping company’s air cargo operations and its largest package-handling facility worldwide. UPS is the largest employer in Louisville, providing 26,000 jobs, according to Louisville Business First.

    Black smoke billows from the Louisville plane crash.

    Fire and smoke mark where a UPS cargo plane crashed near Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport Nov. 4, 2025. (Stephen Cohen/Getty Images)

    AIRLINES TOLD TO REEVALUATE EMERGENCY EVACUATION PROCEDURES AFTER CARRY-ON CONCERNS

    Beshear declared a state of emergency Wednesday morning to assist in recovery efforts.

    “I’m deeply saddened to share that the death toll has risen to 12, with several individuals still unaccounted for,” Lousiville Mayor Craig Greenberg wrote in an X post Wednesday night. “No one should face tragedy alone. Please take a moment to hug your loved ones and check on your neighbors. We will continue providing resources and support to everyone affected by this heartbreaking event.”

    The NTSB will hold an organizational meeting to establish party status for various entities, including the aircraft manufacturer, operator, labor unions representing crew members and relevant government agencies. Once they join, they are prohibited from commenting publicly without NTSB consent.

    Officials noted the investigation will not be affected by the ongoing federal government shutdown.

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    The FBI did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

    Fox News Digital’s Pilar Arias and Emma Bussey contributed to this report.

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  • UFC’s Dana White confirms FBI talks over unusual betting activity on fighter Isaac Dulgarian match

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    UFC president Dana White confirmed that the organization has been in talks with the FBI over “unusual” betting activity on a fight involving fighter Isaac Dulgarian.

    Dulgarian was the heavy favorite heading into UFC Fight Night 263 over the weekend but stunningly lost in the first round by submission. It was the first stoppage loss of his career.

    Yadier del Valle of Cuba secures a rear choke submission against Isaac Dulgarian in a featherweight fight during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on Nov. 1, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

    But behind the scenes and prior to the fight, White was contacted by Integrity Compliance 360 (IC360) over what he called “unusual” betting action that reportedly saw wagering interest on opponent Yadier del Valle to win in the first round.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    White told TMZ Sports on Tuesday that they contacted Dulgarian and his attorney before the fight to question him over their concerns.

    “We called the fighter and his lawyer, and said, ‘What’s going on? There’s some weird action going on in your bet – some weird betting action going on with your fight. Are you injured? Do you owe anybody money? Has anybody approached you?’ And the kid said, ‘No, absolutely not. I’m going to kill this guy.’ So we said, OK.”

    White said as soon as the fight was over, the UFC contacted the FBI.

    Isaac Dulgarian walks in octagon

    Isaac Dulgarian returns to his corner after the first round of his featherweight fight against Christian Rodriguez during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on March 16, 2024, in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)

    NBA MEMO SHEDS LIGHT ON LEAGUE’S INTEGRITY CONCERNS AFTER GAMBLING-RELATED ARRESTS

    “The fight plays out and [it’s a] first-round finish by rear-naked choke. Literally, the first thing we did was call the FBI.

    White said he has since spoken to the FBI multiple times. He stopped short of calling Dulgarian “guilty.”

    “There is no proof that he’s done this yet, but I can tell you this: it doesn’t look good. It definitely doesn’t look good.”

    Isaac Dulgarian fights

    (L-R) Christian Rodriguez punches Isaac Dulgarian in their featherweight fight during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on March 16, 2024, in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)

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    Caesars Sportsbook released a statement after the fight announcing that losing bets would be refunded.

    The controversy surrounding the UFC comes amid the FBI’s bombshell indictments into illegal sports betting and gambling that involved allegations against Miami Heat player Terry Rozier, Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and former NBA player and coach Damon Jones.

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  • Federal prosecutors flesh out their case against James Comey. It still looks shaky.

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    On July 5, 2016, FBI Director James Comey publicly explained why he did not think Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump’s Democratic opponent in that year’s presidential election, should be prosecuted for her “extremely careless” handling of “very sensitive, highly classified information” as secretary of state during the Obama administration. But four months later, just 11 days before the election, Comey informed Congress that the FBI had reopened its investigation of Clinton in light of recently discovered emails between her and her personal assistant. Although the new evidence did not change the FBI’s assessment of Clinton’s conduct, Comey did not report that outcome to Congress until November 6, two days before the election.

    Comey took a lot of flak from Democrats, who thought he had recklessly undermined their nominee’s prospects by revealing a renewed yet ultimately fruitless investigation so close to the election. He responded by encouraging his “good friend” Daniel Richman, a Columbia law school professor, to defend him in interviews with reporters, which helped generate stories that summarized Comey’s perspective on the controversy. Sometimes Richman was quoted by name, and sometimes he provided information “on background.” Richman’s interactions with the press, it turns out, are at the center of the perjury and obstruction charges against Comey.

    That point, which federal prosecutors first revealed to Comey’s lawyers on October 15 and fleshed out in a brief they filed on Monday, adds some much-needed clarity to the vague, skimpy indictment that Lindsey Halligan, the interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, obtained on September 25. At the same time, it sheds light on the reasons why Halligan’s predecessor, whom Trump replaced just a few days before the indictment, did not think the case was worth pursuing—an assessment shared by career prosecutors in his office.

    Halligan says Comey lied during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on May 3, 2017, less than a week before Trump fired him out of anger at the FBI’s investigation of alleged ties between his 2016 campaign and the Russian government. Although the statute of limitations precludes charging Comey in connection with that hearing, Halligan alleges that he reiterated his lie when he reaffirmed his 2017 testimony during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on September 30, 2020. Halligan managed, just barely, to obtain an indictment within five years of the latter hearing.

    As relevant to the indictment, Comey answered “no” in 2017 when Sen. Charles Grassley (R–Iowa) asked whether he had “ever authorized someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports” about “the Clinton investigation.” At the 2020 hearing, Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas) noted the exchange with Grassley, and Comey said “I stand by” that answer, adding that his testimony “is the same today.”

    In sticking by his 2017 testimony, Halligan alleges, Comey “willfully and knowingly” made “a materially false, fictitious, and fraudulent statement” to Congress, a felony punishable by up to five years in prison under 18 USC 1001(a)(2). Comey’s statement was false, the indictment says, because he “then and there knew” that he “in fact had authorized PERSON 3 [Richman] to serve as an anonymous source in news reports regarding an FBI investigation of PERSON 1 [Clinton].” Halligan says Richman qualified as “someone else at the FBI” because, in addition to his full-time, paying gig at Columbia, he served the agency as an unpaid “special government employee” during Comey’s tenure there.

