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Tag: federal courts

  • Federal prosecutor admits ‘extraordinary’ timing in Abrego Garcia smuggling case charges

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    A federal prosecutor acknowledged Thursday that the decision to charge Salvadoran migrant Kilmar Abrego Garcia two years after a routine traffic stop was “extraordinary,” while defending the human smuggling case as legally justified.

    Abrego Garcia, 31, has become a flashpoint in the national immigration debate since last March, when he was deported to El Salvador in violation of a 2019 court order in what Trump administration officials acknowledged was an “administrative error.” 

    The Supreme Court later ruled that the administration had to work to bring him back to the U.S.

    After returning in June, Abrego Garcia was taken into federal custody in Nashville and detained on human smuggling charges stemming from a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee.

    He has pleaded not guilty and is seeking dismissal of the charges on the grounds of vindictive and selective prosecution.

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife Jennifer Vasquez Sura, left, are accompanied by Lydia Walther-Rodriguez, right, of We Are Casa, as they leave the federal courthouse, Thursday, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

    A 2019 court order prevents Abrego Garcia from being deported to El Salvador after an immigration judge determined he faced danger from a gang that had threatened his family. He immigrated to the U.S. illegally as a teenager and has been under the supervision of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). 

    Abrego Garcia was accused in court records of repeated domestic violence against his wife, who alleged multiple incidents of physical abuse in protective order filings. She later withdrew the protective order request and has defended her husband publicly. 

    The Department of Homeland Security has also said he was living in the U.S. illegally and has alleged ties to MS-13, disputing portrayals of him as simply a “Maryland man.” His attorneys have denied the gang allegations.

    Tennessee Highway Patrol body camera footage from when Abrego Garcia was pulled over for speeding shows a calm exchange with officers. While officers discussed suspicions of smuggling among themselves — noting there were nine passengers in the vehicle — Abrego Garcia was issued only a warning.

    TENNESSEE BODYCAM OF ‘MARYLAND MAN’ TRAFFIC STOP SHOWS TROOPERS’ HANDS TIED DESPITE SMUGGLING CLUES

    A woman is seen holding a sign of Kilmar Abrego Garcia in front of the U.S. Court for the Middle District of Tennessee. Abrego Garcia was deported to El Salvador's CECOT prison earlier this year, in what Trump administration officials described as an 'administrative error.' Photo via Getty Images

    A woman holds a sign in support of Kilmar Abrego Garcia in front of the U.S. District Court in Nashville. (Getty Images )

    First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee Rob McGuire, who was acting U.S. attorney in April 2025, testified Thursday that his decision to charge Abrego Garcia was based on the evidence.

    “I had previously prosecuted several human smuggling cases,” McGuire said, noting that after seeing video of the traffic stop, “I was immediately struck by how similar what was being depicted in the body cam was to those investigations.”

    McGuire said Abrego Garcia’s vehicle belonged to someone with “a human smuggling background” and added that the route was “suspicious.”

    “It was a large number of individuals traveling in one SUV with a driver who spoke for the group. No one had luggage… the car had Texas plates… the route was suspicious,” McGuire said.

    DEM JUDGE IN HOT SEAT AFTER DHS EXPOSES ‘WHOLE NEW LEVEL’ OF ACTIVISM, SHELTERING ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT

    Kilmar Abrego-Garcia arrives at the federal courthouse

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia arrived at the federal courthouse, Thursday, for a hearing on whether the charges against him should be dismissed. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

    During cross-examination, McGuire acknowledged that the timing of the charges, coming so long after the traffic stop, was “extraordinary.”

    He said he had not previously been aware of the traffic stop but reiterated that nobody in the Trump administration, including the White House or the Department of Justice, pressured him to seek the indictment.

    When asked about whether he might have felt pressure to prosecute the case, McGuire said, “I’m not going to do something that is wrong to keep my job.”

    DHS OFFICIAL RIPS KILMAR ABREGO GARCIA FOR ‘MAKING TIKTOKS’ WHILE AGENCY FACES GAG ORDER

    Kilmar Abrego-Garcia ICE Custody

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia, right, and his brother Cesar Abrego Garcia, center, arrive at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office in Baltimore, Aug. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)

    McGuire also said timing factored into charging Abrego Garcia since he was being held in El Salvador and he did not want the indictment to go public before all senior officials were briefed on the matter.

    “I knew from the get-go that this was going to be a controversial matter,” McGuire said.

    U.S. District Judge Waverly D. Crenshaw did not make a ruling Thursday and said he would wait to receive post-hearing briefs from attorneys by March 5 before determining whether another hearing is necessary.

    Crenshaw previously found some evidence that the prosecution “may be vindictive” and that prior statements by Trump administration officials “raise cause for concern.”

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    Thursday’s court appearance came after a federal judge blocked the Trump administration from re-arresting Abrego Garcia into federal immigration custody on Feb. 17.

    Fox News Digital’s Breanne Deppisch and Jake Gibson, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Judge orders migrant deported in 'error' free from ICE custody with criminal case looming

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  • Federal judge upholds temporary protected status for Haitian immigrants

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    A federal judge on Thursday upheld her order postponing the termination of temporary protected status for hundreds of thousands of Haitians in the United States.

    The Justice Department appealed U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes’ stay to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit but simultaneously requested that she rescind her order. Judge Reyes heard arguments from both sides on Thursday and said that she is denying the government’s motion and would issue a written order before Feb. 19, which is the next deadline in the appellate court case. 

    Reyes’ order pauses Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s termination of Temporary Protected Status for Haitians.

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION BLOCKED FROM ENDING TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS FOR HAITIANS

    U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes upheld her order postponing termination of temporary protected status for Haitians, denying the Justice Department’s motion. (David ‘Dee’ Delgado/Reuters)

    “During the stay, the Termination shall be null, void, and of no legal effect … The Termination therefore does not affect the protections and benefits previously conferred by the TPS designation, including work authorization and protection from detention and deportation, and the valid period of work authorization extends during the stay.”

    At the end of Thursday’s hearing, Reyes said she had something “important” to put on the record.

    “People are entitled to their views,” said Reyes, who is both the first Latina and openly LGBTQ person to serve in Washington, D.C., as a district court judge.

    LEFT-WING COURT HANDS KRISTI NOEM BIG WIN IN ‘UNVETTED IMMIGRATION’ CASE

    “I am an immigrant. I did not hide that from the president of the United States … or from the U.S. Senate,” Reyes said, adding that she has heard questions about “how someone like me, an immigrant and a lesbian could get this job.”

    Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian immigrants

    Judge Ana Reyes says Thursday she will issue a written order before Feb. 19 after denying the Justice Department’s motion to lift her stay pausing the termination of Temporary Protected Status for Haitians living in the United States. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

    Reyes remarked that she doesn’t hear anyone talking about how she was magna cum laude at Harvard Law and practiced law at a top firm for 22 years.

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    Reyes then went on to read threats that have been emailed to her chambers. “I don’t mind being called the C-word,” Reyes said, before quoting from various threats she said she has received.

    “I hope you lose your life by lunchtime … God d*** you. I hope you die today … The best way you could help America is to eat a bullet,” Reyes quoted. Judge Reyes also quoted from social media posts about her, including one which read, “Hang the b****.”

    Judge Ana Reyes

    U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes on Thursday denied the Justice Department’s request to rescind her order delaying the termination of Temporary Protected Status for hundreds of thousands of Haitians. (Reuters)

    “Many of my colleagues have received threats,” she said, adding there have been threats to the families of judges as well. “To those who would threaten judges … we will act without fear or favor. … We will continue to do our jobs. … We will not be intimidated.”

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  • Federal appeals court upholds Trump mass detention policy for illegal immigrants

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    A federal appeals court on Friday upheld the Trump administration’s mass detention policy, allowing illegal immigrants to be detained without bond.

    The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) can lawfully deny bond hearings to immigrants arrested nationwide under the Constitution and federal immigration law.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi reacted to the ruling, saying the Department of Justice (DOJ) “secured yet another crucial legal victory” in support of President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.

    “The Fifth Circuit just held illegal aliens can rightfully be detained without bond — a significant blow against activist judges who have been undermining our efforts to make America safe again at every turn,” she wrote on X. “Thank you to Ben Hayes who argued this case, Brett Shumate and the @DOJCivil Division. We will continue vindicating President Trump’s law and order agenda in courtrooms across the country.”

    BOASBERG ORDERS TRUMP TO BRING BACK CECOT MIGRANT CLASS DEPORTED IN MARCH

    A federal appeals court upheld the Department of Homeland Security’s authority to detain illegal aliens without bond hearings, a ruling Attorney General Pam Bondi called a major legal victory for the Trump administration. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    Circuit judge Edith H. Jones wrote in the majority opinion that “unadmitted aliens apprehended anywhere in the United States are ineligible for release on bond, regardless of how long they have resided inside the United States.”

    Many illegal immigrants who were not detained at the border previously had the opportunity to request a bond hearing as their cases progressed, and those without a criminal history who were not deemed flight risks were often granted bond.

    “That prior Administrations decided to use less than their full enforcement authority under” the law “does not mean they lacked the authority to do more,” Jones wrote.

    SUPREME COURT ALLOWS TRUMP ICE RAIDS TO RESUME IN CALIFORNIA

    illegal migrants arrested by ICE

    The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that federal law allows illegal immigrants to be detained without bond, a decision praised by Attorney General Pam Bondi. (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement)

    Writing in dissent, Circuit Judge Dana M. Douglas said that the members of Congress who passed the Immigration and Nationality Act roughly 30 years ago “would be surprised to learn it had also required the detention without bond of two million people.”

    Douglas noted that some of the people detained are “the spouses, mothers, fathers, and grandparents of American citizens.”

    The ruling stems from two separate cases filed last year against the Trump administration, both involving Mexican nationals who had lived in the U.S. for more than a decade and were not considered flight risks, according to their attorneys.

    ICE and FBI agents arrested the illegal immigrant in Indiana.

    The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that federal law permits the Department of Homeland Security to deny bond hearings to illegal immigrants arrested across the country, siding with the Trump administration’s enforcement policy. (@ICE via X)

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    Although they did not have criminal records, both were jailed for months last year before a lower court in Texas granted them bond last October.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Watchdog claims proof of ‘harm’ nonexistent in suit against Trump’s ban on trans surgeries for minors

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    FIRST ON FOX: A Trump-aligned lawfare group filed records requests attempting to uncover the “harm” that Democrat states said was being incurred as the result of one of President Trump’s Day One executive order banning sex changes for minors.

    However, those states either ignored their requests or said they could not find any responsive records documenting the very harms their lawsuit warns are already unfolding.  

    After 15 states, the District of Columbia and Pennsylvania Democrat Gov. Josh Shapiro sued the president and his Department of Justice over the executive order that was issued on Aug. 1, America First Legal subsequently filed records requests to those states that were suing in an attempt to uncover whether the claims of injury are true and accurate. Only three states, Massachusetts, Illinois and Nevada, have provided any sort of response thus far. Furthermore, the responses that did arrive indicated there were no responsive records relating to AFL’s request even though they asked for documents pertaining to precisely what the lawsuit in question alleges. 

    “States suing the Trump Administration appear to lack evidence of actual harm supporting their allegations,” said Dan Epstein, Vice President of America First Legal. “The Trump Administration’s executive order sought to protect minors from permanent physical damage. Protecting children should not be subject to politics.”

    TRUMP ADMIN FINDS CALIFORNIA BAN ON NOTIFYING PARENTS OF GENDER TRANSITIONS VIOLATED FEDERAL LAW

    President Trump took on transgender activism early in his second term, including through Executive Order 14187, which prohibits sex-change surgeries for anyone under the age of 19. (Getty Images/AP)

    While a nationwide preliminary injunction was issued just a few months after the issuance of Trump’s executive order prohibiting physicians from performing sex change surgeries on individuals under the age of 19, according to Epstein, the plaintiffs must still must show “standing” in order for a court to provide a remedy and just because the plaintiffs filed their suit early does not mean this responsibility disappears. 

