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Tag: Marines

  • Melania Trump says AI will reshape war more profoundly than nuclear weapons during visit with Marines

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    In her first joint visit with Second Lady Usha Vance, First Lady Melania Trump met with troops and military families, praising the Marine Corps’ 250 years of service while warning that artificial intelligence (AI) will redefine modern warfare and America’s defense.

    In her Wednesday remarks at Marine Corps Air Station New River, Mrs. Trump emphasized AI’s role in her husband’s administration as a pillar of American defense strategy.

    “Technology is changing the art of war,” Trump said. “Predictably, AI will alter war more profoundly than any technology since nuclear weapons.”

    The First Lady’s remarks come as the Trump administration expands its focus on AI. The president posted to Truth Social earlier this week, saying, “We MUST have one Federal Standard instead of a patchwork of 50 State Regulatory Regimes.”

    FIRST LADY MELANIA TRUMP AND USHA VANCE VISIT TROOPS’ FAMILIES IN FIRST JOINT VISIT

    First Lady Melania Trump cautioned about the future of artificial intelligence (AI) during remarks to Marines at Marine Corps Air Station New River on Wednesday, Nov. 19. (SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

    President Trump’s AI push aligns with his broader “Winning the AI Race: America’s AI Action Plan,” published in July.

    The First Lady acknowledged the service and 250-year legacy of the Marine Corps, including two Marines she welcomed on stage, Sergeant Blake Donoher and Corporal Daishamari Cannon.

    Trump said that the “most significant change will be speed” when it comes to AI, adding that “artificial intelligence will take center stage in the theater of war… but of course, it is the Marine who will always play the most critical role in realizing mission success.”

    GOOGLE CEO, MAJOR TECH LEADERS JOIN FIRST LADY MELANIA TRUMP AT WHITE HOUSE AI MEETING

    First Lady Melania Trump hugs student

    First Lady Melania Trump embraces a student during a visit at DeLalio Elementary School on Marine Corps Air Station New River on Wednesday, Nov. 19.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    The First Lady noted that AI is taking America’s military “from soldiers to machines.”

    “Artificial intelligence is propelling America’s military into a new era,” Trump said. “We are moving from human operators to human overseers – fast. The shift from soldiers to machines is already underway: autonomous helicopters, swarming drones, and recon aircraft are here now. Fighter-less jets and autonomous bombers are on the way.”

    The First Lady was introduced by Second Lady and Marine Corps spouse Usha Vance, who greeted the Marines by relaying a “Happy birthday” message from Vice President JD Vance. The Marine Corps birthday is Nov. 10.

    MELANIA TRUMP ‘PEACE LETTER’ TO PUTIN HAILED BY USHA VANCE, WHO CALLS HER A ‘TRAILBLAZER’

    First Lady Melania Trump plays "Heads Up" with students

    First Lady Melania Trump played a game of “Heads Up” with students during a visit to Camp Lejeune on Wednesday, Nov. 19. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    The event coincided with national Thanksgiving preparations, where both the First and Second Lady visited classrooms at Camp Lejeune.

    Students showcased AI projects as part of the Presidential Artificial Intelligence Challenge during the visit. Trump hugged a shy student in a sweet moment caught on camera in a first-grade class where kids read aloud and joined in a lively game of “Heads Up,” wearing a matching notecard on her head.

    “Don’t be shy,” the First Lady said before embracing the boy who seemed nervous to meet her.

    The First Lady concluded her remarks with heartfelt thanks to service members and their families.

    “To every Service Member — thank you for standing watch so others can celebrate in peace. And to every military spouse and child — thank you for your strength and love,” Trump said. “You serve our country, too.”

    First Lady Melania Trump holds a baby at Marine Corps visit

    Melania Trump greets military families at Marine Corps Air Station New River on Wednesday, Nov. 19. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    “As we give thanks this season, let us remember what unites us — our shared love of country, our faith in one another, and our pride in those who serve,” Trump concluded.

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    The Office of First Lady Melania Trump referred Fox News Digital to her prepared remarks.

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

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  • Haitian gangs call for mobilization as US Embassy sends message with Marines gunfire

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    As terrorizing criminal gangs in Haiti continue their aggressive tactics, U.S. authorities are sending a strong message: Fire on U.S. embassy personnel or property and expect to be fired upon.

    That was the action taken on Thursday when suspected gang members fired shots near the U.S. embassy compound, east of Port-au-Prince.

    “Marines supporting embassy security operations were fired upon by suspected gang members in Port-au-Prince and the Marines returned fire on the evening of 13 Nov.,” Capt Steven J. Keenan, a spokesman for the U S. Marines, confirmed to the Miami Herald in an email after the incident was made public this weekend. “No Marines were injured.”

    Keenan referred additional questions to the U.S. Embassy in Haiti. The State Department did not respond to a request for further details.

    This is not the first time that suspected gang members have opened fire near the embassy, which is surrounded by three major armed groups and has been forced to reduce staff due to the escalating security concerns.

    Despite recent signs of gangs slowing down attacks in Port-au-Prince, they’ve continued to utilize aggressive tactics to maintain their tightened grip on 90% of the capital, and they have resumed for ransom kidnappings, demanding upwards of over $100,000 for the release of victims.

    The latest exchange of gunfire between U.S. Marines and suspected gang members, who are part of the Viv Ansanm gang coalition, unfolded during scaled up security operations last week. The multi-day operations targeted the strongholds of the 400 Mawozo and Chen Mechan gangs and their leaders. They were carried out by specialized units of the Haiti National Police, Armed Forces of Haiti, and the Kenyan-led security mission operating as the recently approved Gang Suppression Force. The forces also received assistance from a weaponized drone task force overseen by private military contractors employed by former Blackwater founder Erik Prince.

    Gang attacks were continuing Sunday despite the operations. Members of Viv Ansanm, which has been designated by Washington as a foreign and global terrorist organization, reportedly set up roadblocks and burning barricades in Cité Militaire and Simon-Pelé, west of the Airport Road in Port-au-Prince.

    Meanwhile, 400 Mawozo, the target of last week’s operations, set up multiple barricades in its Croix-des-Bouquets stronghold. Haitian police’s anti-gang units were deployed to the areas.

    In reaction to the expanded security operations, leaders of Viv Ansanm are threatening a shutdown on Monday.

    In a video released Saturday night, former policeman turned warlord Jimmy Chérizier, who is known as “Barbecue,” called on the population not to go out on Monday “to avoid becoming victims.” Presenting himself as the president and spokesperson of Viv Ansanm, he said gang members plan to deploy and that the population should “leave the streets to them” and to Haitian police.

    In another video on Sunday, gang leader “Krisla” another leading figure in Viv Ansanm, called for “a general strike” and for Haitians to rise up as he accused the country’s elite and transitional government of targeting the population.

    “We are telling the Haitian people, rise up en masse,” “Krisla” said in a message being shared on social networks.

    The gang leader controls Carrefour, a sprawling suburb south of Port-au-Prince. He said schools and government offices should all be closed on Monday. Only hospitals and the fire department should remain open. In his message, “Krisla” accused Haitian security forces of using a helicopter to try and kill the population, and called for “the entire country” to fight against the “corrupted” system.”

    “We are telling the Haitian people, the youth, we have to take our destiny in our hands,” he said accusing journalists of also conspiring against Viv Ansanm.

    The message, masked as a call against Haiti’s corrupt and dysfunctional system, comes as members of Viv Ansanm leaders find themselves under increased pressure from anti-gang operations.

    Over the weekend, for example, the area around the embassy at times sounded like a war zone. Embassy employees as late as Saturday afternoon were under shelter-in-place orders.

    As units targeted 400 Mawozo, Viv Ansanm members turned to a common tactic to stretch police resources and break the momentum of the operations. Over Haitian police radio, officers were told that gangs were approaching the old U.S. embassy building in downtown Port-au-Prince. The building, which was donated to the Haitian government after the 2010 earthquake, has been off limits due to gangs’ control of the area.

    In addition to the previously reported high-powered Barrett M50 sniper rifle that was recovered from 400 Mawozo, security forces also seized six assault rifles and three pistols during operations targeting the group, which had blocked and fortified several sections of National Route 3, the spokesman for the Kenyan forces said in a statement about the operations.