    There are several problems with Halligan’s interpretation of Comey’s exchange with Cruz, beginning with the fact that the senator’s questioning focused on a dispute between Comey and Andrew McCabe, his former deputy, regarding the release of information about a different FBI investigation. Comey’s lawyers argue that “when Senator Cruz referenced Senator Grassley’s question about whether Mr. Comey authorized ‘someone else at the FBI’ to serve as anonymous source, there was no reason to assume that he was referring to anyone but full-time employees like Mr. McCabe—who were stationed at the FBI—as opposed to someone like Mr. Richman, who was a Special Government Employee living fulltime in New York.”

    In light of Comey’s close, longstanding friendship with Richman, it is especially plausible that he did not think of him as “someone else at the FBI.” Richman repeatedly defended Comey’s handling of the Clinton investigation, both on and off the record, in conversations with journalists—to the point that a sympathetic 2017 article in The New Yorker described Richman as “a close friend of Comey who has served as his unofficial media surrogate.” Given that background, it seems unlikely that Comey, in his responses to Grassley and Cruz, was trying to cover up Richman’s role in getting him good press.

    That is nevertheless what federal prosecutors suggest in their November 3 brief. Officially, it is a response to Comey’s argument that the indictment should be dismissed because his prosecution is vindictive and selective, driven by Trump’s personal grudge against him. But in rebutting that claim, the brief offers a narrative that was conspicuously missing from the indictment, which Halligan rushed to obtain before a statutory deadline that would have missed by the end of September.

    Notably, the indictment was signed by Halligan alone, which seemed to reflect internal skepticism about the charges. But the response to Comey’s claim of vindictive and selective prosecution is signed by two assistant U.S. attorneys: N. Tyler Lemons and Gabriel J. Diaz, both of whom were reassigned to Halligan’s office from the Eastern District of North Carolina in October.

    Lemons and Diaz cite emails between Comey and Richman that illustrate their collaboration in generating stories that reflected Comey’s defense of the way he handled the Clinton investigation. On November 1, 2016, for example, Comey expressed his dissatisfaction with coverage of the controversy in The New York Times.

    “When I read the [Times] coverage involving [reporter Michael Schmidt], I am left with the sense that they don’t understand the significance of my having spoke[n] about the case in July,” Comey wrote. “It changes the entire analysis. Perhaps you can make [Schmidt] smarter.”

    Comey was alluding to his argument that he had an obligation to update Congress about the Clinton investigation in light of his earlier announcement. “Why is this so hard for them to grasp?” he wondered. “All the stuff about how we were allegedly careful not to take actions on cases involving other allegations about which we have never spoken is irrelevant. I love our practice of being inactive near elections. But inactivity was not an option here. The choices were act to reveal or act to conceal.”

    Richman replied the next day, assuring Comey that he was working hard to promote his perspective: “This is precisely the case I made to them and thought they understood. I was quite wrong. Indeed I went further and said mindless allegiance to the policy (and recognition that more evidence could come in) would have counseled silence in [J]uly to let [Clinton] twist in the wind.”

    Later that day, Richman told Comey he had tried again, this time with more success: “Just got the point home to [Schmidt]. Probably was rougher than u would have been.”

    That same day, the Times ran a flow-chart-style article by Matt Apuzzo and Sergio Pecanha under the headline “These Are the Bad (and Worse) Options James Comey Faced.” Comey deemed that article “pretty good,” adding, “Someone showed some logic. I would paint the cons more darkly but not bad.” Richman replied, “See I *can* teach.” Comey expressed his gratitude: “Well done my friend.”

    On February 11, 2017, Richman emailed Chuck Rosenberg, who was then acting head of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Rosenberg had previously held various FBI and Justice Department positions, including chief of staff for Comey when he was deputy attorney general during George W. Bush’s administration.

    “My pal at the NYT, Mike Schmidt, is (along with [Matt] Apuzzo, [Adam] Goldman, and (gag me) [Eric] Lichtblau)…doing a huge piece on the [Clinton] emails,” Richman wrote. “He’s had a ton of background conversations with players and non-players (like me). Mike would very much like to talk to you exclusively on background as he tries to [understand] Jim’s decisionmaking to the extent possible. Mike asked me to reach out to you. Hence this email. Would you be willing to chat with him?” Rosenberg said he would “reach out” to Schmidt.

    The “huge piece” to which Richman referred evidently was a story by Apuzzo, Schmidt, Goldman, and Lichtblau that the Times ran on April 22, 2017, under the headline “Comey Tried to Shield the F.B.I. From Politics. Then He Shaped an Election.” The story quoted Richman by name, describing him as “a longtime confidant and friend of Mr. Comey’s.” Comey was again pleased. “I read the piece,” he wrote to Richman the next day. “Thanks so much for your words and tell [Schmidt] he did a good job. Would be different if I wrote it but it is by and large fair.”

    Richman replied: “You’re ever so welcome. And will do re Mike. Any badly or under-developed points for me to work on with the New Yorker? Or just the usual.”

    Richman apparently was referring to a flattering article by Peter Elkind that would appear in the May 11, 2017, issue of The New Yorker, titled “James Comey’s Conspicuous Independence.” Like the April 22 Times story, it quoted Richman by name, describing him as “a Columbia law professor and close friend of Comey who has served as his unofficial media surrogate.”

    The evidence cited by the government, in short, does not do much more than confirm Richman’s well-known role as Comey’s champion. It establishes that Richman, with Comey’s encouragement, sometimes openly defended his friend and sometimes worked behind the scenes to influence press coverage.

    Given the latter approach, it is accurate to say that Comey “authorized” Richman to “serve as an anonymous source in news reports” about the Clinton investigation. But the assertion that Comey lied about that hinges on two questionable assumptions.

    Halligan assumes that Comey, when he was questioned by Grassley and Cruz, would have thought of Richman as “someone else at the FBI” rather than his “longtime confidant and friend.” She also assumes that Comey was deliberately trying to mislead the senators about his well-established relationship with Richman, at least to the extent that it included “background” discussions with reporters.

    To convict Comey, prosecutors would have to persuade a jury that there is no reasonable doubt about either of those propositions. It is therefore not surprising that Erik Siebert, Halligan’s predecessor, was not keen to pursue this case, or that Trump managed to get what he wanted only by intervening at the last minute. He replaced Siebert with Halligan, a neophyte prosecutor whose main qualification was her willingness to overlook the weaknesses that had deterred her predecessor, and he publicly ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to prosecute Comey before it was too late.