    “Because standing is necessary for any federal court to provide a remedy, plaintiffs must plead concrete evidence of harm in their complaint,” Epstein asserted. “Here, plaintiffs’ complaint failed to show an actual, traceable loss tied to the federal action, beyond merely speculative claims of harm or generalized concerns. Filing suit early does not eliminate this requirement to establish standing.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to the health departments and Attorneys General offices in Massachusetts, Illinois and Nevada, to request information about the documents being relied on by plaintiffs in their suit against Trump’s executive order. In particular, Fox News Digital also asked if the state health departments had no responsive records, or whether there might be anywhere else that they could be kept, but again did not receive a response. 

    In the lawsuit challenging Trump’s Executive Order 14187, which bans federal taxpayer dollars from being used to “fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the so-called ‘transition’ of a child from one sex to another,” the blue state plaintiffs allege the executive order was fostering “an atmosphere of fear and intimidation experienced by transgender individuals, their families and caregivers, and the medical professionals who seek only to provide necessary, lawful care to their patients.”

    PRIVACY CONCERNS, DISCRIMINATION, DOCTOR PUSHBACK: THE COMPLIANCE TRAPS LOOMING BEHIND SEX-SEPARATED SPORTS

    Demonstrators during the Rise Up for Trans Youth rally against President Donald Trump's executive actions targeting transgender people at Union Square in New York, US, on Saturday, Feb. 7, 2025. Three of New York's most prominent hospitals are curbing gender-affirming care for minors after President Donald Trump's executive orders put at risk billions of dollars in federal funding. 

    Demonstrators during the Rise Up for Trans Youth rally against President Donald Trump’s executive actions targeting transgender people at Union Square in New York, US, on Saturday, Feb. 7, 2025. Three of New York’s most prominent hospitals are curbing gender-affirming care for minors after President Donald Trump’s executive orders put at risk billions of dollars in federal funding.  (Photographer: Stephanie Keith/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    AFL’s records requests sought any documents showing the states had actually experienced the harms they claim in their lawsuit against Trump’s Executive Order 14187 — including evidence of prosecutions or penalties for providers, clinic closures, reduced services, and increased medical or mental-health crises for transgender adolescents. 

    The group also asked for records showing higher costs for things like counseling, crisis services, or hospitalizations, worsened mental and physical health outcomes, or the states’ inability to meet legal obligations to provide medical care for minors in state custody. AFL also asked, in its final tenth point, for any internal communications specifically referencing the executive order and its alleged effects.

    The only states who have gotten back to AFL’s records request are Massachusetts, Illinois and Nevada. Massachusetts and Nevada said they had zero records pertaining to any of their requests, while Illinois responded that they had no records responsive to every one of AFL’s requests except for their last and most broad one, which asked for records and communication mentioning the terms “Executive Order 14187,” the order’s formal title, or “affect shape harm.”

    The records handed over by Illinois’ public health department included notices that agency personnel received notifying them that funds could not be used for services that violate President Trump’s Executive Order 14187, as well as notices to grantees telling them they may incur new costs that support programs or activities in conflict with the executive order. 

    Illinois’ records also showed that a program director at a nonprofit healthcare group expressed concern about an inability to register new clients because the president’s directive prevented staff from asking a patient’s gender identity or preferred pronouns, which were required fields in the healthcare group’s client database. Because clients have to be enrolled in the database to receive HIV/AIDS services, the director feared this could impact those services.

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    Illinois records showed a slow-down in grant releases as well, while everyone got up to date with the new requirements of Trump’s executive order.

    Fifteen states, D.C. and Gov. Josh Shapiro have sued the Trump admin over the president's executive order prohibiting transgender surgeries for those under the age of 19.

    Fifteen states, D.C. and Gov. Josh Shapiro have sued the Trump admin over the president’s executive order prohibiting transgender surgeries for those under the age of 19. (Getty Images)

    Fox News Digital reached out repeatedly to the public health departments and Attorneys General offices for comment on AFL’s accusations that their lawsuit is without evidence, but only received a response from Massachusetts’ Department of Public health, which referred Fox News Digital to the state’s Attorney General office.

    “AFL has previously exposed other states’ lack of standing in their own respective cases against the Trump Administration. Specifically, AFL uncovered Colorado, Rhode Island, Hawaii, and Arizona’s lack of evidence supporting their claims of injury in an attempt to block the Trump Administration’s sharing of Medicaid beneficiary data with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security,” a press release from the lawfare group said. “These states’ responses to AFL’s records requests repeatedly reveal a lack of standing. AFL will continue to expose baseless litigation efforts aimed at undermining the America First agenda.”

    Trump’s Executive Order 14187 is also being challenged for alleged discrimination in a lawsuit against the Health and Human Services Department led by New York Attorney General Letitia James.

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  • California man arrested for allegedly making online death threats against JD Vance during Disneyland visit

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    A California man has been arrested on a federal criminal complaint alleging that he made online death threats against Vice President JD Vance during his visit to Disneyland Resort in Anaheim in July.

    Marco Antonio Aguayo, 22, of Anaheim, was taken into custody Friday after he allegedly made multiple threatening comments on Disney’s official Instagram account referencing pipe bombs, imminent bloodshed and violent action against “corrupt politicians” on July 12, the same day Vance and his family were visiting and staying at the resort.

    Aguayo is charged with threatening the president and successors to the presidency, according to a criminal complaint filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

    He is expected to make his initial appearance Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Santa Ana.

    SECRET SERVICE AWARE OF UMASS LOWELL-FUNDED RADIO DJ’S DIRECTIVE TO ‘KILL JD VANCE’

    Vice President JD Vance was visiting Disneyland in California when the alleged threats were posted on social media. (Bonnie Cash/UPI/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “This case is a horrific reminder of the dangers public officials face from deranged criminals who would do them harm,” Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a Department of Justice news release announcing Aguayo’s arrest. “I am grateful that my friend Vice President Vance and his family are safe, applaud the police work that led to the arrest, and will ensure my prosecutors deliver swift justice.”

    Just before 6:15 p.m. on July 12, an Instagram account posted a public comment on the Disney page saying, “Pipe bombs have been placed in preparation for J.D. Vance’s arrival,” according to an affidavit by a U.S. Secret Service Special Agent.

    A subsequent comment said, “It’s time for us to rise up and you will be a witness to it,” and a third comment added, “Good luck finding all of them on time there will be bloodshed tonight and we will bathe in the blood of corrupt politicians,” according to the affidavit.

    Disneyland Hotel sign

    General views of the Disneyland Hotel at the Disneyland Resort on November 25, 2023 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)

    SUSPECT IN VANCE HOME VANDALISM HAS HAD MULTIPLE RUN-INS WITH THE LAW, DEMANDED TO BE CALLED JULIA

    Investigators traced the Instagram account allegedly used to post the threats to Aguayo’s email address, phone numbers, IP addresses and home in Anaheim, using records from Meta, Google and other sources.

    While questioning Aguayo at his home, investigators said he initially claimed his account had been hacked, but later admitted to making the posts as a “joke,” with the intention of deleting them.

    A photo of the Disneyland castle

    Guests at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., where Vice President JD Vance visited with this family in July. (Jeff Gritchen/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images)

    Aguayo consented to searches of his phone, bedroom and laptop, where investigators confirmed he was logged into the account that made the posts, according to the affidavit.

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    “We will not tolerate criminal threats against public officials,” First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli said in the release. “We are grateful the Vice President and his family remained safe during their visit. Let this case be a warning to anyone who thinks they can make anonymous online threats. We will find you and bring you to justice.”

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  • DC pipe bomb suspect pleads not guilty to planting devices at DNC and RNC headquarters

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    The man accused of planting pipe bombs outside the Democratic and Republican parties’ headquarters five years ago pleaded not guilty in a court appearance on Friday.

    Brian J. Cole, Jr was arrested by the FBI at his home in Virginia in early December, and faces two counts of transporting and attempting to use explosives.

    The suspect was indicted on federal charges this week, FOX 5 reported.

    He allegedly admitted to planting the bombs, which failed to detonate, in downtown Washington, D.C. on the eve of the Jan.6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

    FEDS SAY MAN ACCUSED OF PLANTING DC PIPE BOMBS CONFESSED, ADMITTING HE TARGETED BOTH PARTIES

    Surveillance footage released by the FBI shows the suspected DC pipe bomber walking near the DNC on Jan. 5, 2021, alongside a photo of accused suspect Brian Cole Jr., who was ordered held while awaiting trial.  (Department of Justice)

    Despite initially denying his involvement to investigators, he eventually allegedly admitted to planting the bombs when he was reminded that lying was an additional crime after being shown alleged surveillance video of him at the scene, according to the Justice Department.

    “According to the defendant, he was not really thinking about how people would react when the bombs detonated, although he hoped there would be news about it,” court documents said, adding that he said he was “relieved” when he heard they hadn’t detonated.

    DC pipe bomb suspect Brian Cole Jr. in court

    Sketch of Brian Cole Jr. first federal court appearance in Washington D.C., Dec. 5. Cole is the lead suspect in the DC pipe bombing.  (Dana Verkouteren)

    Regarding his motive, Cole said “something just snapped” after “watching everything, just everything getting worse” after the 2020 election, and he wanted to do something, “to the parties” because “they were in charge.”

    DC PIPE BOMB SUSPECT IDENTIFIED AT BRIAN COLE JR

    DC pipe bomb suspect

    The suspect is seen outside the Democratic National Committee headquarters moments before placing one of two pipe bombs discovered near party offices in Washington, D.C. (FBI)

    “Ultimately, it was luck, not lack of effort, that the defendant failed to detonate one or both of his devices and that no one was killed or maimed due to his actions,” court documents said. “Indeed, the defendant admitted that he set both devices to detonate 60 minutes after he placed them. His failure to accomplish his objectives does not mitigate the profoundly dangerous nature of his crimes.”

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    Cole also continued to purchase bomb-making materials following the failed Jan. 5 attack, prosecutors said.

    He faces 10 years in prison for one charge and 20 years in prison if convicted of the second charge.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Federal judge blocks Trump from cutting childcare funds to Democratic states over fraud concerns

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    A federal judge Friday temporarily blocked the Trump administration from stopping subsidies on childcare programs in five states, including Minnesota, amid allegations of fraud.

    U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian, a Biden appointee, didn’t rule on the legality of the funding freeze, but said the states had met the legal threshold to maintain the “status quo” on funding for at least two weeks while arguments continue.

    On Tuesday, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said it would withhold funds for programs in five Democratic states over fraud concerns.

    The programs include the Child Care and Development Fund, the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, and the Social Services Block Grant, all of which help needy families.

    USDA IMMEDIATELY SUSPENDS ALL FEDERAL FUNDING TO MINNESOTA AMID FRAUD INVESTIGATION 

    On Tuesday, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said it would withhold funds for programs in five Democratic states over fraud concerns. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

    “Families who rely on childcare and family assistance programs deserve confidence that these resources are used lawfully and for their intended purpose,” HHS Deputy Secretary Jim O’Neill said in a statement on Tuesday.

    The states, which include California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota and New York, argued in court filings that the federal government didn’t have the legal right to end the funds and that the new policy is creating “operational chaos” in the states.

    U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian

    U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian at his nomination hearing in 2022.  (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    In total, the states said they receive more than $10 billion in federal funding for the programs. 

    HHS said it had “reason to believe” that the programs were offering funds to people in the country illegally.

    ‘TIP OF THE ICEBERG’: SENATE REPUBLICANS PRESS GOV WALZ OVER MINNESOTA FRAUD SCANDAL

    graph showing funding for 5 blocked states

    The table above shows the five states and their social safety net funding for various programs which are being withheld by the Trump administration over allegations of fraud.  (AP Digital Embed)

    New York Attorney General Letitia James, who is leading the lawsuit, called the ruling a “critical victory for families whose lives have been upended by this administration’s cruelty.”