    Security forces also intercepted and seized an armored bulldozer the gang had been using to erect road barricades, spokesman Jack Ombaka said. Several gang members were also neutralized, he said.

    Haitian police previously told the Herald that seven gang members had been killed as of Friday, and a helicopter providing air support to police units had to be destroyed after it was forced to make an emergency landing in the Santo and Lilavois area.

    “The elite unit on board was immediately secured and evacuated by ground units, who came under heavy gunfire from gangs during the extraction,” Ombaka said.

    On Sunday, gang attacks continued to be reported. Members of the Viv Ansanm gang coalition were said to have set up roadblocks and burning barricades in Cité Militaire and Simon-Pelé, west of the Airport Road in Port-au-Prince.

    This story was originally published November 16, 2025 at 2:39 PM.

    Jacqueline Charles

    Miami Herald

    Jacqueline Charles has reported on Haiti and the English-speaking Caribbean for the Miami Herald for over a decade. A Pulitzer Prize finalist for her coverage of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, she was awarded a 2018 Maria Moors Cabot Prize — the most prestigious award for coverage of the Americas.

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    Jacqueline Charles

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  • Racers look forward to honoring fallen service members at the Marine Corps Marathon’s ‘Wear Blue Mile’ – WTOP News

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    The race has many aspects that set it apart from your typical 26.2 mile run, and none more so than its “Wear Blue Mile,” commemorating fallen service members.

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    Racers look forward to honoring fallen warriors at the Marine Corps Marathon’s ‘Wear Blue Mile’

    In just six days, runners will take over the streets of D.C. and Arlington, Virginia, for the 50th Marine Corps Marathon, and one of the highlights of the race is the commemorative “Wear Blue Mile.”

    As runners approach the halfway mark of the race, they will turn calm and silent — Mile 12 on Haines Point in the District has no crowd and no cheering. Instead, a sea of blue signs showing the picture and name of a fallen service member will line the route, along with family members of the deceased.

    Every few paces runners will see another face, another name and another date of death, and even the age of the service member when they were killed. On each “Faces of the Fallen” poster is also an American flag with a black ribbon.

    John Cox, who has run the race 39 times, said the Blue Mile is a relatively new addition, but a very moving one.

    “You can’t help but be impacted by it, because there’s so many faces and their sacrifice was for you,” Cox told WTOP. “And you see the reactions of the people who are running for individual people who are there, and they stop and acknowledge, and have their moments. It’s sobering for me.”

    Two runners this year have not only passed by the faces numerous times, but they have also volunteered at the 12th mile, setting up signs and spending time with the military families who sit alongside the remembrances of their loved ones.

    “To stand there holding the flag representing one of our fallen warriors … we watched literally the entire race,” Andrew Dalbey, who volunteered with his wife in 2023, said. “We saw the emotions of every runner. We had people coming up, the sweeper bus had actually passed them, and they’re like, ‘You know what? I’d heard about the blue mile and I just wanted to get to this point.’”

    Dalbey said the mile is a “special section” that started in 2012, and that “basically, they’ve been out there at the Marine Corps Marathon ever since.”

    “Wear blue: run to remember,” the organization behind the emotional mile, was founded in 2010 by several military spouses and family members who lost loved ones in combat.

    Now when they place the blue posters on the route, they also add the service members who have died by suicide.

    “Which is incredible. It’s important to remember them as well,” Dalbey said.

    One such Marine who will be honored is Caleb Murfield, who died by suicide in 2007.

    His father, Loren Murfield, will be a Blue Mile runner this year and told WTOP, “Caleb will have a poster on mile 12. My wife is going to be holding his flag on the tribute mile.”

    This will be Murfield’s first time running the Marine Corps Marathon and seeing this stretch.

    “I suspect, knowing how I run and, at 70 years old, how my body is taxed, I’m not sure how emotional I will be at the time, but I’ve already shed many tears over what it will look like,” Murfield said. “I’ve seen posters, I’ve seen pictures. I’ve already had that emotion, and I’m sure for the rest of my life, I will remember it.”

    Other first-time runners, such as Navy veteran Kylie Vitukevich, will experience the Blue Mile for the first time this year.

    “I think I’m most excited to see that. I’ve heard that it’s a very overwhelming, in a good way, spot to run,” she said.

    Margaret Gill, a fellow first-time runner, said, “I think it puts into perspective how you have something big, like the military or marathon runners, and you can just break it down into individual people. So, taking the time to see those names, see those pictures, it lets you really get more intimate with what’s happening and who’s involved.”

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    Luke Lukert

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  • ‘First to fight’: Marine VP JD Vance marks Corps’ 250th as Hegseth says unity, not ‘diversity,’ is strength

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    Vice President JD Vance joined Marines and sailors at Camp Pendleton in California on Saturday for the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Marine Corps, telling the crowd that the Corps remains ready to fight and ready to win.

    The anniversary event included an amphibious assault demonstration on Red Beach, speeches from military leaders and cabinet officials, and a reminder from Vance that he is the first Marine to serve as vice president.

    Helicopters roared overhead and amphibious vehicles surged through the surf as Marines charged the beach to open the ceremony. Second Lady Usha Vance accompanied her husband to watch the display while families shaded their eyes and Ospreys thundered overhead.

    This year’s ceremony marked a quarter millennium since the Continental Congress first authorized the Marine Corps in 1775.

    NEWSOM CLASHES WITH WHITE HOUSE OVER MARINE CORPS ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION HIGHWAY CLOSURE

    Vice President JD Vance speaks during the Marine Corps’ 250th anniversary celebration at Camp Pendleton, Calif., Saturday. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

    General Eric Smith, Commandant of the Marine Corps, told the crowd that what they were seeing was the sound and look of freedom. He described the Corps as America’s “911 force” and warned that Marines must be ready for whatever comes next.

    “The next fight is coming,” he said. “Marines will be ready. Ready to fight. Ready to win.”

    The next fight is coming. Marines will be ready. Ready to fight. Ready to win.

    — General Eric Smith, Commandant of the United States Marine Corps

    “When it matters most, it’s not technology or equipment that wins the day, but the dependability, decisiveness and character of the Marine or sailor who wields it,” Smith said. He ended by thanking families and offering a blessing for their sacrifices.

    VP VANCE’S CAMP ACCUSES CALIFORNIA GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM OF DISSEMINATING ‘FAKE NEWS’ AHEAD OF MARINES CELEBRATION

    Pete Hegseth speaks at Marine Corps 250th anniversary event

    Secretary of War Pete Hegseth delivers remarks during the Marine Corps’ 250th anniversary celebration at Camp Pendleton, Calif., Saturday. (Oliver Contreras/AFP via Getty Images)

    Secretary of War Pete Hegseth then delivered one of the day’s most fiery addresses. A combat veteran himself, he told the Marines that the Corps stood strong when others wavered. 

    “I’m not supposed to say this, really not. But I think you guys might be my favorite,” Hegseth said.

    He tied the Corps to the administration’s broader theme of America First, peace through strength, and common sense at every turn. Hegseth reminded the crowd that while many different faces fill the ranks, unity of mission is the true strength of the Corps. 

    “The truth is, your diversity is not your strength. Never has been. Your strength is in your unity of purpose. It’s in your shared mission. It’s in your oath to the Constitution. It’s the bond that turns individuals into single-minded fighting units. You see, you are set apart. You’re not civilians. You’re devil dogs, leathernecks, United States Marines,” the Secretary said, drawing cheers.

    The crowd erupted when Vance took the stage. 

    “God bless you, Marines,” he began, smiling as chants of “Oorah!” echoed back. He quickly reminded them that he’s the first Marine to hold the office of vice president. “From one Marine to another, thank you for your service,” he said.

    “I’ve also got to give a special shout out to the incredible display that we saw earlier today. It made my heart sing,” Vance said. “As your vice president, and it was a testament to the core strength and unbeatable power. It reminded me why I am so proud to have worn the uniform, to be one among your ranks, and to be the very first vice president to have been a United States Marine.”