    “We can’t delay any longer,” Trump told Bondi. “JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!” Five days later, Siebert delivered the indictment that Trump had demanded, although it was such a hasty job that the details of the allegations against Comey are only now coming into focus. Those details reinforce the impression that Trump was determined to get Comey one way or another, regardless of the law or the evidence.

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    Jacob Sullum

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  • FBI Warns of Criminals Posing as ICE, Urges Agents to ID Themselves

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    Criminals posing as US immigration officers have carried out robberies, kidnappings, and sexual assaults in several states, warns a law enforcement bulletin issued last month by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The bureau urges agencies to ensure officers clearly identify themselves and to cooperate when civilians ask to verify an officer’s identity—including by allowing calls to a local police precinct. “Ensure law enforcement personnel adequality [sic] identify themselves during operations and cooperate with individuals who request further verification,” it says.

    First reported by WIRED, the bulletin cites five 2025 incidents involving fake immigration officers and says criminals are using Immigration and Custom Enforcement’s heightened profile to target vulnerable communities, making it harder for Americans to distinguish between lawful officers and imposters while eroding trust in law enforcement. A review of public reporting confirms four of the five cases described in the bulletin. One appears to have gone unreported, suggesting the FBI drew in part on internal law enforcement information. The document was first obtained by the transparency nonprofit Property of the People.

    On August 7, according to the FBI, three men in black vests entered a New York restaurant claiming to be ICE agents. Inside, they tied a worker’s hands and pulled a garbage bag over the person’s head. Another, believing the burglars’ story, surrendered themselves, only to be kicked to the ground and tied up as the intruders robbed an ATM.

    The bureau’s advisory urges agencies at every level of government to coordinate to “verify legitimate versus non-legitimate operations” attributed to ICE—a call that frames the wave of impersonations as a national law-enforcement concern.

    The FBI declined to comment. Its national press office said that it could only respond to media inquiries involving national security, violations of federal law, or essential public safety functions during the government shutdown.

    Cases cited by its advisory span kidnappings, street crime, and sexual violence: In Bay County, Florida, the advisory says, a woman “unzipped [her] jacket and revealed a shirt that said ICE” and told her ex-boyfriend’s wife she was there to “pick her up,” before driving her to an apartment complex. The woman later escaped. In Brooklyn, it alleges, a man told a woman he was an immigration officer and “directed [her] to a nearby stairwell,” where he punched her, tried to rape her, and stole her phone before police caught him. In Raleigh, North Carolina, it claims, a man “entered [a] motel room and threatened to deport the woman if she did not have sex with him,” telling her he was a sworn officer. He showed her a business card with a badge, police said.

    The FBI describes a few signs of impersonation: forged or mismatched credentials, outdated protective gear, and cloned vehicle markings. It’s urging agencies to launch outreach programs aimed at identifying fake ICE agents, a step the FBI argues could counteract the mistrust caused by impersonators and strengthen law enforcement’s image.

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    Dell Cameron, Caroline Haskins

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  • FBI Thwarts Possible Halloween Terror Attack – LAmag

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    Kash Patel said the FBI has thwarted a potential Halloween weekend terrorist attack in Michigan with multiple would-be jihadi arrested

    FBI Director Kash Patel said that several suspects hellbent on committing an act of terror in Michigan were arrested, interrupting what homeland security officials call a jihadi plot.

    White House Senior Director for Counterterrorism Seb Gorka wrote on social media that federal agents “disrupted a Jihadi terror plot in Detroit timed for Halloween when innocent children should be enjoying themselves Trick or Treating. The threat is real.”

    A federal source told Los Angeles that at least five people, including a teenager, were taken into custody at several locations after search warrants were executed at two Dearborn addresses, according to the city’s police department who said in a statement:  “the FBI conducted operations in the City of Dearborn earlier this morning,” in a statement that emphasized “there is no threat to the community at this time.”

    A third warrant was executed in Inkster, according to the police there, who posted on Facebook that stated federal agents were working in its jurisdiction.

    Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said Friday, “As details continue to develop, I am grateful for the swift action of the FBI and MSP protecting Michiganders.”

    The Department of Justice has not yet identified the suspects or announced federal charges against them. In May, the DOJ announced charges against a 19-year-old Michigan man who was an active member of the National Guar who was allegedly planning to attack a U.S. military base in the U.S. on behalf of ISIS.

    In that case, Ammar Abdulmajid-Mohamed Said, confided in an undercover FBI agent a plan “he had personally devised and formulated to conduct an armed attack and mass shooting on the U.S. Army’s Tank-Automotive & Armaments Command (“TACOM”) facility at the Detroit Arsenal in Warren, Michigan,” according to a criminal complaint.

    Ammam Said pledged loyalty to ISIS in 2024 when he was active member of the Michigan National Guard, according to a criminal complaint
    Credit: Department of Justice Exhibit

    Investigators say Said played a video on his cellular phone that depicted Said performing a “bayah” pledge of loyalty to the “Chalifa” of ISIS in 2024 while he was still an active member of the Michigan National Guard. According to a court docket, Said’s attorneys are in negotiations for a possible plea deal with the government.

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    Michele McPhee

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  • FBI searches Melodee Buzzard’s home in case of the missing Santa Barbara girl

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    The search for 9-year-old Melodee Buzzard took a new turn on Thursday when the FBI searched the girl’s Santa Barbara County home weeks after she was reported missing.

    Detectives escorted the girl’s mother, Ashlee Buzzard, off the property to another location “that would not interfere with their ability to conduct a thorough search,” the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office said.

    Along with the search at the home in the 500 block of Mars Avenue, authorities also searched a storage locker and the rental car that the girl was last seen in. Authorities said Melodee was missing on Oct. 14 after a prolonged absence from her school. Officials believe she was last seen as recently as Oct. 7 and may have been driven to Nebraska by her mother, the Sheriff’s Office said.

    Sheriff’s detectives and FBI agents served a search warrant at the Buzzard home where a makeshift memorial on the sidewalk includes a picture of the curly haired girl.

    “We appreciate the FBI’s assistance in today’s searches,” Lt. Chris Gotschall from the Sheriff’s Office said in a statement. “In cases like this, every detail matters and it is invaluable to have additional resources and specialized expertise. Collaboration with our federal partners allows us to ensure we’re using every available tool to help bring resolution to this case.”