    New York Attorney General Letitia James

    New York Attorney General Letitia James, who is leading the lawsuit, called the ruling a “critical victory for families whose lives have been upended by this administration’s cruelty.” (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

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    Fox News Digital has reached out to HHS for comment.

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  • DC pipe bomb suspect says someone needed to ‘speak up’ about stolen election claims

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    Federal prosecutors said Sunday the man accused of planting pipe bombs in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 5, 2021, told investigators he felt compelled to “speak up” for people who believed the 2020 election was stolen and said he targeted the two major political parties because they were in charge of the political system.

    Prosecutors detailed the allegations in a memo filed with the Justice Department, arguing that Brian J. Cole Jr., arrested earlier this month, should remain detained as the case moves forward.

    Cole was arrested in Woodbridge, Virginia, after investigators identified him as the suspect accused of placing pipe bombs near the Capitol complex and outside the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee headquarters, marking the first major break in a case that had gone cold for years.

    Sunday’s memo provides the most detailed government account to date, including statements prosecutors say Cole made to investigators. It also cites evidence such as bomb-making materials recovered from his home after his arrest, which officials say link him to the crime.

    EVIDENCE AGAINST J6 PIPE BOMB SUSPECT WAS JUST ‘SITTING THERE’ FOR YEARS, DOJ SAYS

    Brian J. Cole Jr., the DC pipe bomb suspect, made his first court appearance on Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. (Dana Verkouteren)

    Undetonated homemade bombs were discovered Jan. 6, though prosecutors said Cole denied his actions were connected to the events at the Capitol that day.

    Although he initially denied involvement, prosecutors allege Cole later confessed to placing the devices outside the RNC and DNC.

    Cole also allegedly said he was disillusioned by the election outcome and sympathetic to claims by President Donald Trump and some allies that it had been stolen.

    FBI RELEASES NEW SURVEILLANCE VIDEO OF SUSPECT WHO PLACED PIPE BOMBS NEAR DNC, RNC OFFICES IN DC

    Brian J. Cole Jr. smiling in an Instagram picture.

    The Department of Justice releases new photos of Brian J. Cole, who was arrested by the FBI for alleged involvement in the D.C. pipe bomb incident. (Department of Justice)

    “In the defendant’s view, if people ‘feel that, you know, something as important as voting in the federal election is being tampered with, is being, you know, being – you know, relegated null and void, then, like, someone needs to speak up, right? Someone up top. You know, just to, just to at the very least calm things down,’” prosecutors wrote.

    They added that when agents returned to questions about his motive, Cole explained that “something just snapped” after “watching everything, just everything getting worse.”

    DC pipe bomb suspect.

    The suspect is seen walking outside the Democratic National Committee headquarters moments before placing one of two pipe bombs discovered near party offices in Washington, D.C. (FBI)

    “The defendant wanted to do something ‘to the parties’ because ‘they were in charge,’” prosecutors wrote. “When asked why he placed the devices at the RNC and DNC, the defendant responded, ‘I really don’t like either party at this point.’”

    Prosecutors said Cole also told investigators the idea to use pipe bombs stemmed from his interest in the historical conflict in Northern Ireland.

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    Cole’s attorneys are expected to argue against his detention at a hearing scheduled for Tuesday in federal court in Washington.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • The DOJ assails D.C.’s ‘assault weapon’ ban as an arbitrary, historically ungrounded gun law

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    In Washington, D.C., a gun cannot be legally owned unless it is registered, and it cannot be registered if it qualifies as an “assault weapon” under D.C. law. That policy, the U.S. Justice Department argues in a lawsuit it filed this week in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, violates the Second Amendment by arbitrarily banning guns that are commonly used for lawful purposes.

    The lawsuit, which seems to be the first case pursued by a new Second Amendment Section within the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, “underscores our ironclad commitment to protecting the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding Americans,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said on Monday. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, who runs the Civil Rights Division, said she is determined to “defend American citizens from unconstitutional restrictions [on] commonly used firearms.”

    The statutory basis for the lawsuit, which names the District of Columbia, the Metropolitan Police Department, and D.C. Police Chief Pamela Smith as defendants, is 34 USC 12601, which prohibits any law enforcement “pattern or practice” that “deprives persons of rights, privileges, or immunities secured or protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States.” That statute authorizes the attorney general to address such abuses by filing civil actions seeking “appropriate equitable and declaratory relief.”

    In this case, Dhillon alleges a pattern or practice that deprives D.C. residents of the constitutional right to keep and bear arms. That right, the Supreme Court said in the landmark Second Amendment case District of Columbia v. Heller, encompasses ownership of firearms “in common use” for “lawful purposes like self-defense.” Since handguns are “the quintessential self-defense weapon,” the Court said, they clearly fall into that category, which made D.C.’s ban on them unconstitutional.

    The Court’s 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, which overturned New York’s restrictions on carrying handguns in public for self-defense, reiterated that point. “Whatever the likelihood that handguns were considered ‘dangerous and unusual’ during the colonial period, they are indisputably in ‘common use’ for self-defense today,” the majority said. Colonial laws that “prohibited the carrying of handguns,” the Court concluded, “provide no justification for laws restricting the public carry of weapons that are unquestionably in common use today.”

    The guns banned by D.C.’s “assault weapon” law likewise are “unquestionably in common use today.” The law covers a long list of firearm models, including AR-15 rifles, along with guns that meet specified criteria. Any semi-automatic rifle that accepts detachable magazines, for example, is considered an “assault weapon” if it has a pistol grip, a thumbhole stock, a folding or adjustable stock, or a flash suppressor.

    Since 1990, more than 30 million “modern sporting rifles” have been sold in the United States, and as many as 24 million Americans have owned AR-15s or similar rifles for lawful purposes such as self-defense, hunting, and recreational target shooting. “The AR–15 is the most popular rifle in the country,” the Supreme Court noted in a recent decision.

    Under Bruen, a restriction on conduct covered by the “plain text” of the Second Amendment is constitutional only if the government can show it is “consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” Yet as Dhillon notes, there is no “historically analogous” precedent for a “broad ban” on firearms “commonly used” by “law-abiding citizens” for “lawful purposes” such as “self-defense inside the home”—the right recognized in Heller.

    Dhillon notes that D.C.’s “assault weapon” ban, like other laws of this sort, “is based on little more than cosmetics, appearance, or the ability to attach accessories.” More to the point, it “fails to take into account whether the prohibited weapon is ‘in common use today’” or whether “law-abiding citizens may use these weapons for lawful purposes protected by the Second Amendment.”

    Although the Justice Department’s nine-page complaint is skimpy, federal judges have elaborated on these points. Like the law at issue in Heller, U.S. District Judge Peter Sheridan noted last year, New Jersey’s AR-15 ban amounts to “the total prohibition [of] a commonly used firearm for self-defense…within the home.” And under Heller, “a categorical ban on a class of weapons commonly used for self-defense is unlawful.”

    Sheridan highlighted testimony showing that “AR-15s are well-adapted for self-defense.” When it upheld Maryland’s AR-15 ban a week later, by contrast, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit declared that such rifles are “ill-suited and disproportionate to the need for self-defense.”

    That conclusion, Judge Julius Richardson noted in a dissent joined by four of his colleagues, ignored the self-defense advantages of AR-15s, including better accuracy, greater recoil absorption, and more stopping power than handguns. While handguns also have certain advantages, Richardson said, the appeals court had no business second-guessing gun owners’ weighing of these rifles’ pros and cons, thereby “replac[ing] Americans’ opinions of their utility with its own.”

    Where Richardson saw self-defense advantages, the majority saw features that make AR-15s especially deadly in mass shootings. These clashing perspectives illustrate the folly of trying to draw a legal distinction between guns that are suitable for legitimate purposes and guns that supposedly are good for nothing but killing innocent people.

    Also last year, a federal judge in Illinois issued a permanent injunction against that state’s “assault weapon” ban, deeming it “an unconstitutional affront to the Second Amendment.” In his 168-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Stephen P. McGlynn explained why that law did not pass the Bruen test, which requires the government to cite historical analogs that are “relevantly similar” in motivation and scope.

    Considering the purported historical analogs on which Illinois relied, McGlynn noted that “only 4% (9 out of 225) of the cited statutes entirely restricted the sale and/or possession of entire classes of weapons.” The government “relies predominantly and overwhelmingly on concealed carry statutes, statutes restricting the discharge of firearms, and statutes proscribing brandishing or causing terror,” he wrote.

    Those laws, like the Illinois ban, were aimed at “preventing death or injury from firearms,” McGlynn conceded. But they were not similar in scope. He concluded that the state “clearly cannot demonstrate” that its law “follows any historical tradition of sweeping prohibitions on the sale, transfer, and possession of vast swaths of firearms.”

    The District of Columbia will face similar challenges in defending its “assault weapon” ban under Bruen. And assuming the Supreme Court eventually agrees to hear this case or a similar one, at least four justices seem inclined to be skeptical of the constitutional justification for such laws. In addition to Brett Kavanaugh, who as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit dissented from a 2011 decision upholding the D.C. ban, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch have indicated their receptiveness to the arguments sketched by Dillon.

    Last June, when the Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal of the 4th Circuit decision upholding Maryland’s “assault weapon” ban, Kavanaugh emphasized the importance of addressing those arguments. “Given that millions of Americans own AR–15s and that a significant majority of the States allow possession of those rifles, petitioners have a strong argument that AR–15s are in ‘common use’ by law-abiding citizens and therefore are protected by the Second Amendment under Heller,” he wrote, highlighting the difficulty of “distinguish[ing] the AR–15s at issue here from the handguns at issue in Heller.”

    While “AR–15s are semi-automatic,” Kavanaugh noted, “so too are most handguns.” Both kinds of weapons are used “for a variety of lawful purposes, including self-defense in the home,” he added. “For their part, criminals use both AR–15s and handguns, as well as a variety of other lawful weapons and products, in unlawful ways that threaten public safety. But handguns can be more easily carried and concealed than rifles, and handguns—not rifles—are used in the vast majority of murders and other violent crimes that individuals commit with guns in America.”

    The denial of review in the Maryland case “does not mean that the Court agrees” with the 4th Circuit’s decision “or that the issue is not worthy of review,” Kavanaugh emphasized. “The AR–15 issue was recently decided by the First Circuit and is currently being considered by several other Courts of Appeals. Opinions from other Courts of Appeals should assist this Court’s ultimate decisionmaking on the AR–15 issue. Additional petitions for certiorari will likely be before this Court shortly and, in my view, this Court should and presumably will address the AR–15 issue soon, in the next Term or two.”

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    Jacob Sullum

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  • Texas AG Ken Paxton sues Latino voter group Jolt for allegedly registering illegal immigrants

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    Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing a nonprofit group dedicated to increasing Latino participation in civic engagement, accusing them of registering illegal immigrants to vote. 

    In court documents, Paxton’s office said Jolt Initiative is “systematically subverting the election process and violating Texas election law by recruiting, training, and directing individuals to submit false, or otherwise unlawful, voter registration applications.”

    “The left constantly tries to cheat and rig elections because they know they can’t win honestly. Any organization attempting to register illegals, who are all criminals, must be completely crushed and shut down immediately,”Paxton said in a statement. “JOLT is a radical, partisan operation that has, and continues to, knowingly attempt to corrupt our voter rolls and weaken the voice of lawful Texas voters. I will make sure they face the full force of the law.”

    TEXAS AG LAUNCHES UNDERCOVER OPERATIONS TO INFILTRATE ‘LEFTIST TERROR CELLS’ ACROSS THE STATE

    FILE – Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton spoke at the Supreme Court building in Washington, June 9, 2016. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

    The lawsuit asks a court to dissolve Jolt’s charter and revoke its ability to do business in Texas.

    In response, Jolt has sued Paxton and filed a motion for a preliminary injunction against him, accusing their attorney general of engaging in a retaliatory campaign aimed at revoking the organization’s corporate charter.