    Vance used his speech to honor heroes, remember the fallen and reflect on his own service. He mentioned Medal of Honor recipient Sgt. Dakota Meyer who served in Afghanistan, Navy corpsman Charles Cram who helped raise the flag at Iwo Jima, and Navy aviator Elmer Royce Williams who survived the longest dogfight in American history.

    TRUMP DECLARES ‘REAWAKENING’ OF ‘WARRIOR SPIRIT,’ UNWAVERING SUPPORT FOR MILITARY: ‘I HAVE YOUR BACKS’

    JD Vance raises fist at Marine Corps anniversary event.

    Vice President JD Vance raises his fist as helicopters fly over Marines during the Corps’ 250th anniversary celebration at Camp Pendleton, Calif., Saturday. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

    The vice president mixed solemnity with humor that fellow Marines recognized immediately. He joked about the “E-4 Mafia” and shared a story about a gunnery sergeant who once saved him from signing a 22% interest used car loan by steering him to Navy Federal Credit Union.

    “That gunny’s leadership didn’t just save me money,” Vance said. “It taught me that Marines look out for each other.”

    Vance’s remarks included a particular story from boot camp. Recruits queued for Catholic or Protestant church services and Vance, referring to himself in the third person as, “recruit,” called himself an atheist. 

    “Get in the Catholic line,” the drill instructor snapped. That punchline, Vance joked, “wouldn’t work in the Biden administration.”

    Vance also took aim at Democrats in Congress over the government shutdown, promising that the administration would fight to ensure enlisted Marines are paid. 

    “We will do everything possible to make sure enlisted Marines get paid,” he said. “Political battles in Washington should not come at the expense of troops and their families.”

    JD Vance and wife Usha at Marine Corps anniversary

    Vice President JD Vance speaks with his wife Usha Vance before attending the Marine Corps’ 250th anniversary celebration at Camp Pendleton, Calif., Saturday. (Oliver Contreras/AFP via Getty Images)

    He tied the 250th anniversary back to the Corps’ beginnings at Tun Tavern in Philadelphia in 1775. He named battles that define Marine history: from Belleau Wood and Iwo Jima to the Chosin Reservoir, Khe Sanh, Ramadi, Fallujah and Helmand, and told the audience that every generation of the Corps shares the same common purpose.

    “Every single person here bleeds Marine Corps green,” Vance said. “It is our common purpose that carries us forward.”

    Every single person here bleeds Marine Corps green.

    — Vice President JD Vance

    Vance reminded East Coast Marines swatting sand fleas at Parris Island that their bond is the same as those climbing the hills of California. He spoke of his pride in wearing the Corps’ uniform and closed with words that Marines have heard before but welcomed on their birthday.

    “Keep kicking a–. Keep taking names. Semper Fidelis, Marines. Happy 250th birthday. God bless you,” he said.

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    The ceremony ended with the roar of the crowd as the day carried reminders of sacrifice, grit and unity.

    The Department of War, Navy, and Vance’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. The Marine Corps offered no further comment to Fox News Digital at this time.

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  • Pentagon Slams Netflix’s Boots as “Woke Garbage”

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    Pentagon Press Secretary has scathing remarks for “Boots” an LGBT+ military Netflix series.

    Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson had a lot to say about the new Netflix series “Boots” that was released earlier this month. Wilson said in a statement that Netflix’s “leadership consistently produces and feeds woke garbage to their audience”. The show follows a closeted gay teen who impulsively follows his best friend’s lead in enlisting in the Marine Corps. The show is loosely based on Marine Corps Sergeant Greg Cope White’s memoir “The Pink Marine,” which details his journey as a gay man in the military in the 1970s-80s, when it was illegal.

    “Boots” deviates as it takes place during the 1990s, or the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” era, where gay soldiers were allowed to serve as long as they remained silent about their sexual orientation. Although it isn’t directly about his life, White served as a writer for the show alongside late producer and WWII veteran Norman Lear. Andy Parker, the creator of the show, “did not feel the series was inherently political”, however, Secretary Wilson disagreed, stating that the US Military “will not compromise our standards to satisfy an ideological agenda”.

    This statement aligns with the beliefs of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former Fox News personality who is helping “the US Military to get back to restoring the warrior ethos”. He has previously supported Trump’s executive order, which mandates the discharge of all trans service members and prevents new trans troops from enlisting. Earlier this year, he ordered that the US Navy Ship Harvey Milk, named after the veteran and gay activist, be renamed. In May, he spoke about “leaving weakness and weakness behind”. 

    It is a violent reaction for a show that, at its bare bones, is based on someone’s personal experience, especially when the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy was repealed in 2011. Created by two veterans about one of the toughest branches in the military, the show aims to shed light on the experiences of gay veterans, which is apparently too much for the Pentagon to handle. Netflix has not commented on the situation at this point. Especially when the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy was repealed in 2011. Created by two veterans about one of the toughest branches in the military, the show aims to shed light on the experiences of gay veterans, which is apparently too much for the Pentagon to handle. Netflix has not commented on the situation at this point. 

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    Taylor Ford

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  • White House Cancels I-5 Closure Plans During Marine Corps Anniversary

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    The White House alters plans to shut down the I-5 for a military event at Camp Pendleton; The Freeway will remain open as ‘No Kings Day’ protests and the 250th anniversary of the Marine Corps are underway this weekend.

    This weekend, the White House intended to shut down part of the 5 Freeway between Los Angeles and San Diego due to a live fire demonstration for a military event happening at Camp Pendleton. However, after receiving concerned responses from local officials and residents, the 5 Freeway will now stay open during the event.

    In a news release from the same day, the U.S Marines confirmed, “All training events will occur on approved training ranges and comport with established safety protocols. No public highways or transportation routes will be closed.”

    The military event is scheduled for this Saturday, which marks the 250th anniversary of the Marine Corps. The event is set to feature a live-fire and amphibious assault demonstration, which could include firing missiles over the Freeway and onto Camp Pendleton. It is also reported that Navy ships will fire missiles around the coast of the base.

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Vice President JD Vance, and other military leaders are set to attend the event, which has been titled “America’s Marines 250: Sea to Shore – A Review of Amphibious Strength”.

    Christopher Clark, a spokesperson for Caltrans, told SFGATE they were “informed of potential plans” to close the highway and “cautioned against it.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom addressed plans to close I-5 with a post on X on October 15th, writing, “Donald Trump and JD Vance think that shutting down the I-5 to shoot out missiles from ships is how you respect the military. PUT ASIDE YOUR VANITY PARADE AND PAY OUR TROOPS INSTEAD.

    If road closures had happened, they would likely result in extreme congestion from Dana Point to past Del Mar. The road services over 80,000 travelers, who would all have to find alternate routes of up to 30 additional miles.

    Following the Marine Corps’ announcement that I-5 would remain open, Governor Newsom’s press office responded on X, writing: “We’re relieved the White House backed off its plans to shut down a major interstate. Now that I-5 will stay open, we hope the Trump Administration applies that same common sense to reopening the federal government!”

    The Marine Corps anniversary comes amid the ongoing government shutdown, as thousands of federal workers are working without pay as lawmakers scramble to find a solution. On Wednesday, a ninth attempt at voting to fund the government ended unsuccessfully, leading into the third week of nationwide shutdowns.

    Hakeem Jeffries, Minority Leader of the U.S House of Representatives, said, “We are ready, willing to negotiate a bipartisan spending agreement that actually meets the needs of the American people.”

    Air traffic controller Peter Lefevre said about the shutdown, “Not knowing how I’m going to have child care for my kids, put gas in the car or pay the next mortgage payment, adds a certain level of stress to an already stressful profession.”

    The spectacular event is the latest in a series of costly military investments made by the administration at the expense of taxpayers. While the military continues to see significant budget increases, Federal workers, active duty members and American citizens are facing budget cuts and economic hardship. All the while, the government remains at a standstill over the future of its funding.

    The event at Camp Pendleton coincides with another round of ‘No Kings Day’ protests scheduled for this weekend. Upcoming demonstrations are expected to bring out millions of citizens across the country who oppose the current administration.

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    Natalia Oprzadek

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  • This couple has a bigger mission than the finish line during this year’s Marine Corps Marathon – WTOP News

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    One couple is venturing to the starting line not only with the goal of finishing this year’s marathon, but also honoring and advocating for the recognition of two fallen Marines, who died as heroes.