    The Lompoc School District contacted the Sheriff’s Office to report the girl’s prolonged absence from her independent study program Oct. 14. Authorities then visited her home that day, but Melodee was nowhere to be seen and Buzzard refused to cooperate with their investigation, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

    Relatives on the girl’s father’s side of the family said they have not seen the girl in years.

    “She hasn’t let us see her for a few years,” Melodee’s aunt Bridgett Truitt told local news station KEYT. “And all of us have tried. But we never stopped thinking about her or loving her or praying for her.”

    Local authorities were unable to confirm any sightings of the girl within the last year. The FBI joined the investigation four days after her school district reported her absence.

    Melodee is described as 4 feet 6 inches tall, weighing about 60 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes.

    Staff writer Clara Harter contributed to this report.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • FBI thwarts ‘potential terrorist attack’ in Michigan

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    FBI Director Kash Patel said Friday the bureau had thwarted a “potential terrorist attack.”In a social media post, Patel said, “multiple subjects” were arrested by the FBI in Michigan Friday morning. Those subjects were allegedly plotting a violent attack over Halloween weekend, according to Patel. The director said more details were expected to come later.The FBI’s Detroit field office confirmed “the FBI in Michigan were present in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster this morning conducting law enforcement activities,” spokesperson Jordan Hall told CNN. “There is no current threat to public safety.”The Dearborn Police Department said it “has been made aware that the FBI conducted operations in the City of Dearborn earlier this morning.”“We want to assure our residents that there is no threat to the community at this time,” the police department said.Neither the FBI nor the Dearborn police said that the operations were connected to the arrests Patel announced Friday morning.This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

    FBI Director Kash Patel said Friday the bureau had thwarted a “potential terrorist attack.”

    In a social media post, Patel said, “multiple subjects” were arrested by the FBI in Michigan Friday morning. Those subjects were allegedly plotting a violent attack over Halloween weekend, according to Patel.

    The director said more details were expected to come later.

    The FBI’s Detroit field office confirmed “the FBI in Michigan were present in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster this morning conducting law enforcement activities,” spokesperson Jordan Hall told CNN. “There is no current threat to public safety.”

    The Dearborn Police Department said it “has been made aware that the FBI conducted operations in the City of Dearborn earlier this morning.”

    “We want to assure our residents that there is no threat to the community at this time,” the police department said.

    Neither the FBI nor the Dearborn police said that the operations were connected to the arrests Patel announced Friday morning.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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  • FBI announces arrests from nationwide ‘Summer Heat’ operation

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    FBI agents. (File image courtesy FBI)

    The FBI San Diego Field Office announced Thursday they have made several arrests over the past three months as part of their “Summer Heat” operation, a nationwide effort by the federal agency targeting violent crime.

    From June 24 through Sept. 20, all FBI field offices throughout the country say they executed federal warrants on alleged violent criminals and fugitives, dismantled reportedly violent gangs, identified and rescued child victims and resolved violent crime cases that even occurred on reservations, according to the agency.

    “The San Diego Field Office works diligently every day towards our mission of protecting the American public,” Special Agent in Charge Mark Dargis said in a statement.

    “The results of the FBI’s Summer Heat operations are proof that surging resources with our federal, state, and local law enforcement partners can, and did, make a significant impact on violent crime in our region. FBI San Diego will continue to aggressively investigate violent criminals while leveraging all available resources to keep our communities safe.”

    The San Diego field office made 76 arrests under the operation, including:

    • the arrest and transfer of a violent fugitive from Mexico alleged to have supplied thousands of kilograms of methamphetamine, fentanyl and cocaine to distributors and cells throughout San Diego and Los Angeles;
    • the seizure of five weapons, 107 kilograms of cocaine and 74 kilograms of methamphetamine–totaling more than $1.9 million;
    • the securing of a lengthy prison sentence for an FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitive behind a multimillion-dollar criminal empire that lured young women into pornography through lies, coercion and manipulation;
    • the facilitating of several other arrests resulting in sentences for sexual exploitation or abuse of a minor, and;
    • the identification and or location of seven children in sexual exploitation or abuse situations.

    The operation led to 8,629 arrests nationally, with more than 6,500 falling under the FBI’s Violent Crime and Gang program. Agents and intelligence professionals investigating violent crimes against children identified or located at least 1,053 child victims.

    The nationwide operation also led to the seizure of 44,569 kilograms of cocaine, 421 kilograms of fentanyl and 2,281 weapons, the agency reported.


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  • FBI Adds Charge Over Unborn Child in Birchmore Murder Case

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    Matthew Farwell, who was arrested by the FBI and charged with the murder Sandra Birchmore in Aug. 2024, is now charged with killing her unborn 8-to-10 week child

    Accused killer and former Massachusetts cop Matthew Farwell – who was arrested in Aug. 2024 for the murder of a 23-year-old pregnant woman he is also accused of grooming, a murder federal prosecutors say he then staged her death to look like a suicide – was hit with an additional charge connected to the death of her unborn 8 to 10-week-old boy.

    Farwell, multiple sources confirm, was not the father of the child, but believed that he was when he drove to her house in Canton, Massachusetts, on Feb. 1, 2021, and allegedly strangled her to death during a blizzard. According to the first indictment unsealed in the summer of 2024, which charged him, he then drove to a Boston area hospital to be there alongside his wife for the birth of the couple’s third child.

    In the lead-up to her brutal alleged murder, she was pestering Farwell, according to a federal complaint, “regarding her due date, ultrasounds, genetic testing, gender reveals, and doctor appointments.” Farwell, a married man whose third baby was due around the time Birchmore was excitedly telling everyone she was expecting and the detective was the father, wasn’t as excited and had texted her that he “wish she would die.”

    During a Nor’easter, Farwell had a change of heart. He texted Birchmore he “wanted to come by for a minute,” braving an ongoing blizzard that had created treacherous conditions, dumping a foot of snow on Boston’s south shore area. That night, Birchmore was captured on her apartment building’s security cameras coming in and out with an ice scraper. She texted Farwell at 9:10 p.m. that her door would be open. 

    Sandra Birchmore was a Stoughton Police Explorer at 12. In the program she met Matthew Farwell
    Credit: Birchmore family

    Farwell showed up four minutes later – wearing a COVID mask with a hoodie pulled tight over his head – and left twenty minutes later, driving directly to a Boston area hospital where his wife Michelle was giving birth to their third child, a boy. 