    The group said Paxton’s lawsuit is “direct retaliation for Jolt’s protected First Amendment activities, including its voter registration drives and its previous federal lawsuit challenging an intrusive document demand from the Attorney General’s office.”

    “Let the record show that the Texas Attorney General is using the power of his office to silence Latino voters,” said Jackie Bastard⁩, Jolt’s executive director. “After we challenged his first unconstitutional attempt to intimidate us, he escalated his attack by moving straight to the corporate ‘death penalty’, seeking to revoke our ability to exist. The state’s quo warranto petition is explicitly retaliatory, citing our voter registration activity and prior lawsuit as a reason for its filing.”

    TEXAS GOP SEEKS TO ‘DOMESTICATE’ ROGUE DEMS FOR BREAKING QUORUM THROUGH NATIONWIDE CIVIL ARREST WARRANTS

    ROSENBERG, TEXAS - MARCH 1: Voters stand in line to cast their ballots inside Calvary Baptist Church March 1, 2016 in Rosenberg, Texas. Voters in 12 states go to the polls in today's Super Tuesday. (Photo by Erich Schlegel/Getty Images)

    Voters stand in line to cast their ballots inside Calvary Baptist Church March 1, 2016 in Rosenberg, Texas.  (2015 Getty Images)

    Paxton said an investigation by his office found that JOLT members were stationed outside Texas Department of Motor Vehicles locations, where they provided instructions that directly violated provisions of the Texas Election Code.

    JOLT and its Volunteer Deputy Registrars allegedly coordinated the scheme to recruit and solicit individuals to submit unlawful voter registration applications, which could be designed to register illegal aliens who lack proper identification. 

    In the lawsuit, Paxton’s office said Jolt does not attempt to verify if a voter registration applicant is eligible to vote and has induced people to submit false statements in their voter registration applications. 

    Jolt said the lawsuit is part of a campaign by Paxton to suppress the vote of young Latinos in Texas. 

    Texas Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton (left) has launched an investigation into 33 potential noncitizens allegedly voting in the 2024 general election.

    Texas Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton (left) has launched an investigation into 33 potential noncitizens allegedly voting in the 2024 general election. (Justin Lane/Reuters and AP Photo/Keith Srakocic, File)

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    “We refuse to be bullied. We are asking the federal court to intervene immediately to protect our First Amendment right to speak, associate, and petition the government, and to ensure we can continue our vital work of civic engagement,” said Maria Tolentino, director of programs at Jolt.

    Paxton’s office launched an investigation last year into Jolt and other groups over similar claims. Paxton demanded documents and information from Jolt, which sued the state over concerns about placing its workers and volunteers in harms way.

    In October, a Texas election review identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state’s voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said. Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

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  • What to know about the Supreme Court arguments over Trump’s tariffs

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    Three lower courts have ruled President Donald Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose worldwide tariffs to be illegal. Now the Supreme Court, with three justices Trump appointed and generally favorable to muscular presidential power, will have the final word.In roughly two dozen emergency appeals, the justices have largely gone along with Trump in temporarily allowing parts of his aggressive second-term agenda to take effect while lawsuits play out.But the case being argued Wednesday is the first in which the court will render a final decision on a Trump policy. The stakes are enormous, both politically and financially.The Republican president has made tariffs a central piece of his economic and foreign policy and has said it would be a “disaster” if the Supreme Court rules against him.Here are some things to know about the tariffs arguments at the Supreme Court:Tariffs are taxes on importsThey are paid by companies that import finished products or parts, and the added cost can be passed on to consumers.Through September, the government has reported collecting $195 billion in revenue generated from the tariffs.The Constitution gives Congress the power to impose tariffs, but Trump has claimed extraordinary power to act without congressional approval by declaring national emergencies under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act.In February, he invoked the law to impose tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, saying that the illegal flow of immigrants and drugs across the U.S. border amounted to a national emergency and that the three countries needed to do more to stop it.In April, he imposed worldwide tariffs after declaring the United States’ longstanding trade deficits “a national emergency.”Libertarian-backed businesses and states challenged the tariffs in federal courtChallengers to Trump’s actions won rulings from a specialized trade court, a district judge in Washington and a business-focused appeals court, also in the nation’s capital.Those courts found that Trump could not justify tariffs under the emergency powers law, which doesn’t mention them. But they left the tariffs in place in the meantime.The appeals court relied on major questions, a legal doctrine devised by the Supreme Court that requires Congress to speak clearly on issues of “vast economic and political significance.”The major questions doctrine doomed several Biden policiesConservative majorities struck down three of then-President Joe Biden’s initiatives related to the coronavirus pandemic. The court ended the Democrat’s pause on evictions, blocked a vaccine mandate for large businesses and prevented student loan forgiveness that would have totaled $500 billion over 10 years.In comparison, the stakes in the tariff case are much higher. The taxes are estimated to generate $3 trillion over 10 years.The challengers in the tariffs case have cited writings by the three Trump appointees, Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, in calling on the court to apply similar limitations on a signal Trump policy.Barrett described a babysitter taking children on roller coasters and spending a night in a hotel based on a parent’s encouragement to “make sure the kids have fun.”“In the normal course, permission to spend money on fun authorizes a babysitter to take children to the local ice cream parlor or movie theater, not on a multiday excursion to an out-of-town amusement park,” Barrett wrote in the student loans case. “If a parent were willing to greenlight a trip that big, we would expect much more clarity than a general instruction to ‘make sure the kids have fun.’”Kavanaugh, though, has suggested the court should not apply the same limiting standard to foreign policy and national security issues.A dissenting appellate judge also wrote that Congress purposely gave presidents more latitude to act through the emergency powers law.Some of the businesses that sued also are raising a separate legal argument in an appeal to conservative justices, saying that Congress could not constitutionally delegate its taxing power to the president.The nondelegation principle has not been used in 90 years, since the Supreme Court struck down some New Deal legislation.But Gorsuch authored a dissent in June that would have found the Federal Communications Commission’s universal service fee an unconstitutional delegation. Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas joined the dissent.“What happens when Congress, weary of the hard business of legislating and facing strong incentives to pass the buck, cedes its lawmaking power, clearly and unmistakably, to an executive that craves it?” Gorsuch wrote.The justices could act more quickly than usual in issuing a decisionThe court only agreed to hear the case in September, scheduling arguments less than two months later. The quick turnaround, at least by Supreme Court standards, suggests that the court will try to act fast.High-profile cases can take half a year or more to resolve, often because the majority and dissenting opinions go through rounds of revision.But the court can act quickly when deadline pressure dictates. Most recently, the court ruled a week after hearing arguments in the TikTok case, unanimously upholding a law requiring the popular social media app to be banned unless it was sold by its Chinese parent company. Trump has intervened several times to keep the law from taking effect while negotiations continue with China.

    Three lower courts have ruled President Donald Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose worldwide tariffs to be illegal. Now the Supreme Court, with three justices Trump appointed and generally favorable to muscular presidential power, will have the final word.

    In roughly two dozen emergency appeals, the justices have largely gone along with Trump in temporarily allowing parts of his aggressive second-term agenda to take effect while lawsuits play out.

    But the case being argued Wednesday is the first in which the court will render a final decision on a Trump policy. The stakes are enormous, both politically and financially.

    The Republican president has made tariffs a central piece of his economic and foreign policy and has said it would be a “disaster” if the Supreme Court rules against him.

    Here are some things to know about the tariffs arguments at the Supreme Court:

    Tariffs are taxes on imports

    They are paid by companies that import finished products or parts, and the added cost can be passed on to consumers.

    Through September, the government has reported collecting $195 billion in revenue generated from the tariffs.

    The Constitution gives Congress the power to impose tariffs, but Trump has claimed extraordinary power to act without congressional approval by declaring national emergencies under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

    In February, he invoked the law to impose tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, saying that the illegal flow of immigrants and drugs across the U.S. border amounted to a national emergency and that the three countries needed to do more to stop it.

    In April, he imposed worldwide tariffs after declaring the United States’ longstanding trade deficits “a national emergency.”

    Libertarian-backed businesses and states challenged the tariffs in federal court

    Challengers to Trump’s actions won rulings from a specialized trade court, a district judge in Washington and a business-focused appeals court, also in the nation’s capital.

    Those courts found that Trump could not justify tariffs under the emergency powers law, which doesn’t mention them. But they left the tariffs in place in the meantime.

    The appeals court relied on major questions, a legal doctrine devised by the Supreme Court that requires Congress to speak clearly on issues of “vast economic and political significance.”

    The major questions doctrine doomed several Biden policies

    Conservative majorities struck down three of then-President Joe Biden’s initiatives related to the coronavirus pandemic. The court ended the Democrat’s pause on evictions, blocked a vaccine mandate for large businesses and prevented student loan forgiveness that would have totaled $500 billion over 10 years.

    In comparison, the stakes in the tariff case are much higher. The taxes are estimated to generate $3 trillion over 10 years.

    The challengers in the tariffs case have cited writings by the three Trump appointees, Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, in calling on the court to apply similar limitations on a signal Trump policy.

    Barrett described a babysitter taking children on roller coasters and spending a night in a hotel based on a parent’s encouragement to “make sure the kids have fun.”

    “In the normal course, permission to spend money on fun authorizes a babysitter to take children to the local ice cream parlor or movie theater, not on a multiday excursion to an out-of-town amusement park,” Barrett wrote in the student loans case. “If a parent were willing to greenlight a trip that big, we would expect much more clarity than a general instruction to ‘make sure the kids have fun.’”

    Kavanaugh, though, has suggested the court should not apply the same limiting standard to foreign policy and national security issues.

    A dissenting appellate judge also wrote that Congress purposely gave presidents more latitude to act through the emergency powers law.

    Some of the businesses that sued also are raising a separate legal argument in an appeal to conservative justices, saying that Congress could not constitutionally delegate its taxing power to the president.

    The nondelegation principle has not been used in 90 years, since the Supreme Court struck down some New Deal legislation.

    But Gorsuch authored a dissent in June that would have found the Federal Communications Commission’s universal service fee an unconstitutional delegation. Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas joined the dissent.

    “What happens when Congress, weary of the hard business of legislating and facing strong incentives to pass the buck, cedes its lawmaking power, clearly and unmistakably, to an executive that craves it?” Gorsuch wrote.

    The justices could act more quickly than usual in issuing a decision

    The court only agreed to hear the case in September, scheduling arguments less than two months later. The quick turnaround, at least by Supreme Court standards, suggests that the court will try to act fast.

    High-profile cases can take half a year or more to resolve, often because the majority and dissenting opinions go through rounds of revision.

    But the court can act quickly when deadline pressure dictates. Most recently, the court ruled a week after hearing arguments in the TikTok case, unanimously upholding a law requiring the popular social media app to be banned unless it was sold by its Chinese parent company. Trump has intervened several times to keep the law from taking effect while negotiations continue with China.

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  • In tariff case, Trump’s attorneys can’t decide if foreign investment is good or bad for America

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    When the Trump administration’s lawyers go before the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to argue a crucial case that will determine the limits of presidential tariff authority, they will be asking the justices to accept contradictory claims about the value of foreign investment in the United States.

    In a brief filed with the court ahead of this week’s oral argument, the government’s attorneys argue that foreigners buying up American “assets” is a serious enough threat to require emergency executive powers over trade.

    “By the end of 2024, foreigners owned approximately $24 trillion more of U.S. assets than Americans owned of foreign assets,” the administration argues. That imbalance has “weakened” the United States and “created an ongoing economic emergency of historic proportions.”

    In the same brief—indeed, just four pages later—those same attorneys warn that undoing Trump’s tariffs would jeopardize “trillions of dollars” in foreign investment that the president has successfully negotiated. They point to $600 billion in investments pledged by the European Union and another $1 trillion promised by the governments of Japan and South Korea. Those investments, the administration argues, will “rectify past imbalances.”

    How can it be that previous foreign investments are a threat to the United States—one so severe as to require an unprecedented expansion of executive power—while investments secured by the administration are the exact opposite?