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    This couple has a bigger mission than the finish line during this year’s Marine Corps Marathon

    The 50th Marine Corps Marathon is less than a month away, and here at WTOP, we are highlighting some of the inspiring people that are running to that start line and what brought them there.

    One couple is venturing to the starting line, not only with the goal of finishing this year’s marathon, but also honoring and advocating for the recognition of two fallen Marines, who died as heroes.

    Andrew and Shelley Dalbey have run the Marine Corps Marathon before, but this year, they return from a slight hiatus and will continue to run as part of Team Jordan.

    The group honors Lance Cpl. Jordan Haerter and Cpl. Jonathan Yale. Both men were killed on April 22, 2008, in Ramadi, Iraq.

    Their two battalions were switching places at the Joint Security Station. Both men were standing guard at the entry control point when a large truck accelerated toward the gates. It did not stop on command and both men fired until it stopped and a suicide bomber detonated a 2,000-pound blast that killed them both.

    “They had six seconds to stop a suicide bomber,” Andrew told WTOP. “They saved the lives of 150 Marines and Iraqi police officers.”

    They were both posthumously awarded the Navy Cross and now this group, lead by Haerter’s mother, advocates for the two young men to receive the congressional Medal of Honor.

    One couple is running the Marine Corps Marathon not only with the goal of finishing, but also honoring and advocating for the recognition of two fallen Marines.
    (Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey)

    Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey

    Andrew and Shelley Dalbey have run the Marine Corps Marathon before, but this year, they return from a slight hiatus and will continue to run as part of Team Jordan.
    (Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey)

    Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey

    One couple is running the Marine Corps Marathon while honoring and advocating for the recognition of two fallen Marines.
    (Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey)

    Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey

    Team Jordan is a Marine Corps Marathon honoring two fallen Marines.
    (Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey)

    Courtesy Andrew and Shelley Dalbey

    Speaking about the two fallen Marines’ families, Shelley said, “Nothing in my life has changed my life as much as these events have shaped and changed their lives.”

    “They deserve to have their kids and their brothers remembered,” she added.

    The couple and the other members of Team Jordan will all sport similar shirts honoring Lance Cpl. Haerter. They will also pay respects at his remembrance on the “Wear Blue Mile” where many fallen service members are honored.

    This race and cause have special meaning for Andrew, as he was also a Marine. For the entire 26.2-mile race, he will carry the American flag complete with streamers with the names of both service members.

    “In training, I will typically carry an eight-pound dumbbell just to develop the arm fatigue, the stamina for it,” Andrew said.

    While they have raced the streets before, this is the first Marine Corps Marathon for Shelley since beating cancer a few years ago.

    “Surgery was sufficient, but it took a while, because it was an abdominal surgery, so it took a while to get past that,” she told WTOP.

    Though the Dalbeys have raced other marathons across the country, they keep coming back to the Marine Corps Marathon. This will be the ninth time Andrew has run with the Marines.

    “It’s the power of this race. It’s the Marines that are out there cheering you on. … There’s no other race like it,” Andrew said.

    Both said that this is a milestone in a personal fitness journey as well, as both have lost over 50 pounds in preparation for the marathon.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Luke Lukert

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  • I-5 may be shut down due to concerns over live-fire military event at Camp Pendleton

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    Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office is weighing whether to close parts of Interstate 5 beginning Friday amid concerns over what it says is a White House-directed plan to use live ordnance during a military anniversary celebration off Camp Pendleton’s coast in San Diego County — where Navy ships are expected to fire over the freeway onto the base.

    Newsom’s office has received, but not confirmed, reports that live ordnance will be fired from offshore vessels during the event commemorating the Marine Corps’ 250th anniversary. The event is titled “Sea to Shore — A Review of Amphibious Strength” and will feature Vice President JD Vance.

    Newsom’s office said it has received little information about the event or safety plans. The military show of force coincides with No Kings rallies and marches across the state on Saturday that are expected to draw large crowds, demonstrations challenging Trump and what critics say is government overreach.

    “Donald Trump and JD Vance think that shutting down the I-5 to shoot out missiles from ships is how you respect the military,” Newsom posted on the social media site X Wednesday.

    A military media advisory said the celebration will include a live amphibious assault demonstration. The Times could not confirm whether live ordnance will be fired over the freeway. The White House and Marine Corps did not respond to questions from The Times.

    “California always honors our Marines — but this isn’t the right way to go about it,” said a Newsom spokesperson. “The White House should focus on paying their military, lowering grocery prices and honoring these soldiers for their service instead of pompous displays of power. The lack of coordination and communication from the federal government on this event — and the overall impact to our society and economy — is evident of the larger disarray that is the Trump Administration.”

    Freeway closures are being considered for a section of I-5 between Orange County to San Diego County from Friday to Saturday, which would cut off a major traffic artery that moves upward of 80,000 travelers a day. A closure with little notice would likely result in massive gridlock from Dana Point in the north to well past Del Mar in the south.

    Vance, the first Marine veteran to serve as vice president, is expected to attend the event Saturday along with 15,000 Marines, Sailors, veterans and their families, according to event’s media release. Along with Vance, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is expected to deliver remarks.

    Camp Pendleton advised nearby residents that there will be live-fire training with high explosive munitions through Sunday, which will result in some roads on base being closed.

    The Trump administration previously had plans for a major celebration next month for the 250th anniversary of the Navy and Marines, which would have included an air and sea show — with the Blue Angels and parading warships — attended by President Trump, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune. Plans to host that show in San Diego have been called off, the paper reported.

    Camp Pendleton is a 125,000-acre base in northwestern San Diego County that has been critical in preparing soldiers for amphibious missions since World War II thanks to its miles of beach and coastal hills. The U.S. Department of Defense is considering making a portion of the base available for development or lease.

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    Melody Gutierrez

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  • Camp Pendleton is an oasis from SoCal urban sprawl. Feds now consider unprecedented development

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    In the sweeping Southern California metropolis spanning from Santa Barbara to the Mexico border, Camp Pendleton has long remained the largest undeveloped stretch of the coastline.

    The 17 miles of beach and coastal hills has, since World War II, proven critical in preparing soldiers for amphibious missions. The bluffs, canyons and mountainous terrain that comprise the interior of the base has been fertile training ground for those sent to conflicts in the Middle East and beyond.

    But change may be on the horizon.

    The United States Department of Defense is considering making a portion of the 125,000 acre base in northwestern San Diego County available for development or lease in what, if successful, would be unprecedented for the military installation.

    “There’s no place in Southern California like Camp Pendleton when it comes to open space along the coast,” said Bill Fulton, a professor of practice in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at UC San Diego.

    Marine recruits rest while the rest of the remaining platoons in their company to catch up at Camp Pendleton in 2020.

    (Nelvin C. Cepeda/San Diego Union-Tribune via AP)

    In late August, Secretary of the Navy John Phelan conducted an aerial tour of Camp Pendleton and visited with Marines at the base where he had “initial conversations about possible commercial leasing opportunities” by the Department of Defense, Phelan’s spokesperson Courtney Williams told The Times.

    “These opportunities are being evaluated to maximize value and taxpayer dollars while maintaining mission readiness and security,” Williams said in a statement. “No decisions have been made and further discussions are needed.”

    Details about the sites being considered for commercial lease remain unclear. Officials with Camp Pendleton declined to comment to The Times.

    A view of the sign at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton.

    A view of the sign at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton.

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    Discussions over the 83-year-old base comes at a time when the Trump administration is more aggressively trying to use public lands to raise money for the federal government and rolling back protections on open space.

    The administration this month proposed rescinding a Biden-era rule that sought to protect public lands from industrial development and instead prioritizing the use of the land for oil and gas drilling, coal mining, timber production and livestock grazing.

    Secretary Doug Burgum has repeatedly emphasized that federal lands are untapped assets worth trillions of dollars.

    “We believe that our natural resources are national assets that should be responsibly developed to grow our economy, help balance the Budget, and generate revenue for American taxpayers,” he said in a statement to Congress in May.