    Matthew Farwell’s wife gave birth to their third child just hours after he allegedly murdered Sandra Birchmore and is wearing the same clothes.
    Matthew Farwell’s wife gave birth to their third child just hours after he allegedly murdered Sandra Birchmore and is wearing the same clothes.
    Credit: Courtesy of The Case Podcast

    The six-foot-four detective, 38, was the last person to see her alive, and her body was found days later after Canton Police were asked to do a well-being check when Birchmore didn’t show up for work and couldn’t be reached. Yet, he was never seriously considered a suspect in her death despite multiple tips to the Norfolk County D.A.’s office about Farwell’s long history with Birchmore, who had been involved in a police mentoring program since she was a girl. 

    It would take nearly four years, and an FBI investigation before Farwell would be arrested in Birchmore’s death, essentially charged with framing the young woman for her own murder. Federal prosecutors now say he used his “knowledge and experience as a law enforcement officer to stage her death to make it look like a suicide.”

    The case was thrust into the national spotlight with the trial of Karen Read, the woman acquitted this summer after going on trial for the murder of her boyfriend, Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe. Her Los Angeles attorney, Alan Jackson, said his client was framed by a corrupt state trooper assigned to the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office, the same investigators who determined Birchmore’s case was a suicide. A judge in Read’s trial earlier this year barred any mention of Birchmore’s investigation by her attorneys.

    Birchmore first met Farwell when she joined the Stoughton Police Explorers Academy at 12 years old. Farwell is accused of initiating a relationship with Birchmore when she was 15 and he was 26, which is considered statutory rape under Massachusetts law.

    The handling of both cases has become the focus of intense scrutiny. The lead investigator in Read’s case, Michael Proctor, was fired, and a trove of his text messages was recently uncovered. Last week, he ended his fight to be reinstated, leading Jackson to say Proctor’s withdrawal of his appeal was an act of “self-preservation.”

    “He learned investigators had recovered text messages from his private phone dating back years, and he wanted no part of what those messages would reveal,” Jackson said. “He didn’t accept accountability—it hunted him down.”

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    Michele McPhee

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  • FBI Blows Lid Off NBA Betting and Illegal Poker Scandal – Houston Press

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    During football season around these here parts (and really, almost any part of America), it’s hard for a sports story, outside of the NFL, to cut through on a relevance and intrigue level. It’s exceedingly difficult. So kudos to the FBI, the New York mob, and a handful of current and former NBA luminaries for their key roles in the two-pronged gambling scandal that the government unveiled last week!

    In case you missed it, last week the FBI announced over 30 arrests in a massive investigation that blew the lid off of two illegal scams. First, current Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier was the big name in an inside information and game rigging scam that goes back a couple years. On multiple occasions, Rozier removed himself from games after just a few minutes so the “under” would hit on his individual player prop bets. This is an inferno for NBA commissioner Adam Silver, whose sport’s integrity is at stake in scandals like this.

    Second, the FBI announced a slew of arrests, several of which were reputed New York mob soldiers, involving illegal poker games. Taking this one a step further, not only were the games themselves illegal, but they were fixed, as the hosts of the games had electronic information on the hands of the “regular people” at the tables.

    Compounding things for Silver is that there is a tie to the NBA with the poker games, as Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and former player and coach (and current close friend of LeBron James) Damon Jones were paid thousands to appear at these games in order to attract clientele to want to play cards with celebs. Both reportedly knew about the cheating going on at the tables.

    This story feels like it’s just beginning. Reportedly, there are indictments coming down on people associated with college basketball engaging in similar conduct to Rozier at the NBA level. To be clear, I have a morbid fascination with stories like this. 

    With that in mind, here are the five craziest things from this still unfolding story: 

    1. After the March 23, 2023 game where Rozier pulled himself from the game nine minutes in, the co-conspirators went and got their $200,000 in winnings, and came back to Rozier’s house with the money in tow. The parties involved, including Rozier, then proceeded to count the cash in Rozier’s kitchen. What a visual this is! Please, tell me they used one of those cash counting shuffle machines, as they wrapped up stacks and stacks of cash.

    2. In addition to playing in the illegal poker games, Billups appears to have passed along inside information to gambling co-conspirators. In the court documents, there is a “Co-conspirator 8” on the sports betting charges, who is listed as a former player and current coach. It has to be Billups. Reportedly, he told bettors that the Blazers would be tanking games for better draft position late in March 2023. This should be the lead part of this story — an NBA head coach is in cahoots with gamblers, passing along inside information. 

    3. Most Houstonians may know Damon Jones from his time as a Univeristy of Houston Cougar in the mid ’90s. In the 2000s, he befriended LeBron James when the two played for the Cleveland Cavaliers. In 2022-2023, Jones had an unofficial position with the Lakers, essentially as L:eBron’s personal ball shagger, more or less. Like Billups, Jones was sharing inside information from the Lakers, specifically letting bettors know that James would be missing a game in February 2023 for load management, before the market knew. Bettors cleaned up by betting against the Lakers in a loss to the Bucks.

    4. The technology in these illegal poker games is mind boggling. Check this out — shuffling machines that could read the cards in the deck, poker chip trays with hidden cameras, special contact lenses and glasses that could read pre-marked cards, and an X-ray table that could read cards facedown on the table. Here is what the cards looked like through the shades and contact lenses.

    The lesson here — never play poker with people wearing shades, especially in the greater New York area! 

    5. Speaking of which, isn’t it awesome to have the mob back in our lives? I thought the “five families” were the stuff of mythology these days, like Zeus and centaurs and such. Nope! They’re very much alive! So welcome back to the Bonanno, Gambino, Luchese, and Genovese families. Too bad The Sopranos is no longer around, because you know we’d be getting a massive sports betting and rigged poker storyline next season. 

    I promise you, we will keep following this story. And by “we,” I mean “me.” THAT is something you can go bet on, and take it to the bank! 

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • “What Did Anyone Think Was Going to Happen?”: The NBA Gambling Scandal Hiding in Plain Sight

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    The brick row house sits just steps from Washington Square Park, in plain view of any passersby from New York University. In 2021, it was rented, the New York Post reported in its wall-to-wall coverage of an unmissable sports betting spectacle, to Travis Scott over the period when he was dating Kylie Jenner—a glancing connection that suggested no wrongdoing. It was not a New York landmark, exactly, but in its simultaneous accessibility and status, it brought out some essential, familiar character of its monied Greenwich Village vicinity.