    “In short, their argument is that the tariffs are necessary to reduce foreign ownership of American assets, but the Supreme Court must keep the tariffs in place to allow more foreign investment,” points out an amicus brief filed by the National Taxpayers Union Foundation in support of the small businesses challenging the legality of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

    This is probably not the most critical legal issue upon which the tariff case will be resolved. But the glaring contradiction reveals a few important things.

    First, it once again demonstrates the incoherence of Trump’s tariff strategy. Does the administration want more foreign investment or less? It’s not sure! You can add that to the list alongside such questions as “Are the tariffs meant to generate revenue for the government or serve as negotiating tools for better trade deals?” It can’t be both, since tariffs meant as negotiating tools would have to be lowered or eliminated eventually, thus rendering them useless for producing revenue.

    In a similar vein, Trump has argued that higher tariffs on legal imports from Canada, Mexico, and China will be a useful tool for combating the flow of illegal drugs. This makes little sense. Taxing maple syrup and avocados seems about as likely to stop the flow of fentanyl as taxing beer would be effective at reducing the use of cocaine.

    Second, the confusion about foreign investments in the U.S. points to Trump’s ongoing misunderstanding of the trade deficit. A trade deficit is the difference between the total value of all imports and all exports, and America indeed runs a sizable trade deficit—in other words, we import more than we export.

    As economists who understand global trade would tell you, America’s trade deficit is offset by an investment surplus. In other words, “the US is able to sustain a large trade deficit because so many foreigners are eager to invest here,” as the Boston University economist Tarek Alexander Hassan wrote in April. The Trump administration sees that routine, trade-balancing foreign investment as a problem that demands a muscular executive response. It’s not.

    Finally, the fact that the administration’s attorneys take a very different view of foreign investments secured by the president’s negotiations ought to tell us something, too. The administration is not really making an argument against foreign investment here; it is making an argument for top-down, centrally planned foreign investment that meets the chief executive’s political needs.

    When the administration says that striking down these tariffs would jeopardize “trillions of dollars” in foreign deals, what it means is that America’s investment surplus would be determined by market forces rather than the whims of the president. But as the Supreme Court will hopefully soon remind it, the Constitution plainly does not give the president unilateral power to control foreign trade or to decide which foreign investments are good for America.

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    Eric Boehm

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  • Federal appeals court cancels daily Border Patrol chief check-ins

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    The Department of Homeland Security is celebrating a victory after an “act of judicial overreach has been paused.”

    On Wednesday, an appeals court blocked an order issued on Tuesday that required a senior Border Patrol official to give unprecedented daily briefings to a judge about immigration sweeps in Chicago.

    U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis had ordered the meetings after weeks of tense encounters and increasingly aggressive tactics by government agents working on Operation Midway Blitz, which has resulted in more than 1,800 arrests and complaints of excessive force.

    While Bovino told Fox News earlier Wednesday that he was eager to talk to Ellis, government lawyers were appealing her decision at the same time, calling it “extraordinarily disruptive.”

    ICE AGENTS BREAK CAR WINDOW TO ARREST RESISTING ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT IN EXCLUSIVE FOX NEWS RIDE-ALONG

    Protesters yell toward U.S. Customs and Border Patrol Gregory Bovino when he leaves federal court in Chicago, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (Nam Y. Huh)

    “The order significantly interferes with the quintessentially executive function of ensuring the Nation’s immigration laws are properly enforced by waylaying a senior executive official critical to that mission on a daily basis,” the Justice Department argued.

    “We are thrilled this act of judicial overreach has been paused,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement to The Associated Press.

    OBAMA-APPOINTED JUDGE SAYS SHE WANTS BODY CAMERAS FOR FEDERAL AGENTS AMID CHICAGO ANTI-ICE CLASHES

    Federal agents in Chicago with Gregory Bovino

    U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents arrive to escort U.S. Customs and Border Patrol Gregory Bovino from federal court in Chicago, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025.  (Nam Y. Huh)

    On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), released footage on X that appears to show Border Patrol agents under siege during an immigration raid in Chicago’s Little Village, a Southwest Side neighborhood often referred to as “La Villita” and home to one of the largest Mexican-American communities in the Midwest.

    Chicago protesters yell at Gregory Bovino

    Protesters yell towards U.S. Customs and Border Patrol Gregory Bovino when he leaves federal court in Chicago, Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (Nam Y. Huh)

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    “VIDEO EVIDENCE,” DHS wrote in the post with the video attached.

    Last week, on Oct. 22, three illegal immigrants and six U.S. citizens were arrested on charges on what DHS dubbed “one of the most violent days” of Operation Midway Blitz.”

    Fox News Digital’s Rachel Wolf and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Trump’s presidency faces crucial tests as Supreme Court begins pivotal term

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    The Supreme Court will launch its new term Monday with a focus on controversial prior rulings and a review of President Donald Trump’s sweeping executive agenda.

    After a three-month recess, the nine justices met together for the first time this week to reset their docket, and discuss appeals that have piled up over the summer. The high court will resume oral arguments to confront issues like gender identity, election redistricting, and free speech.

    But looming over the federal judiciary is the return of Trump-era legal battles. The administration has been winning most of the emergency appeals at the Supreme Court since January, that dealt only with whether challenged policies could go into effect temporarily, while the issues play out in the lower courts — including immigration, federal spending cuts, workforce reductions and transgender people in the military.

    In doing so, the 6-3 conservative majority has reversed about two dozen preliminary nationwide injunctions imposed by lower federal courts, leading to frustration and confusion among many judges.

    FEDERAL JUDGES ANONYMOUSLY CRITICIZE SUPREME COURT FOR OVERTURNING DECISIONS WITH EMERGENCY RULINGS

    The nine Supreme Court justices pose for their official portrait inside the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 7, 2022. (Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images )

    Now those percolating petitions are starting to reach the Supreme Court for final review — and legal analysts say the bench may be poised to grant broad unilateral powers to the president.

    The justices fast-tracked the administration’s appeal over tariffs on dozens of countries that were blocked by lower courts. Oral arguments will be held in November.

    In December, the justices will decide whether to overturn a 90-year precedent dealing with the president’s ability to fire members of some federal regulatory agencies like the Federal Trade Commission. 

    And in January, the power of President Trump to remove Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors will be tested in a major constitutional showdown. For now, the Biden-appointed Cook will remain on the job.

    “A big fraction of the Supreme Court’s docket will present the question: ‘can President Trump do?’— then fill in the blank. And that could be imposing tariffs; firing independent board members; removing illegal aliens; sending the military into cities like Los Angeles,” said Thomas Dupree, a prominent appellate attorney and constitutional law expert. “So, much of what the Supreme Court is deciding this term is whether the president has acted within or has exceeded his authority.” 

    The tariffs dispute will be the court’s first major constitutional test on the merits over how broadly the conservative majority high court views Trump’s muscular view of presidential power, a template for almost certain future appeals of his executive agenda.

    Presidential prerogative or power push?

    In earlier disputes over temporary enforcement of those policies, the court’s left-leaning justices warned against the judiciary becoming a rubber stamp, ceding its power in favor of this president.

    After a late August high court order granting the government the power to temporarily terminate nearly $800 million in already-approved health research grants, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said her conservative colleagues had “ben[t] over backward to accommodate” the Trump administration. “Right when the Judiciary should be hunkering down to do all it can to preserve the law’s constraints, the Court opts instead to make vindicating the rule of law and preventing manifestly injurious Government action as difficult as possible. This is Calvinball jurisprudence with a twist. Calvinball has only one rule: There are no fixed rules. We seem to have two: that one, and this Administration always wins.”

    But some of Jackson’s colleagues have denied they are paving the way for Trump’s aggressive efforts to redo the federal government.

    FEDERAL APPEALS COURT WEIGHS TRUMP BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP ORDER AS ADMIN OUTLINES ENFORCEMENT DETAILS

    Ketanji Brown Jackson

    Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson stands as she and members of the Supreme Court pose for a new group portrait following her addition, at the Supreme Court building in Washington, Oct. 7, 2022.  (J. Scott Applewhite, File/AP Photo)

    “The framers recognized, in a way that I think is brilliant, that preserving liberty requires separating the power,” said Justice Brett Kavanaugh earlier this month at a Texas event. “No one person or group of people should have too much power in our system.”

    And Justice Amy Coney Barrett told Fox News’ Bret Baier three weeks ago that she and her colleagues “don’t wear red and blue, we all wear black because judges are nonpartisan … We’re all trying to get it right. We’re not playing for a team.”

    Barrett, who is promoting her new book, “Listening to the Law,” said her court takes a long-term view, and is not reflexively on Trump’s side.

    “We’re not deciding cases just for today. And we’re not deciding cases based on the president, as in the current occupant of the office,” Barrett told Fox News. “I think the judiciary needs to stay in its lane … we’re taking each case and we’re looking at the question of presidential power as it comes. And the cases that we decide today are going to matter, four presidencies from now, six presidencies from now.”

    KAVANAUGH CITES 3 PRESIDENTS IN EXPLAINING SUPREME COURT’S BALLOONING EMERGENCY DOCKET

    U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett is seen at the White House shortly after her Senate confirmation in October 2020. Justice Barrett delivered remarks at the 2025 Seventh Circuit Judicial Conference at the Swissotel hotel in Chicago, Illinois, on August 18, 2025. (Getty Images)

    Justice Amy Coney Barrett speaks at the Seventh Circuit Judicial Conference in Chicago on Aug. 18, 2025. (Getty Images)

    These sharp court fractures between competing ideologies will likely escalate, as the justices begin a more robust look at a president’s power, and by dint, their own.

    Divisive decisions

    “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law,” Trump cryptically posted on social media a month after retaking office.

    Federal courts have since been trying to navigate and articulate the limits of the executive branch, while managing their own powers.

    Yet several federal judges — appointed by both Democratic and Republican presidents — have expressed concern that the Supreme Court has been regularly overturning rulings by lower courts dealing with challenges to Trump administration policies — mostly with little or no explanation in its decisions.

    Those judges — who all requested anonymity to speak candidly — tell Fox News those orders blocking enforcement have left the impression they are not doing their jobs or are biased against the President.

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TORPEDOES SCOTUS WITH EMERGENCY REQUESTS AND SEES SURPRISING SUCCESS

    President Donald Trump takes press questions.

    President Donald Trump speaks during a White House press conference on Supreme Court rulings in Washington, D.C. on June 27, 2025.  (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    Those frustrations have spilled into open court.

    “They’re leaving the circuit courts, the district courts out in limbo,” said federal appeals Judge James Wynn about the high court, during oral arguments this month over the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) access to Social Security data.

    “We’re out here flailing,” said Wynn, an Obama bench appointee. “I’m not criticizing the justices. They’re using a vehicle that’s there, but they are telling us nothing. They could easily just give us direction, and we would follow it.”

    Courting controversy

    The president may be winning short-term victories in a court where he has appointed a third of its members, but that has not stopped him or his associates from criticizing federal judges, even calling for their removal from office when preliminary rulings have gone against the administration.

    “This judge, like many of the Crooked Judges I am forced to appear before, should be IMPEACHED!!!” Trump posted on social media, after a March court ruling temporarily halting the deportation of alleged Venezuelan gang members.

    The target of the attack was DC-based Chief Judge James Boasberg, appointed to the bench by President Obama.

     Top Trump White House policy advisor Stephen Miller, in interviews, has warned against some unaccountable and “communist crazy judges” “trying to subvert the presidency.” 

    TRUMP TURNS TO SUPREME COURT IN FIGHT TO OUST BIDEN-ERA CONSUMER SAFETY OFFICIALS

    Stephen Miller gesturing at the podium

    White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Thursday, May 1, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Alex Brandon/AP Photo)

    According to an analysis by Stanford University’s Adam Bonica, federal district judges ruled against the administration 94.3% of the time between May and June. 

    But the Supreme Court has in turn reversed those injunctions more than 90% of the time, giving the president temporary authority to move ahead with his sweeping reform agenda.

    As for the rhetoric, the high court has walked a delicate path, reluctant to criticize Trump directly, at least for now.