    A man takes in the view from the Southbound I-5 Aliso Creek Rest Area of the surrounding Camp Pendleton property.

    A man takes in the view of Camp Pendleton property. Camp Pendleton has long remained the largest undeveloped stretch of the coastline in California.

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    While there has been development on Camp Pendleton those projects have solely been for military uses. A large hospital was recently added, and there are various buildings for the base’s more than 42,000 active duty personnel.

    Camp Pendleton has won praise for balancing national security needs with environmental preservation.

    In 2022, Camp Pendleton was named the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s military conservation partner of the year for its efforts to support the recovery of several species, including the tidewater goby, coastal California gnatcatcher, the arroyo toad and southern California steelhead.

    Conservation and management of the least Bell’s vireo, California least tern, and western snowy plover have resulted in significant increases to on-base populations of these species, according to the agency.

    A marine walks through the Santa Margarita River running through Camp Pendleton, where the arroyo toad can be found.

    A marine walks through the Santa Margarita River running through Camp Pendleton, where the arroyo toad can be found.

    (Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

    In addition to endangered populations, the base is home to a herd of North American bison, one of only two wild conservation herds of bison in California.

    Past efforts to build more on the camp have not been popular with the public.

    In the mid-1990s, the U.S. Marine Corps put forth a plan to build 128 homes for officers and their families on a 32-acre bluff at San Mateo Point near Trestles Beach, one of the nation’s most famous surfing spots. The California Coastal Commission ultimately rejected the project.

    In 2021, the Department of the Navy issued a request for information to seek feedback on hosting “critical energy and water infrastructure resiliency projects” on a portion of Camp Pendleton.

    In the document, the department sought information on long-term partnerships to plan, design, construct and operate facilities that could include energy generation, transmission and storage, microgrid technologies, water desalination, drought mitigation, stormwater management, reuse or alternative use of decommissioned energy infrastructure, high speed fiber communications, data centers or residential, commercial or industrial purposes.

    It is not clear whether any potential projects were identified from the request for information.

    Motorists travel the 5 Freeway with military housing at San Mateo Point in the background.

    Motorists travel the 5 Freeway with military housing at San Mateo Point in the background.

    (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

    NBC News reported that funds from development on Camp Pendleton could potentially fund Trump’s Golden Dome missile defense project, citing defense sources. But officials have not publicly specified where funds would be allocated.

    Absent specifics, it’s challenging for people in the areas immediately around the base to know what to expect and how to prepare, Fulton said.

    “Are we talking about little shopping centers or high-rise hotels?” he said. “You would assume that the military has certain constraints that they would want to impose to protect their activities, but we just don’t know.”

    Given the base’s coastal location, development on the site could certainly be fruitful for the federal government. Developers have long had their eye on smaller swaths of coastal land in Southern California. Years-long battles between developers and environmentalists were waged in the fight over proposed housing and commercial developments at Bolsa Chica in Huntington Beach and Banning Ranch in Newport Beach. Ultimately, those projects were scrapped.

    Camp Pendleton, bordered by San Clemente to the north and Oceanside to the south, opened in 1942 during World War II at a time when the military was looking for large places to train soldiers, particularly for amphibious missions in the Pacific. It became a permanent installation two years later and has trained thousands of service members, sending troops to battle in Operation Desert Storm and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Camp Pendleton has a deeply entwined relationship with its southern neighbor, Oceanside, once a sleepy beachside town turned military city and recreation hub.

    In 1940, the city’s population was 4,652. Ten years later, it had swelled to more than 12,800 and grew further as the United States entered the Korean War and more service-connected families moved into the region, according to census data.

    Development on the base would certainly have an effect on Oceanside, city leaders say.

    Service members and their families frequently travel off the base to surrounding communities to shop and dine out, providing a steady customer supply for local businesses including those that cater heavily to Marines including dry cleaners, tailors, barbershops and military surplus stores. The base’s regional economic impact is more than $6 billion dollars annually, according to the city.

    “I think it would be very concerning to see large scale development without collaboration with local municipalities,” said Oceanside Deputy Mayor Eric Joyce. Joyce said the city hasn’t yet been given any insight into the federal government’s plans for the base.

    “We have neighborhoods that are literally right up to the gate, who are very impacted when there are changes in traffic or other developments there,” Joyce said, adding that the city has a deep respect for the base and any shifting away from its original mission of training Marines would “be deeply concerning.”

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    Hannah Fry

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  • Fair Oaks WWII Veteran celebrates his 100th birthday

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    WHAT. HOPE YOUR DAD’S OKAY. ALL RIGHT, WELL, IN FAIR OAKS, ONE MARINE VETERAN MARKING A MILESTONE MOST OF US CAN ONLY HOPE TO SEE. HE’S TURNING 100 YEARS OLD. THE CELEBRATION WASN’T JUST ABOUT AGE, BUT HONORING A LIFE OF SERVICE AND WISDOM. A CENTURY LATER, KCRA 3’S CORTEZ TAKES US TO THE CELEBRATION. HAPPY BIRTHDAY. A CENTURY OF LIFE. A LIFETIME OF SERVICE. I WAS STATIONED WITH THE FOURTH MARINES. AND A SALUTE THAT HASN’T FADED WITH TIME. STUART MCINTYRE IS ONE OF JUST 66,000 WORLD WAR TWO VETERANS. STILL WITH US. AND AT 100 YEARS OLD, THIS BIRTHDAY MARKS A MILESTONE OUT OF THE 16.4 MILLION WHO ONCE SERVED. I WAS VERY YOUNG WHEN I JOINED THE MARINE CORPS, AND THEY HAD JUST PULLED THE MARINES THAT HAD BEEN SERVING IN CHINA. I’VE HAD MEMORIES FROM EUROPE AND MEMORIES FROM ALL OVER, BUT THE ONES THAT COME BACK TO ME MOST ARE THE LITTLE ISLAND. MCINTYRE ENLISTING INTO THE MARINES AT 16 YEARS OLD ON DECEMBER 1941. NOW, DECADES LATER, IT’S HIS COMMUNITY SERVING HIM. I REALLY AM SHOCKED THAT SO MANY PEOPLE WOULD TAKE THE TIME. THEY DON’T EVEN KNOW HIM TO STOP AND WISH HIM A HAPPY BIRTHDAY BECAUSE HE’S A MARINE, YOU KNOW? ONCE A MARINE, ALWAYS A MARINE. HIS STORY, MORE THAN JUST LONGEVITY, BUT LEGACY. AND WHILE REACHING 100 IS NO SMALL LIFE BATTLE, THE MILESTONE ISN’T JUST ABOUT LOOKING BACK, BUT INSPIRING THE NEXT GENERATION. IT MEANS A LOT TO ME BECAUSE MY PARENTS ARE FROM THE GREATEST GENERATION TOO, SO. AND HE’S SHARING HIS LIFE STORIES WITH US AND THE COMMUNITY. FOR HIM TO STILL STAY ENGAGED AND WANT TO SHARE IS REALLY, REALLY AWESOME. I’M THE LAST ONE TO BE GIVING PEOPLE ADVICE ABOUT ANYTHING. I’VE LED A. I’VE LED MY LIFE KIND OF THE WAY I WANTED TO. WITH THE BAGPIPES. LEADING THE WAY. HIS 100 YEARS REMIND US THAT A LIFE WELL LIVED. IS A MELODY WORTH HEARING. AND MCINTYRE RETIRED FROM THE MARINES WITH THE RANK OF GUNNERY SERGEANT. WHEN I ASKED HIM, WHAT’S THE SECRET TO LONGEVITY? BREATHE. SUCH A SIMPLE TASK

    Fair Oaks WWII Veteran celebrates his 100th birthday

    A Fair Oaks community is celebrating a WWII veteran’s special moment, sharing his wisdom and stories with the next generation.