    As federal prosecutors claimed in an indictment unsealed on Thursday, the building was later where “Flappy,” “the Wrestler,” and “Juice,” among other evocatively nicknamed alleged members of the Bonanno, Gambino, Lucchese, and Genovese New York mafia families, assembled to carry out a Hollywood-ready scheme that rigged poker games with card-reading contact lenses and X-ray tables and used the attendance of an active NBA coach, Chauncey Billups, as bait for their marks. In a separate but simultaneous indictment, prosecutors alleged that an active and a former player, Terry Rozier and Damon Jones, provided insider information on NBA games to bettors and, in Rozier’s case, manipulated his performance to the gambler’s benefit. (All the defendants in the two cases—which include Billups, Rozier, Jones, and alleged organized-crime affiliates—who have entered a plea thus far have pleaded not guilty on fraud, money laundering, extortion, and gambling charges.)

    Perhaps, as alleged, the set-up was even stranger than fiction, a relic from a bygone era when Gottis in courthouses dominated the tabloid pages, or when betting scandals rocked professional baseball several times over.

    And yet, in some sense, the alleged behavior was taking place right under our noses. Vanity Fair spoke with veterans of the gambling and mafia underworlds to help situate the relative absurdity—and predictability—of the scandal that has ricocheted across sports, business, and politics.

    The new sports gambling landscape

    “What did anyone think was going to happen?” New York sports radio host Craig Carton asked me on Friday.

    Carton’s career as a leading local drive time personality was upended in 2017 when he was arrested for running a ticket reselling Ponzi-like scheme in order to cover millions of dollars in gambling debts. He was sentenced to 42 months of prison for fraud, ultimately serving about a year, at what was a fairly quaint time by the standards of today’s gambling industry.

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    Dan Adler

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  • Congress Requests Briefing From NBA, Commissioner ‘Disturbed’

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    Posted on: October 25, 2025, 03:19h. 

    Last updated on: October 25, 2025, 03:19h.

    • Congress has asked NBA Commissioner Adam Silver to testify about the league’s illegal gambling scandal
    • Several current and former players and coaches were named in FBI indictments

    Congress is demanding answers from the NBA for what’s emerging as the biggest sports betting scandal since Pete Rose was found to have bet on baseball games he managed and played more than four decades ago.

    Congress NBA Adam Silver sports betting
    NBA Commissioner Adam Silver takes questions about the FBI’s indictment of several of its current and former players and coaches. Congress has asked Silver to testify about the illegal sports betting and gambling scandal. (Image: Amazon Prime)

    This week, the FBI unsealed two federal indictments naming more than 30 defendants who allegedly engaged in an unlawful sports betting and gambling operation, with the rigged poker component thought to have involved New York crime families. Several current and former NBA players, including Terry Rozier, NBA Hall of Famer Chauncey Billups, and Damon Jones, were named in the charges.

    This is the insider trading saga for the NBA,” FBI Director Kash Patel said Thursday. “It’s not thousands of dollars. It’s not tens of thousands of dollars. It’s not even millions of dollars. We’re talking about tens of millions of dollars in fraud, theft, and robbery.”

    Rozier is accused of throwing games and faking injuries for the benefit of his illegal sports gambling cohorts. Jones is accused of selling inside information about the status of key players, including LeBron James, to bettors looking for an edge on the books. Billups is alleged to have participated in an illegal poker scheme with mob ties.

    Congress Demands Answers 

    On Friday, the bipartisan leaders of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce sent a letter to NBA Commissioner Adam Silver requesting that he testify before the panel, which has jurisdiction over interstate commerce, consumer protection, and sports, regarding the federal sports fixing and illegal gambling indictments.

    The committee is seeking the NBA’s insights about the insider sports betting trading, which actions it intends to take to limit the disclosure of nonpublic information for illegal purposes, and whether the league’s Code of Conduct effectively prohibits such illegal activity. The committee members are also asking for an explanation of how the NBA’s current regulations might have allowed the matter at hand to be executed, and if the league is reevaluating the terms of its sports betting partnerships.

    The hearing will presumably also discuss player props, or bets in which a player can singlehandedly influence. 

    Silver ‘Deeply Disturbed’ 

    Silver was interviewed about the FBI bombshell during Friday night’s game between the Boston Celtics at the New York Knicks.

    My initial reaction was that I was deeply disturbed. There’s nothing more important to the league and its fans than the integrity of the competition. I had a pit in my stomach. It was very upsetting,” Silver said on Amazon Prime Video, during the streaming service’s first NBA broadcast.

    “I apologize to our fans that we are all dealing with this situation,” Silver said.

    Silver also answered for the NBA’s unfruitful probe of Rozier’s illegal conduct, as alleged by the FBI, when sportsbooks in 2023 tipped the league off to suspicious betting activity surrounding his player props.

    We frankly couldn’t find anything,” Silver said. “Terry cooperated. He gave the league his phone. He sat down for an interview. We ultimately concluded that were was insufficient evidence despite the aberrational behavior to move forward.”

    Silver concluded by saying Rozier hasn’t been convicted of anything, but he acknowledged that “it doesn’t look good.”

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    Devin O’Connor

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  • Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups charged in Mafia-backed poker scheme

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    NEW YORK — Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier were arrested Thursday along with more than 30 other people accused of participating in schemes involving illegal sports betting and rigged poker games backed by the Mafia, authorities said.

    Rozier is accused of participating in an illegal sports betting scheme using private insider NBA information, officials said. Billups, a Denver native who starred for the Nuggets during a long playing career, is charged in a separate indictment alleging a wide-ranging scheme to rig underground poker games that were backed by Mafia families, authorities said.

    Both men face money laundering and wire fraud conspiracy charges and were expected to make initial court appearances later Thursday.

    In the first case, six defendants are accused of participating in an insider sports betting conspiracy that exploited confidential information about NBA athletes and teams, said Joseph Nocella, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York. He called it “one of the most brazen sports corruption schemes since online sports betting became widely legalized in the United States.”

    The second case involves 31 defendants in a nationwide scheme to rig illegal poker games, Nocella said. The defendants include former professional athletes accused of using technology to steal millions of dollars in underground poker games in the New York area that were backed by Mafia families, he said.

    “My message to the defendants who’ve been rounded up today is this: Your winning streak has ended. Your luck has run out,” Nocella said.

    A message seeking comment was left Thursday morning with Billups. A message was also left with Rozier’s lawyer, Jim Trusty. Trusty previously told ESPN that Rozier was told that an initial investigation determined he did nothing wrong after he met with NBA and FBI officials in 2023, the sports network reported.

    In the sports betting scheme, players sometimes altered their performance or took themselves out of games early, New York Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said. In one instance, Rozier, while playing for the Hornets, told people he was planning to leave the game early with a “supposed injury,” allowing them to place wagers that raked in thousands of dollars, Tisch said.