    “The fact that some of our public leaders are lawyers advocating or making statements challenging the rule of law tells me that, fundamentally, our law schools are failing,” said Justice Sonia Sotomayor at a recent Georgetown University Law Center event, without naming Trump by name. “Once we lose our common norms, we’ve lost the rule of law completely.”

    Chief Justice John Roberts in March offered a rare public statement criticizing impeachment calls from the right.

    But several federal judges who spoke to Fox News also wish Roberts would do more to assert his authority and to temper what one judge called “disturbing” rhetoric.

    The U.S. Marshals Service — responsible for court security — reports more than 500 threats against federal judges since last October, more than in previous years. Law enforcement sources say that includes Boasberg, who, along with his family, has received physical threats and intimidating social media posts.

    TURLEY: JUSTICE JACKSON SHOWS ‘JUDICIAL ABANDON’ IN LONE DISSENT ON TRUMP LAYOFF RULING

    Charlie Kirk in October 2024.

    Charlie Kirk was a conservative activist who led Turning Point USA. (Alex Brandon/The Associated Press)

    “I think it is a sign of a culture that has, where political discourse has soured beyond control,” said Justice Barrett in recent days.

    “The attacks are not random. They seem designed to intimidate those of us who serve in this critical capacity,” said Justice Jackson in May. “The threats and harassment are attacks on our democracy, on our system of government.”

    The administration in recent days asked Congress for $58 million more in security for executive branch officials and judges, following the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist who led Turning Point USA. 

    Testy term awaits

    A Fox News poll from this summer found 47% of voters approve of the job the Supreme Court is doing, a 9-point jump since last year when a record low 38% approved.

    “Over the past decade, public confidence in our major institutions has declined,” says Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who helps conduct the Fox News survey with Democrat Chris Anderson. “The Court’s rebound could reflect its attempts to steer a middle course on politically polarizing questions or indicate an uptick in positive attitudes toward our more venerable institutions.”

    Still, by more than 2-to-1, more voters think the court is too conservative (43%) than too liberal in its decisions (18%, a low), while 36% think the court’s rulings are about right. That continues a seven-year trend.

    FEDERAL JUDGES ANONYMOUSLY CRITICIZE SUPREME COURT FOR OVERTURNING DECISIONS WITH EMERGENCY RULINGS

    Supreme Court building

    The U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C., on June 20, 2024. ( Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    The public’s views of the court’s ability to steer clear of politics will be tested this term.

    Besides the two Trump-related appeals, the justices are already scheduled to decide:

    • At least two appeals involving LGBTQ+ rights: which public school sports teams transgender students can join; and state laws banning so-called “conversion therapy” for minors who may have gender identity or sexual orientation issues.
    • Two election-related disputes involving partisan gerrymandering and federal campaign spending coordination that each could have major impacts on the 2026 midterms and beyond.

    Precedent on a precipice

    But court watchers are pointing to several hot-button pending appeals where “stare decisis” or respect for established landmark court rulings will be tested:  same-sex marriage and communal school prayer.   

    The high court is expected to decide in coming weeks whether to put those petitions on its argument calendar, with possible rulings on the merits by June 2026.

    But other cases are already awaiting a final ruling: the use of race in redistricting under the Voting Rights Act; and independent government boards.

    “I think the likeliest candidates for being revisited are the ones that involve the power of the president to fire the heads of federal agencies,” said attorney Dupree. “This is an old precedent that’s been on the books really back since the New Deal, and it’s come into question in recent years. There’s been a long shadow hanging over these decisions, and I think the Supreme Court is poised to revisit those this term and in all likelihood overrule that.”

    The court may have already set the stage, by using the emergency docket in recent weeks to allow Trump to temporarily fire members of several other independent federal agencies without cause. The court’s liberal wing complained that giving the president that power without explanation effectively unravels the 1935 precedent known as “Humphrey’s Executor.”

    KAVANAUGH CITES 3 PRESIDENTS IN EXPLAINING SUPREME COURT’S BALLOONING EMERGENCY DOCKET

    “Today’s order favors the president over our precedent,” said Justice Elena Kagan in a blistering dissent against Trump’s removal of Gwynne Wilcox from the National Labor Relations Board.

    The court’s “impatience to get on with things — to now hand the President the most unitary, meaning also the most subservient, administration since Herbert Hoover (and maybe ever) — must reveal how that eventual decision will go” on the merits, added Kagan.

    Sotomayor said recent overturned precedents were “really bad” for certain groups of people.

    “And that’s what’s at risk, is in each time we change precedent, we are changing the contours of a right that people thought they had,” she said this month. “Once you take that away, think of how much more is at risk later. Not just in this situation.”

    The conservative justices in recent years have not been shy about revisiting cases that had been settled for decades but now have been overturned: the nationwide right to abortion, affirmative action in education and the discretionary power of federal agencies.

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    Other pending issues the justices may soon be forced to confront which could upset longstanding precedent include libel lawsuits from public officials, flag burning and Ten Commandments displays in public schools.

    One justice who has been more willing than his benchmates to overrule precedents may be its most influential: Justice Clarence Thomas.

    “I don’t think that any of these cases that have been decided are the gospel,” Thomas said last week at a Catholic University event. If it is “totally stupid, and that’s what they’ve decided, you don’t go along with it just because it’s decided” already.

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  • Reagan-appointed judge slams Trump’s crackdown on pro-Palestinian students

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    President Donald Trump often channels former President Ronald Reagan, down to his signature slogan, “make America great again.” But Judge William Young, who was appointed by Reagan himself, cited Reagan’s legacy as a total rebuke to Trump’s ruling philosophy. “Freedom is a fragile thing and it’s never more than one generation away from extinction,” Young wrote in a ruling filed on Tuesday, quoting a speech by Reagan.

    “I’ve come to believe that President Trump truly understands and appreciates the full import of President Reagan’s inspiring message—yet I fear he has drawn from it a darker, more cynical message,” Young warned. “I fear President Trump believes the American people are so divided that today they will not stand up, fight for, and defend our most precious constitutional values so long as they are lulled into thinking their own personal interests are not affected.”

    Young’s ruling came in response to one of the Trump administration’s signature policies, its attempts to shut down Palestinian solidarity protests by deporting Palestinian students and their supporters. The American Association of University Professors and the Middle East Studies Association sued a few days after the arrest of Columbia University graduate student Mahmoud Khalil, arguing that the policy violates freedom of speech, both by intimidating foreign academics in America and preventing American academics “from hearing from, and associating with, their noncitizen students and colleagues.”

    Ruling that administration officials indeed “acted in concert to misuse the sweeping powers of their respective offices to target non-citizen pro-Palestinians for deportation primarily on account of their First Amendment protected political speech,” Young promised to hold a hearing on the specific measures he will order. He wrote that “it will not do simply to order the Public Officials to cease and desist in the future,” given the current political environment.

    What seems to have set off Young was a postcard from a hater: “Trump has pardons and tanks…What do you have?” Young attached a photocopy of the postcard to the top of his ruling, and dedicated the ruling to disproving the writer. “Alone, I have nothing but my sense of duty. Together, We the People of the United States—you and me—have our magnificent Constitution. Here’s how that works out in a specific case,” he wrote, inviting the letter writer to visit his courthouse at the end of the ruling.

    The ruling itself meticulously outlined how several different activists—Khalil, Rümeysa Öztürk, Mohsen Mahdawi, Yunseo Chung, and Badar Khan Suri—were targeted for deportation and how the administration justified it, both internally and publicly. Although Secretary of State Marco Rubio repeatedly claimed in the media that the deportations were meant to target “riots” on campus, Young shows that the students were often targeted based on their opinions alone, with vague chains of association linking them to violent protests.

    For example, the Department of Homeland Security noted in an intelligence analysis that “Hamas flyers” were handed out during a March 2025 protest that Khalil and Chung attended. But as Young pointed out, there was “neither an allegation nor evidence” that either Khalil or Chung themselves were involved in distributing the flyers.

    In another case, Öztürk was a member of Graduate Students for Palestine. Because that group cosigned a call for boycotting Israel with Students for Justice in Palestine, a group that was banned from Tufts University for allegedly using violent imagery, the Department of Homeland Security’s intelligence analysts tried to tie Öztürk to Students for Justice in Palestine, which she was not a member of. Young, exasperated, called the logic “hard to follow.”

    He wrote that “there is no evidence that Öztürk did anything but co-author an op-ed that criticized the University’s position on investments with Israel, that she criticized Israel, and that the organization of which she was member joined in that criticism with an organization that was banned on Tufts campus, with which she was not affiliated.”

    Particularly striking was the way that the administration used anonymous online blacklists as a basis for investigation. In March 2025, the Department of Homeland Security ordered its intelligence office to review all 5,000 names on Canary Mission, a controversial website that lists allegedly antisemitic students, Assistant Director Peter Hatch testified. The office also relied on names provided by Betar, an Israeli nationalist organization that has bragged about getting its opponents deported, Hatch testified.

    “Those names that were passed up the chain of command by the investigating subordinates were almost universally approved for adverse action, and, again, the reasons for being passed up the chain of command included any form of online suggestion that one was ‘pro-Hamas,’ including Canary Mission’s own anonymous articles,” Young wrote.

    The judge directly addressed Rubio’s claim that, because a visa or green card is a privilege, the government has unlimited power to remove non-citizens.

    “This Court in part must agree: non-citizens are, indeed, in a sense our guests. How we treat our guests is a question of constitutional scope, because who we are as a people and as a nation is an important part of how we must interpret the fundamental laws that constrain us. We are not, and we must not become, a nation that imprisons and deports people because we are afraid of what they have to tell us,” he wrote.

    And, Young argued, the decision to go after students for activism they did before Trump took office made the policy especially “arbitrary” and “capricious.” Students across America “have all been made to understand that there are certain things that it may be gravely dangerous for them to say or do, but have not been told precisely what those things are,” he wrote, noting that many of the arrests were designed to be as intimidating as possible.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents snatched Öztürk off the street while wearing masks. “ICE goes masked for a single reason—to terrorize Americans into quiescence,” Young wrote, calling ICE officials “disingenuous, squalid and dishonorable” for trying to argue otherwise. “In all our history we have never tolerated an armed masked secret police. Carrying on in this fashion, ICE brings indelible obloquy to this administration and everyone who works in it,” he added, citing Abraham Lincoln.

    Young moved from a discussion of the case into a broadside against the way immigration enforcement is used in America.

    “ICE has nothing whatever to do with criminal law enforcement and seeks to avoid the actual criminal courts at all costs. It is carrying a civil law mandate passed by our Congress and pressed to its furthest reach by the President. Even so, it drapes itself in the public’s understanding of the criminal law though its ‘warrants’ are but unreviewed orders from an ICE superior and its ‘immigration courts’ are not true courts at all but hearings before officers who cannot challenge the legal interpretations they are given,” he wrote.

    The Department of Homeland Security responded publicly to Young’s ruling—ironically, by accusing him of dangerous speech. “It’s disheartening that even after the terrorist attack and recent arrests of rioters with guns outside of ICE facilities, this judge decides to stoke the embers of hatred,” department spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement, accusing Young of “smearing and demonizing federal law enforcement.”

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  • ICE arrested a U.S. citizen—twice—during Alabama construction site raids. Now he’s suing.

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    An Alabama construction worker is challenging the Trump administration’s warrantless construction site raids after he says he was arrested and detained by federal immigration agents—twice—despite being a U.S. citizen with a valid ID in his pocket.

    In a federal civil rights lawsuit filed today in the Southern District of Alabama, Leo Garcia Venegas is seeking to stop “dragnet raids” that target Latinos like himself, without any probable cause besides their ethnicity. 

    “It feels like there is nothing I can do to stop immigration agents from arresting me whenever they want,” Venegas said in a press release by the Institute for Justice, a public interest law firm that filed the suit on his behalf. “I just want to work in peace. The Constitution protects my ability to do that.”