    Updated: 6:50 PM PDT Aug 20, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Surrounded by friends and fellow veterans, Stuart McIntyre walked into the American Legion Post 383 on Wednesday in salute formation. American flags were displayed proudly.McIntyre, a World War II veteran, celebrated his 100th birthday, marking a milestone many hope to achieve. According to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs statistics, less than 1% percent of the 16.4 million who served in WWII are still alive. McIntyre, who enlisted in the Marine Corps at age 16 in December 1941, reflected on his service, saying, “I was very young when I joined the Marine Corps, and they had just pulled the Marines that had been serving in China.”He recited the poem “Mandalay” by Rudyard Kipling, a poem about a soldier recounting his time in Burma. It’s a piece of poetry that reminds McIntyre of his time of service.His community gathered to honor him, with longtime friend Candace Duva expressing surprise at the turnout.”I really am shocked that so many people would take the time that don’t even know him to stop and wish him a happy birthday, because he’s a Marine. You know, once a Marine, always a Marine,” Duva said.”I’m inspired by his patriotism, his positive outlook on life. And I mean, I think that’s part of, probably is part of what’s kept him going. When you’re a positive person and you stay active, I think that means a lot. And he’s sharing his life stories with us and the community,” MaryAnne Povey, executive director of Orangevale Live, said. Despite his age, McIntyre remains humble about his life experiences. “Well, I’m the last one to be giving people advice about anything, I’ve lived my life kind of the way I wanted to,” he said.

    Surrounded by friends and fellow veterans, Stuart McIntyre walked into the American Legion Post 383 on Wednesday in salute formation. American flags were displayed proudly.

    McIntyre, a World War II veteran, celebrated his 100th birthday, marking a milestone many hope to achieve. According to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs statistics, less than 1% percent of the 16.4 million who served in WWII are still alive.

    McIntyre, who enlisted in the Marine Corps at age 16 in December 1941, reflected on his service, saying, “I was very young when I joined the Marine Corps, and they had just pulled the Marines that had been serving in China.”

    He recited the poem “Mandalay” by Rudyard Kipling, a poem about a soldier recounting his time in Burma. It’s a piece of poetry that reminds McIntyre of his time of service.

    His community gathered to honor him, with longtime friend Candace Duva expressing surprise at the turnout.

    “I really am shocked that so many people would take the time that don’t even know him to stop and wish him a happy birthday, because he’s a Marine. You know, once a Marine, always a Marine,” Duva said.

    “I’m inspired by his patriotism, his positive outlook on life. And I mean, I think that’s part of, probably is part of what’s kept him going. When you’re a positive person and you stay active, I think that means a lot. And he’s sharing his life stories with us and the community,” MaryAnne Povey, executive director of Orangevale Live, said.

    Despite his age, McIntyre remains humble about his life experiences.

    “Well, I’m the last one to be giving people advice about anything, I’ve lived my life kind of the way I wanted to,” he said.

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  • Trump expands L.A. military tactics by sending National Guard to Washington, D.C.

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    In an expansion of tactics started in June during immigration raids in Los Angeles, President Trump on Monday announced he would take federal control of Washington’s police department and activate 800 National Guard troops in the nation’s capital to help “reestablish law and order.”

    “Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people,” Trump said at the White House.

    “This is liberation day in D.C.,” he declared.

    Trump, who sent roughly 5,000 Marines and National Guard troops to L.A. in June in a move that was opposed by California Gov. Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, issued an executive order declaring a public safety emergency in D.C. The order invoked Section 740 of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act that places the Metropolitan Police Department under direct federal control.

    The California governor decried Trump’s move in D.C., warning that what happened in L.A. was now taking place across the country.

    “He was just getting warmed up in Los Angeles,” Newsom said on X. “He will gaslight his way into militarizing any city he wants in America. This is what dictators do.”

    In his briefing, Trump painted D.C. in dark, apocalyptic terms as a grimy hellhole “of crime, bloodshed, bedlam, squalor and worse.” He said he planned to get tough, citing his administration’s stringent enforcement on the nation’s southern border.

    Already, Trump said, his administration has begun to remove homeless people from encampments across the city, and he said he planned to target undocumented immigrants, too. He vowed to “restore the city back to the gleaming capital that everybody wants it to be.”

    As the White House noted in a fact sheet Monday, D.C. had a 2024 homicide rate of 27 per 100,000 residents, the nation’s fourth-highest homicide rate. By comparison, Los Angeles’ homicide rate is 7.1 per 100,000 residents.

    But data also show violent crime has declined significantly in D.C. in recent years.

    Just a few weeks before Trump took office, the Justice Department announced that violent crime in the city was at a 30-year low. Homicides were down 32%, robberies down 39% and armed carjackings down 53% when compared with 2023 levels, according to data collected by the Metropolitan Police Department.

    In a press conference Monday, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser called Trump’s deployment of troops “unsettling and unprecedented.” But she also tried to strike a conciliatory tone with the president, acknowledging he was operating within the letter of the law in her district.

    “We’re not a state. We don’t control the D.C. National Guard,” she told reporters. “… Limited home rule gives the federal government the ability to intrude on our autonomy in many ways.”

    Bowser suggested the president was misinformed about crime in the district, advancing the idea that his views of D.C. were largely shaped by his COVID-era experience.

    “It is true that those were more challenging times,” Bowser told reporters. “It is also true that we experienced a crime spike post-COVID. But we worked quickly to put laws in place and tactics that got violent offenders off our streets and gave our police officers more tools, which is why we have seen a huge decrease in crime.”

    Accountability for gun-related crimes in the district remains an issue of concern, Bowser said, again offering an olive branch to Trump. But she noted that crime in the capital is down to pre-pandemic levels and that violent crime statistics are at 30-year lows.

    Brian Schwalb, the elected attorney general of the District of Columbia, said in a statement that “there is no crime emergency” in D.C. and the administration’s deployment of troops was “unprecedented, unnecessary and unlawful.”

    His office refuted the claims of Jeanine Pirro, U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, who said juveniles, or as she put it, “young punks,” were too often granted probation or other lenient sentences

    In D.C., the U.S. attorney’s office handles all adult felonies and the majority of adult misdemeanors, while Schwalb’s office exercises jurisdiction over crimes committed by juveniles and some adult misdemeanors.

    Since Schwalb took office in January 2023, the office has prosecuted so many juveniles at higher rates that the mayor has had to issue an emergency order creating more space at juvenile detention facilities, according to his office. Last year, the office prosecuted over 90% of homicide and attempted homicide cases, 88% of violent assault cases and 87% of carjacking cases, according to the statement.

    Ken Lang, a veteran of the Baltimore Police Department and an expert on law enforcement, said that Trump’s actions in D.C. could be an effort “to model a new national law enforcement strategy by having federal, state and local agencies better partner together.”

    But because it is a federal district and not a state, he said, D.C. occupies a “unique legal position” under the Home Rule Act.

    Oklahoma Mayor David Holt, who is also president of the United States Conference of Mayors, condemned Trump’s move as a “takeover,” and said “local control is always best.”

    Holt noted that the Trump administration’s data — specifically, the FBI’s national crime rate report released last week — shows crime rates dropping in cities across the nation.

    Trump said the deployment of troops in D.C. should serve as a warning to cities across the nation — including Los Angeles.

    “Hopefully L.A.’s watching,” Trump said as he berated Bass and Newsom for their handling of the firestorm that swept through the region in January, destroying thousands of homes.

    “The mayor’s incompetent and so is Gov. Newscum,” Trump said. “He’s got a good line of bull—, but that’s about it.”

    Trump’s announcement that he was deploying troops to D.C. comes more than two months after he sparked a major legal battle with California when he sent thousands of troops to Los Angeles. He argued they were necessary to combat what he described as “violent, insurrectionist mobs” as protests broke out in the city against federal immigration raids.

    But the protests calmed relatively quickly and local officials said they were primarily kept in check by police. The National Guard troops and Marines wound up sparsely deployed in Los Angeles, with some protecting federal buildings and some assisting federal agents as they conducted immigration enforcement operations. Military officials said the troops were restricted to security and crowd control and had no law enforcement authority.

    Trump’s deployment of troops to D.C. immediately found its way into the pitched court battle in California over whether his administration violated the Posse Comitatus Act, which bars federalized military from civilian law enforcement.

    As top U.S. military officials testified before Senior U.S. District Judge Charles R. Breyer in federal court in San Francisco on Monday, California lawyers quickly maneuvered to get Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s statement into evidence, hoping to bolster their argument that the government had not only knowingly violated the law, but was likely to do so again.