    The indictment of Rozier and others says there are nine unnamed co-conspirators, including a Florida resident who was an NBA player, an Oregon resident who was an NBA player from about 1997 to 2014 and an NBA coach since at least 2021, as well as a relative of Rozier. Billups played in the NBA from 1997 to 2014 and currently resides in Portland as the Trail Blazers’ head coach.

    Rozier and other defendants “had access to private information known by NBA players or NBA coaches” that was likely to affect the outcome of games or players’ performances and provided that information to other co-conspirators in exchange for either a flat fee or a share of betting profits, the indictment says.

    The NBA placed Billups and Rozier on immediate leave Thursday and released a statement: “We are in the process of reviewing the federal indictments announced today. Terry Rozier and Chauncey Billups are being placed on immediate leave from their teams, and we will continue to cooperate with the relevant authorities. We take these allegations with the utmost seriousness, and the integrity of our game remains our top priority.”

    Rozier was in uniform as the Heat played the Magic on Wednesday evening in Orlando, Florida, in the season opener for both teams, though he did not play in the game. He was taken into custody in Orlando early Thursday morning. The team did not immediately comment on the arrest.

    The case was brought by the U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn that previously prosecuted ex-NBA player Jontay Porter. The former Toronto Raptors center pleaded guilty to charges that he withdrew early from games, claiming illness or injury, so that those in the know could win big by betting on him to underperform expectations.

    Billups was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame last year. The five-time All-Star and three-time All-NBA point guard led the Detroit Pistons to their third league title in 2004 as NBA Finals MVP.

    The Denver-born phenom graduated from George Washington High School and played basketball at CU before being selected with the No. 3 overall pick in the 1997 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics.  Known as Mr. Big Shot nationally and the King of Park Hill locally in Denver, Billups also played for Toronto, Denver, Minnesota, the New York Knicks and the Los Angeles Clippers. Billups won the Joe Dumars Trophy, the NBA’s sportsmanship award, in 2009 while playing for his hometown Nuggets.

    The 49-year-old Billups is in his fifth season as Portland’s coach, compiling a 117-212 record. The Trail Blazers opened the season Wednesday night at home with a 118-114 loss to Minnesota. Billups’ brother, Rodney, is currently the Nuggets’ director of player development and an assistant coach on David Adelman’s staff.

    A game involving Rozier that has been in question was a matchup between the Hornets and the New Orleans Pelicans on March 23, 2023. Rozier played the first 9 minutes and 36 seconds of that game — and not only did not return that night, citing a foot issue, but did not play again that season. Charlotte had eight games remaining and was not in playoff contention, so it did not seem particularly unusual that Rozier was shut down for the season’s final games.

    In that game, Rozier finished with five points, four rebounds and two assists in that opening period — a productive quarter but well below his usual total output for a full game.

    Posts still online from March 23, 2023, show that some bettors were furious with sportsbooks that evening when it became evident that Rozier was not going to return to the Charlotte-New Orleans game after the first quarter, with many turning to social media to say that something “shady” had gone on regarding the prop bets involving his stats for that night.

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  • David Adelman after Chauncey Billups, Terry Rozier arrests connected to sports gambling: ‘Just hoping for the best for everybody’

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    SAN FRANCISCO — In his first pregame news conference of the season, and his tenure as a full-time NBA head coach, David Adelman didn’t hear as many basketball questions as he probably would’ve liked.

    That’s because a somber cloud hung over the league on Thursday, after the arrests and federal indictments of an active player, Miami’s Terry Rozier, and a sitting head coach, Portland’s Chauncey Billups, in a wide-ranging FBI gambling investigation.

    “It’s tough,” Nuggets guard Bruce Brown said Thursday morning before the team’s season opener. “I know Chauncey’s a great guy. I’ve hung around him a little bit. It’s just unfortunate.”

    The indictments — particularly Rozier’s, which involved NBA players and coaches divulging nonpublic information to associates for the purpose of placing bets — raised another round of questions about the spread of such information and, more generally, the potential for corruption associated with the proliferation of online sports betting.

    “It’s new, so it’s like anything else. When the world changes, there’s gonna be hiccups,” Adelman said Thursday evening. “People get themselves in tough situations. I think all you can do is just keep pounding the rock and just (emphasize), ‘Hey, you’ve gotta be careful and understand what this is.’

    “(Betting) is such a part of our culture now and community, it’s not going anywhere. … You have to bring it up maybe more. Have more meetings about it. Mention it more throughout the year. Because you care about your players and you care about your staff, and you just don’t want to see them get in a tough situation.”

    Rodney Billups, who is Chauncey’s brother, is an assistant coach on Adelman’s staff and remained with the team Thursday. Adelman declined to specify whether they had a conversation about possibly stepping away from the team for personal reasons, but he stressed the importance of supporting his coworkers.

    “Whatever Rodney needs for his family is all I care about,” Adelman said. “The situation itself, I only know what I’ve read. You guys know what I know. When your family member is affected by something, you have to support that person. Rodney has been nothing but great for us since he’s been here.”

    Adelman and Warriors coach Steve Kerr both explained that the NBA facilitates meetings with each team about gambling and information disclosure. One example in Thursday’s indictment alleges that a co-conspirator told a bettor several Portland players would be sitting out a March 23, 2023, game as the Blazers were tanking for a better draft pick, allegedly leading to more than $100,000 in wagers that Portland would lose.

    “They give us the guidelines of what it is,” Adelman said. “Obviously, a tricky situation with some of the ‘don’t text, don’t talk,’ that kind of stuff. You’ve just gotta be careful in casual conversation with what you say. That’s the only level of it I know. They give us all the advice about it.”

    “I feel very comfortable sharing details because the league is really adamant about this stuff,” Kerr said. “Every team has to listen closely and hear everything, and a big part of that meeting was, (if) you tell one of your friends that ‘so and so is not playing’ and then that person tells someone else, you are liable. We know this.”

    Players also deal with an increased proximity to emboldened, aggressive fans on the internet stemming from the gambling industry.

    “Obviously, after every game, we get DMs about not hitting people’s parlays,” Brown said. “… There’s been games where I’ve been called every name in the book, just because I didn’t hit a 3 or two. I mean, that’s just the state of the game we’re in, since sports betting (became) legal. So I mean, just kind of deal with it. Not think about it. Don’t check your DMs after games.”