    Venegas and the Institute for Justice argue that Department of Homeland Security (DHS) policies allow immigration agents to illegally raid private construction sites, detain workers without reasonable suspicion, and continue detaining them even after they offer evidence of citizenship or legal status. All of this, they say, violates the Fourth Amendment’s protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.

    “Armed and masked federal officers are raiding private construction sites in Alabama, detaining whoever they think looks undocumented, and ignoring proof of citizenship,” Jared McClain, an attorney for the Institute for Justice, said in the press release. “That’s unconstitutional, and this case seeks to bring that practice to an end.”

    Venegas was detained twice in May and June during raids on private construction sites where he was working. In both instances, the lawsuit says, masked immigration officers entered the private sites without a warrant and began detaining workers based solely on their apparent ethnicity.

    On May 21, Venegas was working on a concrete crew at a construction site in Baldwin County, Alabama, when immigration officers hopped the fence into the site. According to the suit, “The officers ran right past the white and black workers without detaining them and went straight for the Latino workers.”

    The officers tackled Venegas’ brother, who was also on the crew, and Venegas began filming the scene on his cell phone. One of the officers then approached Venegas and said, “You’re making this more complicated than you want to.”

    Immediately after, the officer grabbed Venegas and began wrestling him to the ground. Another construction worker also took cell phone video of the two brothers’ arrests, which shows the agent struggling with Venegas who repeatedly yells, “I’m a citizen.”

    Two other officers joined in to subdue Venegas, telling him to “Get on the fucking ground.”

    Watch the Institute Justice’s video on the case, which includes footage of the arrest:

    According to the suit, the officers retrieved Venegas’ REAL ID from his pocket, but they called it fake, kept him handcuffed, and detained for more than an hour in the Alabama summer sun, until an officer agreed to run his social security number.

    Then on June 12, Venegas was working in a nearly finished house when ICE agents cornered him in a bedroom and ordered him to come with them. Venegas was marched outside to the edge of the subdivision where he was working to have his immigration status checked. According to the lawsuit, two other U.S. citizens had been rounded up with him. Again, officers said his REAL ID could be fake and detained for 20 to 30 minutes before releasing him.

    The Institute for Justice says in its lawsuit on Venegas’ behalf that this sort of behavior is “no accident.” It’s explicit DHS policy.

    “Under DHS’s challenged policies, immigration officers are authorized to presume that construction workers on private property are undocumented based only on their demographic profile and occupation, and can disregard evidence to the contrary—like Leo’s telling them he’s a citizen and presenting a REAL ID.”

    The lawsuit asks the court to block enforcement of the policy and award damages to Venegas, as well as a proposed class of similar plaintiffs, for violations of Fourth Amendment rights.

    Venegas is one of many documented cases of U.S. citizens being violently detained and arrested during indiscriminate federal immigration sweeps. The Institute for Justice is also representing George Retes, an Army veteran and U.S. citizen. Retes says he was pepper-sprayed, dragged out of his car and thrown on the ground during a July raid on a legal marijuana company in California. Despite being a citizen, he alleges he was detained by ICE for three days, during which he says he was kept in solitary confinement, not allowed a phone call or lawyer, and never presented before a judge.

    On August 20, five U.S. citizens in Southern California filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security over their arrests by immigration agents. One of the plaintiffs, Cary Lopez Alvarado, was nine months pregnant when ICE and U.S. Border Protection agents arrested and shackled her. She alleges she went into labor prematurely as a result of her wrongful arrest and assault.

    Earlier this month, the Supreme Court gave its blessing to just this kind of racial profiling by immigration officers, overturning a ruling by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals that found the Trump’s administration was likely violating the Fourth Amendment rights of citizens by seizing them based solely on factors such as “apparent race or ethnicity.” 

    Justice Brett Kavanaugh released a concurring opinion in which he waved away concerns that allowing such profiling would lead to citizens and legal residents being unduly harassed.

    “As for stops of those individuals who are legally in the country, the questioning in those circumstances is typically brief,” Kavanaugh wrote, “and those individuals may promptly go free after making clear to the immigration officers that they are U. S. citizens or otherwise legally in the United States.”

    Whatever world Kavanaugh is describing, it’s not the one that Venegas lives in.

    “The raids continue in the neighborhoods,” Venegas says in the Institute for Justice video. “I live in fear every day that when I get to work it will happen again.”

    DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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    C.J. Ciaramella

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  • Federal judge blocks Voice of America mass terminations in scathing ruling against Lake

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    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth has blocked a new wave of terminations at Voice of America, offering harsh words for Kari Lake and saying the Trump administration’s conduct in his case would support civil contempt proceedings, if only the plaintiffs had asked.

    In the 19-page ruling, Judge Lamberth halted the mass reduction in force at the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) and issued a warning that cuts would “cement” VOA’s failure to meet legal obligations to provide reliable news.

    Lamberth’s list of failures included statutory violations involving VOA shutting down mandated language services despite clear congressional directives.

    KARI LAKE CUTS 532 GOVERNMENT POSITIONS AT VOICE OF AMERICA, PARENT AGENCY

    In this composite image, Kari Lake, senior adviser to the U.S. Agency for Global Media, speaks as the Voice of America headquarters is shown at left.  (Getty Images)

    He stated that VOA acknowledged its “radio presence” had shrunk to a single 30-minute daily program in Dari and Pashto, leaving gaps in coverage for nations like North Korea and China.

    Kari Lake was called out for admitting under oath that she hadn’t “given it a lot of thought” whether Africa qualifies as a “significant region of the world” under the law and confirmed VOA produces no programming for South America.

    And Lamberth accused the Trump administration of misleading the court, going as far as to call it incredible to suggest the RIF was “uncertain” while evidence showed it was already in motion.

    The RIF notices covered both VOA and USAGM employees, and Lamberth rejected the government’s attempt to carve out non-VOA staff.

    JUDGE PUTS TEMPORARY PAUSE ON TRUMP’S MASS LAYOFFS AT GOVERNMENT AGENCIES

    He accused Lake and her team of “thumbing their noses at Congress’s commands” and showing “brazen disinterest” in statutory duties — strong language worth including.

    The contempt warning wasn’t just about tone; it was also tied to their failure to produce required documents about future RIFs, despite court orders.

    Overall, the order keeps VOA’s workforce intact through Oct. 14, when Lake will be forced to work with her team to file a plan showing how they will restore the legally required programming.

    The Voice Of America logi

    The Voice Of America (VOA) logo appears on a mobile phone with the US Agency For Global Media (USAGM) visible in the background in this photo illustration in Brussels, Belgium, on March 16, 2025. (Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

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    The judge warned that their “disrespect” for other rulings would have been enough to trigger a contempt trial.

    “Equity is allergic to rigidity,” Lamberth wrote, pointing out the court’s power to stop executive overreach.

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  • Trump’s public comments could further complicate the shaky case against James Comey

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    Lindsey Halligan seemed out of her depth on Thursday evening, when she presented a two-count indictment of former FBI Director James Comey to a federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia. U.S. Magistrate Judge Lindsey Vaala was puzzled because she had received two versions of the indictment, both signed by the grand jury’s foreperson, that seemed inconsistent with each other.

    Halligan, a defense lawyer with no prosecutorial experience whom President Donald Trump had appointed as the interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia just a few days earlier, said she had “only reviewed” one of the indictments, “did not see the other one,” and didn’t “know where that came from.” When Vaala pointed out that the document Halligan claimed she never saw “has your signature on it,” the neophyte prosecutor was nonplussed. “OK,” she said. “Well.”

    That embarrassing episode reinforced the impression that Trump, in his eagerness to pursue a personal vendetta against Comey, had settled on an agent who was manifestly unqualified to run one of the country’s most prominent U.S. attorney’s offices. Trump’s desperate thirst for revenge, which was also evident in his public comments about the case, supports an argument that Comey’s lawyers are apt to make in seeking dismissal of the charges against him: that he is a victim of selective or vindictive prosecution.

    A claim of selective prosecution alleges that the defendant was singled out for punishment when “similarly situated individuals” were not charged. Vindictive prosecution entails punishing a defendant for exercising his procedural rights. If Halligan files additional charges against Comey, for example, he could argue that she was retaliating against him for challenging the original indictment.

    Such claims are rarely successful because they require evidence that a prosecutorial decision was influenced by improper motives. But in this case, there is no shortage of evidence that the decision to accuse Comey of lying to the Senate Judiciary Committee in September 2020 was driven by presidential pique.

    Trump fired Comey in 2017 out of anger at the FBI investigation of alleged ties between his 2016 campaign and the Russian government. In the years since, Trump has made no secret of his desire to punish Comey for that “witch hunt,” which FBI Director Kash Patel cited in defending the indictment even though the charges are legally unrelated to the Russia probe.

    Those charges, which include one count of “willfully and knowingly” making “a materially false, fictitious, and fraudulent statement” to Congress and one count of obstructing a congressional proceeding, were filed just five days before they would have been barred by the five-year statute of limitations. The Justice Department nearly missed that deadline because neither career prosecutors nor Halligan’s predecessor, Erik Seibert, thought there was sufficient evidence to justify the charges announced on Thursday.

    According to news reports citing unnamed sources, top Justice Department officials, including Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, were also skeptical. But the president was clear about what he wanted to happen.

    “We can’t delay any longer,” Trump declared in a September 20 Truth Social post that directly addressed Bondi. “It’s killing our reputation and credibility. They impeached me twice, and indicted me (5 times!), OVER NOTHING. JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!”

    Who were “they”? Trump specifically mentioned Comey, along with two other nemeses: Sen. Adam Schiff (D–Calif.) and New York Attorney General Letitia James.

    By that point, Trump had already fired Seibert and picked Halligan, who was sworn in two days later, to replace him. Trump described Halligan, who had served on his personal defense team, as “a really good lawyer.”

    Judging from Halligan’s encounter with Vaala, that may have been an overstatement. “This has never happened before,” Vaala remarked. “I’ve been handed two documents [in the Comey case] that are inconsistent with one another. There seems to be a discrepancy. They’re both signed by the [grand jury] foreperson.”

    One indictment listed the two charges approved by the grand jury, while the other mentioned a third count that the grand jury rejected, involving allegedly false statements during the same Senate hearing. The latter document, Vaala noted, described “a failure to concur in an indictment” but did not specify which count was rejected, so “it looks like they failed to concur across all three counts.” The judge said she was “a little confused as to why I was handed two things with the same case number that are inconsistent.”

    The fact that the grand jury rejected any of the charges against Comey was itself remarkable. Because such proceedings entail a one-sided presentation of allegations that the government claims establish probable cause to believe a crime has been committed, grand juries almost never decline to indict. In fiscal year 2016, according to a Justice Department report, U.S. attorneys opened about 152,000 cases, just six of which ended in “no bill” from a grand jury.

    It was even more striking that a U.S. attorney, confronted by such a rare situation, would accidentally submit two seemingly contradictory grand jury reports. Halligan’s confusion reflects both her inexperience and the unseemly haste with which she rushed to obtain the indictment demanded by the president before it was too late. Tellingly, that indictment was signed by Halligan alone, without the signatures of any underlings who agreed that the charges were legally justified.

    After the indictment was announced, Trump publicly gloated. That evening, he described Comey as “one of the worst human beings this Country has ever been exposed to,” adding that “he has been so bad for our Country, for so long, and is now at the beginning of being held responsible for his crimes against our Nation.”

    The next morning, Trump called Comey “A DIRTY COP.” That evening, he thanked Patel and “the outstanding members of the FBI” for “their brilliant work on the recent Indictment of the Worst FBI Director in the History of our Country, James ‘Dirty Cop’ Comey.” He said “the level of enthusiasm by the FBI was incredible” but understandable because “they knew Comey for what he is, and was”—i.e., “a total SLIMEBALL!”

    Trump added an even worse insult while speaking to reporters on Friday. “James Comey essentially was a Democrat,” the president said. “He was worse than a Democrat.”