    “That’s one of the tests for injunctive relief, right?” Breyer said. “Present conduct may be relevant on that issue.”

    In June, Breyer ruled that Trump broke the law when he mobilized thousands of California National Guard members against the state’s wishes.

    In a 36-page decision, Breyer wrote that Trump’s actions “were illegal — both exceeding the scope of his statutory authority and violating the 10th Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

    But the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals paused that court order, allowing the troops to remain in Los Angeles while the case plays out in federal court. The appellate court found the president had broad, though not “unreviewable,” authority to deploy the military in American cities.

    That decision is set to be reviewed by a larger “en banc” panel of the appellate court. Meanwhile, California continues to fight what it says are illegal uses of the military for civilian law enforcement in Judge Breyer’s court in San Francisco.

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    Jenny Jarvie, Michael Wilner, Sonja Sharp

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  • Commentary: California has sued Trump 37 times. Here’s what’s at stake.

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    Seven months into President Trump’s second term, California has filed 37 lawsuits against his administration and spent about $5 million doing it.

    Before you go off on a government-spending rant, let me drop this figure on you: For each dollar the state has spent in litigation with Trump, it has recouped $33,600 in funds that the federal government has tried to take away from the Golden State, according to Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta.

    That, as he put it during a Monday news conference, is “bringing the receipts.”

    These aren’t dollars Californians were wishing for or begging for from the federal government — these are funds that have already been legally allotted to the state but which the Trump administration is attempting to stop for reasons petty, ideological or both. They pay for teacher training, immunizations, tracking infectious diseases, keeping roads safe, disaster recovery and on and on. And they are predominantly your tax dollars, being withheld from your state.

    “What we’re demanding is that we get the funding that’s already been legally approved and appropriated,” Bonta said.

    But as much as it’s about paying for the basics that keep California going, it’s also about protecting an inclusive and equitable way of living that defines the ethos of our state. Don’t tread on us! Californians get to spend our money how we see fit.

    “When you add it all up, you see the totality of what’s at stake: the California dream,” Bonta said. “The idea that every Californian, no matter how they look, where they live or how much money they have, can send their kid to school, go to the doctor when they’re sick and put food on the table and a roof over their heads.”

    Or as Gov. Gavin Newsom put it, it’s litigation not for the sake of suing, but to “defend, to stand tall, to hold the line in terms of our values, the things we hold dear.”

    It’s serious times, folks. Trump has made it clear that he doesn’t stand for LGBTQ+ rights, for immigrants’ rights, for women’s rights, for due process or even public schools. But so far, the courts have held, for the most part, to their responsibility to be a check on this unbalanced administration.

    Of course, lawyers win cases, sometimes regardless of facts. I want to give a shout out to our state Department of Justice. Bonta may be the state’s top lawyer, but there is a whole army of legal folks behind these lawsuits.

    The $5 million spent so far has been entirely in-house, Bonta said. This cash isn’t going to expensive outside counsel, but, as my colleague Kevin Rector points out, money that is funding the smart, talented attorneys and staff who work for taxpayers.

    More than a few of them were around during Trump’s first term, when the state was involved in more than 120 lawsuits against his administration. Many of those suits were about process — the haphazard, rules-be-damned way Trump seeks to implement his policies.

    Our California lawyers learned then that courts do in fact uphold law, and simply pointing out that rules have to be followed was often enough to stop Trump. While we now have a seasoned legal team that understands the weaknesses in what Trump is doing, the sort-of-funny part is that he’s still doing it. Few lessons learned, which is good for California.

    So far, these lawsuits by California have ensured that about $168 billion that Trump would have cut off instead continued to flow to California. Bonta said that in the 19 cases that have made it in front of a judge so far, he’s succeeded in 17, including winning 13 court orders directly blocking Trump’s “illegal actions.”

    He’s also secured wins outside of court, including when the U.S. Department of Education recently backed down after freezing school funding weeks before school is set to start. That funding, under threat of a lawsuit, has been restored.

    Bonta said that while the state is fighting every lawsuit with rigor, two are personal to him and “remain sort of the most important in terms of what they represent.”

    They happen to be the first two suits the state filed, shortly after Trump took office. The first was about birthright citizenship, and Trump’s bid to end it. It’s a case Bonta says is “very meaningful” to him.

    Bonta was born in the Philippines and immigrated to the United States when he was 2 months old, living in a trailer in the Central Valley town of La Paz, the home of the United Farm Workers. His parents left their country to avoid martial law as the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos gained power, and worked with civil rights leaders including Cesar Chavez once they settled here.

    So it makes sense that an executive order that would leave about 24,500 babies born each year in California without U.S. citizenship hits hard with Bonta.

    Bonta, along with attorneys general of several other states, filed that lawsuit the day after Trump took office, in response to an executive order he signed on Inauguration Day. So far, multiple courts have expressed deep skepticism of that order, and the idea that the Constitution and prior Supreme Court rulings should be ignored in favor of Trump’s position.

    The second case that Bonta takes personally is a multistate pushback on Trump’s sweeping halt of federal funding. That case put at risk about $3 trillion nationwide, including that $168 billion in California, about a third of the state budget.

    Coming up next is a challenge to the deployment of Marines and National Guard troops in Los Angeles. The Trump administration has been quietly removing those soldiers in recent days, perhaps in preparation for asking the court to drop that case, which seems like a loser for them. No troops, no case. We’ll see how it goes in a few days.

    “The Marines and the National Guardspeople arrived to quiet streets in L.A.,” Bonta said. “The president has been incredibly, in my view, disrespectful to these patriots. He’s treated them as political pawns.”

    The $5 million the state has spent so far on legal fights with Trump is part of $25 million the Legislature set aside earlier this year during a special session. Bonta said that even that will likely not be enough to keep the challenges flowing for the next three and a half years.

    Newsom, for his part, is all in and promised that Bonta “will not be in need of resources to do his job.” (And yes, I know it raises his profile for a 2028 presidential run.)

    As much as it seems ridiculous that we are setting aside this huge chunk of change for legal fees at a moment when we are facing a budget crisis, the cost of letting Trump run roughshod over our state is much higher. This is money well spent.

    Because it’s not just our federal funding at stake, it’s the California dream.

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    Anita Chabria

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  • 5 Marines aboard helicopter that crashed outside San Diego are confirmed dead, military says

    5 Marines aboard helicopter that crashed outside San Diego are confirmed dead, military says

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    Five U.S. Marines aboard a helicopter that went down during stormy weather in the mountains outside San Diego are confirmed dead, a Marine commander said Thursday.

    It was the second fatal crash for Marines in Southern California involving a Sikorsky CH-53E Super Stallion, a heavy lift helicopter, in the last six years. The Marines said an investigation into the latest crash is underway.

    Authorities say the aircraft vanished late Tuesday while returning to Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego after a routine training mission to Creech Air Force Base in Indian Springs, Nev., northwest of Las Vegas. The helicopter was flying into treacherous weather in California, which had been inundated with three days of relentless rain.

    “It is with a heavy heart and profound sadness that I share the loss of five outstanding Marines from 3d Marine Aircraft Wing and the ‘Flying Tigers,’” Maj. Gen. Michael J. Borgschulte, commander of 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, said in a statement.

    The names of those killed will not be released until 24 hours after next of kin are notified, officials said.

    “To the families of our fallen Marines, we send our deepest condolences and commit to ensuring your support and care during this incredibly difficult time,” Borgschulte said. “Though we understand the inherent risks of military service, any loss of life is always difficult.”

    Those aboard the flight were assigned to Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 361, Marine Aircraft Group 16, according to the Marines.

    In a statement, President Biden said he and First Lady Jill Biden “extend our deepest condolences to their families, their squadron, and the U.S. Marine Corps as we grieve the loss of five of our nation’s finest warriors.” He also thanked the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, the U.S. Air Force Auxiliary-Civil Air Patrol, and other federal, state, and local agencies for helping in the search and recovery efforts.

    “Our service members represent the very best of our nation — and these five Marines were no exception,” Biden said. “Today, as we mourn this profound loss, we honor their selfless service and ultimate sacrifice — and reaffirm the sacred obligation we bear to all those who wear the uniform and their families.”