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  • FBI opens investigation after driver allegedly rams ICE vehicle during Arizona traffic stop attempt

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    The FBI is investigating after a vehicle carrying two Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers was allegedly rammed by a driver in another vehicle during an attempted Arizona traffic stop Thursday morning, officials said.

    The incident began around 8 a.m. local time, when ICE agents tried to stop a vehicle in the Avondale area, according to FOX 10 Phoenix.

    HILTON SLAMS DEMS AFTER MIGRANT ALLEGEDLY RAMS FED VEHICLES, WARNS RHETORIC FUELING ‘DANGEROUS CONDITIONS’

    The FBI has launched an investigation after a suspect allegedly rammed a vehicle carrying two ICE officers during an attempted traffic stop in Avondale, Ariz., Thursday. (KSAZ)

    Authorities allege that the driver refused to pull over and instead fled the scene, the outlet reported.

    The suspect then reportedly returned to a residence in his vehicle, where he rammed it into an ICE vehicle occupied by the two officers. 

    In a statement, FBI officials confirmed they are leading the investigation into the incident and will refer their findings to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona for a charging decision. 

    US MARSHAL, ILLEGAL ALIEN SHOT IN LOS ANGELES IMMIGRATION OPERATION

    Federal agents surround a home in Avondale

    Two ICE officers were inside their vehicle when it was allegedly rammed by a suspect who fled an attempted traffic stop in Avondale, Ariz., Thursday. (KSAZ)

    “The results will be turned over to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona for a charging decision,” the statement read.

    Officials have not yet disclosed the identity of the driver involved, whether any arrests have been made, or if any injuries were reported. 

    Avondale Police Department confirmed to Fox News Digital the incident was deferred to the FBI.

    In another ramming incident, three federal officers were also said to be injured Thursday in San Diego after a man, who ICE said was in the country illegally, allegedly rammed his vehicle to avoid arrest, per reports.

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    One witness, Michael Burreec, told ABC San Diego affiliate KGTV that the driver showed “blatant disregard for human life and the rule of the law is exactly why ICE San Diego will continue to pursue, arrest and remove dangerous illegal aliens who threaten our communities.”

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  • Grassley releases memo showing DOJ ‘unleashed unchecked government power’ on Trump associates

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    Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, on Thursday released an April 2022 Justice Department memo showing then-Attorney General Merrick Garland, then-Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco, and then-FBI Director Christopher Wray personally approved an FBI investigation into alleged efforts by Trump campaign associates to obstruct Congress’ certification of the 2020 election.

    Grassley posted the four-page memorandum on X, saying it proves top Biden administration officials “personally approved” the case — which he referred to as “Arctic Frost” — and that it “unleashed unchecked government power at the highest levels.”

    The Iowa Republican added, “My oversight will continue.”

    The April 2022 memo, signed by Garland, Monaco, and Wray, authorized the FBI’s Washington Field Office to open what the bureau designated a “Sensitive Investigative Matter.” The document details the FBI’s request to examine whether individuals connected to Donald Trump’s 2020 campaign conspired to obstruct Congress’ certification of the Electoral College on Jan. 6, 2021.

    TOP GOP SENATOR DEMANDS PROBE INTO WHETHER JACK SMITH ‘UNLAWFULLY’ TRIED TO INFLUENCE 2024 ELECTION

    “Following the 2020 Presidential and Vice Presidential election, in an apparent effort to obstruct Congress’s certification of Electoral College, fraudulent certificates of electors’ votes were submitted to the Archivist of the United States, purporting to represent the actual elector votes from the states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin,” the executive summary reads. “Open source reporting and public statements made by individuals closely associated with Donald J. Trump, Inc. (Trump Campaign) present an articulable factual basis indicating the existence of a federal crime, and thus the FBI seeks to open a full investigation.

    “Because this investigation involves a SIM as set forth in the Department of Justice memorandum dated February 5, 2020, entitled ‘Additional Requirements for Opening of Certain Sensitive Investigations’ (DOJ Memo), your authorization is required before WFO may initiate this full investigation,” the document continued.

    Monaco wrote at the bottom of the document, “Merrick- I recommend you approve,” before initialing and dating it 4/5/22. Garland ultimately signed off on the investigation on the same day.

    DEM REP DEFENDS DOJ OBTAINING GOP SENATOR CALL RECORDS IN 2023: ‘YOU WEREN’T SURVEILLED’

    Sen. Chuck Grassley released a memo from former FBI Director Christopher Wray to former Attorney General Merrick Garland to open an investigation into the Trump Campaign in April 2022, for allegedly attempting to interfere with Congress’ certification of the 2020 election. (Samuel Corum-Pool, Anna Moneymaker and Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images)

    The authorization came more than a year after the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and months before now-former Special Counsel Jack Smith was appointed to oversee related investigations. The memo appears to document an early stage of the Justice Department’s examination of the so-called “fake electors” effort that became a focus of Smith’s probe.

    In 2023, Smith subpoenaed phone records belonging to eight Republican senators and one House member, covering a four-day period — Jan. 4 to Jan. 7, 2021 — to examine call activity around the Capitol riot. The subpoenas did not seek call content but instead listed numbers, dates and durations.

    The targeted senators included Republican Sens. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, Josh Hawley of Missouri and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

    FBI FIRES AGENTS, DISMANTLES CORRUPTION SQUAD AFTER PROBE UNVEILS MONITORING OF GOP SENATORS, PATEL SAYS

    Former Special Counsel Jack Smith speaking to the press.

    Jack Smith, U.S. special counsel, speaks during a news conference in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2023.  (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    In addition to the eight senators, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, told Fox News’ Sean Hannity Tuesday that he recently discovered Smith also attempted to subpoena his toll records but that his phone company, AT&T, did not hand them over.

    Smith said the records were narrowly tailored and “entirely proper,” adding they were meant to support his investigation into Trump’s alleged efforts to subvert the 2020 election results.

    Sen. Chuck Grassley

    Senator Chuck Grassley, a Republican from Iowa and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, speaks during a hearing in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025 (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    His lawyers wrote to Grassley, saying the subpoenas complied with Justice Department policy and were routine.

    Republicans have broadly claimed they were inappropriately spied on and compared Arctic Frost to the Watergate scandal. Smith’s lawyers emphasized the normalcy of seeking phone records and said public officials are not immune from investigation.

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    Smith’s attorneys also disputed accusations from FBI Director Kash Patel that the subpoenas were hidden, noting the requests were referenced in a footnote of Smith’s final report and shared with Trump’s defense team in discovery.

    Fox News Digital’s Ashley Oliver contributed to this report.

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