    Although Trump suggested that Comey was getting what he deserved for being a terrible person, a “SLIMEBALL,” and “worse than a Democrat,” none of those is actually a crime. The accusation that Comey was “A DIRTY COP” came closer to conduct that might justify a criminal charge. But the indictment does not allege corruption or abuse of power. And despite Patel’s framing, it is not even legally related to “Russiagate.”

    Rather, the indictment involves Comey’s reaffirmation of his earlier testimony that he never authorized anyone at the FBI to be “an anonymous source in news stories about matters relating to the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation”—i.e., the FBI probe that examined Hillary Clinton’s handling of classified material as secretary of state, including her use of a private email server. That denial was a lie, the indictment says, because Comey “then and there knew” that “he in fact had authorized PERSON 3 to serve as an anonymous source in news reports regarding an FBI investigation concerning PERSON 1.”

    The rejected count indicates that “PERSON 1” is Clinton, and the exchange with Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas) cited in the indictment suggests that “PERSON 3” is former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, who in 2016 authorized the disclosure of information about an FBI probe of the Clinton Foundation to The Wall Street Journal. The day after the Journal‘s story ran, McCabe claimed, he informed Comey of what he had done, and his boss expressed approval.

    When the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG) investigated the leak, Comey contradicted that account, and the OIG credited his version of events. The resulting OIG report concluded that “McCabe did not tell Comey on or around October 31 (or at any other time) that he (McCabe) had authorized the disclosure of information about the [Clinton Foundation] Investigation to the WSJ.” It added that “had McCabe done so, we believe that Comey would have objected to the disclosure.”

    In addition to that assessment, the case against Comey is complicated by doubts as to exactly what Comey was denying when he told Cruz that he stood by his earlier testimony, which involved the email investigation rather than the Clinton Foundation probe. It is not hard to see why Seibert and the prosecutors working for him did not think the case was worth pursuing.

    None of that mattered to Trump, who was determined to get Comey one way or another. “The whole thing is just bizarro,” former federal prosecutor Andrew C. McCarthy, a legal analyst at National Review, told Politico. “This is the kind of thing that should never ever happen.…This case should never go to trial because it’s obvious from the four corners of the indictment that there’s no case.”

    McCarthy elaborates on that point in a National Review essay. “The vindictive indictment the Trump Justice Department barely managed to get a grand jury to approve on Thursday is so ill-conceived and incompetently drafted, he should be able to get it thrown out on a pretrial motion to dismiss,” McCarthy writes, noting that the skimpy two-page indictment lacks “any description of the incident involving McCabe, Clinton, and Comey out of which the perjury charge supposedly arises.”

    In any case, McCarthy says, McCabe “is not a credible witness, particularly on this subject.” The OIG, he notes, “found that Comey’s account that he did not approve the leak was overwhelmingly corroborated while McCabe’s account was full of holes.” And even if Halligan believes (or claims to believe) McCabe rather than Comey, McCabe did not claim that Comey “authorized” the Wall Street Journal leak—only that he expressed approval after the fact.

    Halligan overlooked these problems in her eagerness to do what Trump wanted. The case against Comey is “the very definition of selective and vindictive prosecution,” says Joyce Vance, a former U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama. “By demanding the prosecutions, Trump may have undercut any possibility of success by providing the people on his ‘enemies list’ with a built-in defense.”

    Duke University law professor Samuel W. Buell was skeptical of that argument in an interview with The New York Times. “Trump’s being really crass and blatant about the ways he is talking about all that stuff,” Buell said. “But I don’t know that that’s going to give rise to a motion that would invalidate a whole prosecution.”

    Jessica Roth, a professor at Cardozo School of Law, likewise noted that the case against Comey is “not like other cases where we typically see such claims.” But “that doesn’t mean it can’t fall within the concerns and the legal standards for vindictive and selection prosecution,” she added.

    At the very least, Trump has given Comey’s lawyers ammunition they would not otherwise have. A former Eastern District of Virginia prosecutor, who “was granted anonymity because he fears retaliation for speaking about the case,” thinks Trump’s statements pose a serious problem for Halligan. “If I’m defending Comey, that Trump order to Pam Bondi to prosecute him, that’s a big problem,” he told Politico. “That’s going to bite them in a big way.…Comey could become the poster child for selective prosecution.”

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    Jacob Sullum

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  • Riley Gaines’ attorney reveals condition it would take to agree to settle lawsuit with NCAA

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    EXCLUSIVE: Riley Gaines’ lawsuit against the NCAA will proceed after a federal judge partially denied the defendant’s motions to dismiss on Thursday. Her lawyer revealed a key condition it would take to achieve a settlement.

    The attorney for Gaines and 19 other plaintiffs involved, Bill Bock of the Independent Council on Women’s Sports (ICONS), told Fox News Digital he believes his side can achieve everything it set out hoping to do when first filing back in early 2024. But he also isn’t ruling out the possibility of agreeing to a settlement with the NCAA, but said such an agreement in this case would be “difficult.”

    Federal judge Tiffany Johnson ruled on Thursday that Bock’s clients plausibly alleged the NCAA receives federal financial assistance, and is thus, subject to Title IX. 

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    The NCAA changed its gender eligibility policy in February to state that only biologically female athletes be permitted to compete in the women’s category, one day after President Donald Trump signed the “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” executive order. 

    Bock worries about the NCAA changing its policy back in the event of a change in federal policy. 

    “The difficulty with a settlement is making a settlement enforceable long term, so the best way to do that would be with a judicial order,” Bock said. “The only way that I think we would look at settling is if the settlement was accompanied by a consent decree, which is an enforceable ongoing order against the NCAA that complies with Title IX.

    “They violated women’s rights for more than 15 years, so they’ve indicated a strong willingness not to… so we need very strong ironclad assurances that they will protect women at school.” 

    Bock did not indicate that a consent decree would be the only condition needed for a settlement. 

    Another key objective that ICONS is seeking to accomplish with their lawsuit is the implementation of mandatory sex tests for women’s athletes, according to Bock. Gaines and other women’s sports activists have argued that the NCAA’s new policy doesn’t do “enough” to keep males out of women’s college sports, without sex testing. 

    Since the NCAA instituted its current policy, there have been recorded instances of trans athletes competing in women’s events.

    Trans track and field athlete Evelyn Parts has sued Swathmore College, alleging the school removed the athlete from the team after the policy was changed, before being “fully reinstated” and allowed to compete in women’s competition while the rule change and executive order were in place. 

    SUPREME COURT CASE OVER TRANS ATHLETES IN WOMEN’S SPORTS GETS DRAMATIC UPDATE

    Parts is listed as the winner of the women’s 10,000 meters at the Bill Butler Invitational in April and as a participant in the Paul Donahue Invite that same month and the Centennial Championships in early May, according to the athlete’s Swarthmore Athletics page.

    Meanwhile, Ithaca College in New York admitted to allowing a trans athlete to compete in a Division III rowing competition in March. The trans athlete competed in the Cayuga Duals, but only in the third varsity eight event, which is not factored into NCAA championship qualification. 

    The NCAA provided a statement to Fox News Digital addressing Ithaca’s breach of policy, saying “Ithaca stated their intent to adhere to the policy, which allows for practice opportunities, and the NCAA appreciates Ithaca’s responsiveness.”

    Now, Gaines, Bock and the other 19 plaintiffs are seeking to prevent more instances like that from happening, and believe the recent ruling can help them achieve that. 

    Johnson dismissed other charges in the lawsuit, including the allegation that the NCAA is a state actor, allegations of a violation of a right to bodily privacy, and all charges against the University of Georgia System and Georgia Tech, which hosted the 2022 swimming championships where Gaines and other women’s swimmers had to compete against UPenn trans athlete Lia Thomas. Bock said they plan to appeal this. 

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    But with the case proceeding on the Title IX claims, Bock believes his side can still accomplish all of its main goals, including the judicial order and mandatory sex testing.

    Other plaintiffs in the lawsuit include former San Jose State volleyball captain Brooke Slusser, citing her experience with former trans teammate Blaire Fleming, and former Rochester Institute of Technology women’s track and field athlete Caroline Hill, citing her experience with former trans athlete Sadie Schreiner. 

    “We can achieve, effectively, all of what we’ve been seeking, which is A. determination that the NCAA policy violates Title IX, that they violated the rights of the women who competed in the NCAA championships in 2022, and their current policy is in violation of Title IX,” Bock said.

    Fox News Digital has reached out to the NCAA for a response to Bock’s statements, but has not received a response. 

    The NCAA provided a previous response addressing Johnson’s decision. 

    “College sports remain the premier stage for women’s sports in America, and the Association and its members will continue to promote Title IX, make unprecedented investments in women’s sports and ensure fair competition in NCAA championships. The NCAA’s transgender participation policy aligns with the Trump administration’s order,” the statement read. 

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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  • How a fight over voter data could reshape American elections

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    America’s electoral system has always been subject to—by design—a shifting balance of local control, state authority, and federal oversight. That balance is once again under strain, this time in the form of a pair of federal lawsuits that could redefine who ultimately controls access to voters’ personal data. Last week, the Justice Department filed twin lawsuits against Maine and Oregon, arguing that the states violated federal election laws and the Civil Rights Act by refusing to give the agency full access to the states’ voter data.

    Since May, the Justice Department has sent letters to at least 32 states requesting access to their voter registration databases, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. In early August, the agency followed up with a more specific demand for full electronic copies of those files—including names, addresses, dates of birth, and sensitive identifiers such as driver’s license and partial Social Security numbers—along with documentation of how states identify and remove ineligible voters.

    While the Justice Department has requested information from states about election administration in the past—including during the first Trump administration—the scope of the request is unprecedented, per the Brennan Center. Most states have not complied, and those that have appear to have provided only the publicly available portions of their voter files, which vary by state but may include information such as voter names, addresses, party affiliation, and voting history.

    The Justice Department’s requests have raised privacy concerns from state officials, including Washington Democratic Secretary of State Steve Hobbs, who “fears the information would be shared with the Department of Homeland Security to fuel the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown,” reports the Washington State Standard. The Brennan Center notes that the Justice Department’s demands could conflict with the Privacy Act, which restricts how federal agencies collect and share personally identifiable information, especially when such data are not explicitly authorized for disclosure.

    Despite the broad lack of participation from the states, only Maine and Oregon have been sued so far. “States simply cannot pick and choose which federal laws they will comply with, including our voting laws, which ensure that all American citizens have equal access to the ballot in federal elections,” said Harmeet K. Dhillon, an assistant attorney general at the Justice Department, in a press release.

    Maine Democratic Secretary of State Shenna Bellows has called the Justice Department’s actions “absurd” and a “federal abuse of power,” according to CNN. Oregon Democratic Secretary of State Tobias Read criticized President Donald Trump in a statement, saying, “If the President wants to use the [Justice Department] to go after his political opponents and undermine our elections, I look forward to seeing them in court.” Read also maintains that the federal government lacks the constitutional authority to pursue legal action on these grounds, according to the Oregon Capital Chronicle.

    In the U.S., elections—and the voter data that underpin them—are managed primarily by state and local governments, not federal agencies. However, since being reelected, Trump has sought to increase the federal government’s role in national elections. In March, the president signed an executive order directing federal agencies to enforce stricter eligibility verification, tighten mail‑in voting rules, and enhance data sharing between federal and state authorities regarding voter registration and citizenship status.

    In August, Trump pledged to end mail-in voting throughout the country, save for extenuating circumstances, stating that the practice can lead to dishonest elections. Many experts argue that concerns about widespread fraud are overstated, and Oregon Public Broadcasting notes that there were just 38 criminal convictions of voter fraud out of 61 million ballots cast statewide from 2000 to 2019.

    The cases could set a precedent for how far federal authorities can reach into state election systems. If the Justice Department prevails, more states may be forced to share complete voter data—including sensitive identifiers—to federal agencies, giving the government even more access to citizens’ private information. If the courts side with Oregon and Maine, it may affirm states’ ability to limit access in defense of voter privacy.

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    Jacob R. Swartz

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