    As the Marines were flying back to their base Tuesday night, visibility was poor because of snow, rain and gusty winds, according to meteorologist Philip Gonsalves with the National Weather Service in San Diego. Those conditions would have been in play for most of the night and into the morning, Gonsalves said.

    The craft was discovered Wednesday morning near Pine Valley, in the Cuyamaca Mountains an hour’s drive from San Diego. The Marines said an effort to recover the remains of the five has begun.

    The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection received word about the missing helicopter at 2:20 a.m. Wednesday and began the search in the area of Lake Morena, but their efforts were hampered by heavy snow and mud, officials said.

    In 2018, four Marines died in a helicopter crash 15 miles west of El Centro. The crew flew out of a base in Twentynine Palms as part of a training exercise on April 3 on the same type of heavy-lift helicopter that was reported missing Wednesday, according to a news release from the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing.

    Two years after the crash, the families of the four Marines sued the manufacturers who supplied parts to the military. A Marine Corps investigation into the crash ruled out pilot error and pointed to a bypass valve as the root cause of the crash, the news outlet Marine Corps Times reported when the lawsuit was filed.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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    Nathan Solis, Jon Healey

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  • Military helicopter with 5 Marines on board goes missing en route to California

    Military helicopter with 5 Marines on board goes missing en route to California

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    The helicopter was en route from Nevada to California Tuesday night.

    ByLuis Martinez

    Wednesday, February 7, 2024 3:05PM

    Helicopter with 5 Marines on board goes missing en route to San Diego

    Search and rescue crews are looking for a missing helicopter with five Marines aboard, the U.S. Marine Corps said.

    ABCNews

    California search and rescue crews are looking Wednesday for a missing helicopter with five Marines aboard, the U.S. Marine Corps said.

    The CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter was “reported overdue” to Marine Corps Air Station Miramar Tuesday night. The helicopter departed from Creech Air Force Base near Las Vegas and was en route to Miramar, in the San Diego area.

    FILE – In this Oct. 10, 2009, file photo a U.S. military helicopter, the CH-53E Super Stallion, airlifts humanitarian aid to be dropped in affected regions around Pariaman.

    Wong Maye-E

    The Marines have asked for help from the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department and Civil Air Patrol.

    The sheriff’s department said it received a call at 1:50 a.m. and sent its own helicopter to search, but the helicopter wasn’t able to reach the area due to the atmospheric river storm hitting the region. The sheriff’s department said it has now sent off-road vehicles to navigate the rough terrain.

    Firefighters responded to the point where the helicopter was last known, and nothing was found, Cal Fire officials said.

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

    Copyright © 2024 ABC News Internet Ventures.

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    ABCNews

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  • Why a Marine’s Mindset Can Help You Skyrocket Your Company’s Success | Entrepreneur

    Why a Marine’s Mindset Can Help You Skyrocket Your Company’s Success | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Maybe you’ve never considered how the philosophy behind military boot camps could bring tremendous success to your business — but you should. Marines must survive a brutal test to prove they can hold their own, and many of the lessons they learn can easily be applied to an entrepreneurial setting. Leadership, discipline, perseverance and loyalty are all qualities of a great Marine — and entrepreneur. The mindset of a Marine is not all that different from the mindset of a great entrepreneur — a realization I came to in the backseat of an Uber where I met Frank, my Uber driver — and former Marine.

    He took me on a 45-minute drive to the Miami airport, so we had plenty of time to talk. “I’m retired military,” he said. “Marines.” In what little I know about the military, I know the Marines are some of the toughest. Aside from making me feel slightly safer on the ride, I was curious. “Is boot camp as hard as they make it seem in the movies?” I asked. “Worse,” he replied. “But it’s getting easier. I’m glad I’m retired.” That piqued my curiosity, and I wanted to know more, so I asked him to explain.

    He told me that he had served three tours in combat and saw the strongest men break down. His fellow Marines were together, supporting, encouraging and having each other’s backs. The reality is that their lives depended on the ability and strength of the guy next to them in the trenches.

    We’ve seen how boot camps are portrayed in the movies — An Office and a Gentleman with Richard Gere, Full Metal Jacket, or G.I. Jane come to mind but movies often play into the cliche storyline — how the recruit must dig deep and overcome their past or physical and mental hardships to spite their training officer and prove they can do it. They all win in the end. Of course, they do. It’s Hollywood!

    But in real life, there’s a lot more to it than that. The mental stamina Marines must have to endure and withstand pain, fatigue, stress and hardship is unmatched — something all entrepreneurs could benefit to learn from when dealing with the day-to-day stressors of the job.

    Related: Five Ways To Develop Your Mental Toughness For Startup Success

    When you approach an investor, for example, they evaluate you and your business based on their due diligence – examining every corner of you, your business, and what you claim to deliver. They’re judging your ability and strength in business. Your ability to do what’s needed to get the return you’re promising.

    When you seek a partnership with another person or entity, they, too, want to make sure they’re willing to ‘marry’ you. They want to make sure you will support and encourage each other and have each other’s back — let alone make sure you can deliver what you promise.

    When you want a promotion, your boss or superior must ensure you’re worthy of the investment – financially, physically and emotionally. They need to make sure you’re tough.

    See the pattern here? What distinguishes great entrepreneurs from the rest is their ability to navigate the job with the following traits — traits that are integral to Marines:

    Resilient
    Strong
    Able
    Supportive
    Encouraging
    Reliable, and so on.

    The question is, how does one develop these traits? We certainly aren’t born with them. Just as Marines must endure boot camp, entrepreneurs must also endure the perils of the job. For military personnel and entrepreneurs, it comes from adversity. It comes from rejection, unfairness and failure — over and over and over again.

    You’ll lose out if you look at rejection as the ultimate failure, a hindrance, or something personal to you. If you look at rejection as the end of the line, you’ll never achieve the heights you may have been born to reach. Just ask the likes of Oprah Winfrey, J.K Rowling, and Steven Spielberg. They’ve all experienced their fair share of adversity and failure, but ultimately, they can attribute these experiences to their success.

    If you instead look at failure as a stepping stone for future success, you won’t be held back from realizing your greatest potential. As the saying goes, adversity is one of life’s greatest teachers, but what if the ride wasn’t as tough?

    Related: 4 Mental Tactics to Increase Your Odds of Staying Alive, According to This Green Beret

    Well, according to my Marine-tuned-Uber driver, being a Marine today is not as tough as it used to be. “Why is it getting easier, and why does that worry you so much?” I asked. Maybe he was a little biased, but I still wanted to know his take.

    “What’s happening now is that the military has to change its process because of societal pressures, and that means people can’t be yelled at in the same way or pushed to the point of breaking.”

    I thought about business as he continued, “If the toughest guys who went through the toughest, most grueling boot camp can reach a breaking point in combat, what happens to the person treated more gently in boot camp? To the person who isn’t pushed to the point of unfair or unacceptable language and directive?”

    He continued to reveal how he would certainly not feel safe on a battlefield with people who didn’t survive the worst of boot camps – the unfair, the abusive, the crushing. There is no sense of fair in battle, and people are out to win at any cost. In that situation, he wanted the strongest, toughest, most resilient person next to him in combat. It isn’t about gender, sexual preferences, religious beliefs or other societal or personal choices. It’s about who can withstand the brutality of a boot camp — one in which the instructors are not yelling for pleasure but to ensure you’re tough enough to survive the battle.

    While we’re fortunate not to face life-or-death decisions in a conference room, we are encountering a similar sense of evaluation and judgment. Are we worthy of the decision-maker’s funding, partnership, or promotion if we have yet to be deep into rejection and failure? Can we handle the stress and pressure of high-stakes decisions that involve a lot of money or thousands of employees?

    No matter how much you fear or loathe rejection and failure, it nonetheless gives you the skills and the gift of being worthy of every decision-maker’s choice.

    Failure is inevitable.
    Failure breeds resilience.
    Failure offers a great learning experience if you examine it.
    Failure can lead to unexpected innovation.
    Failure builds character.
    Failure is a sign of progress (and it’s usually not personal).

    If you think of a pebble in the middle of a free-flowing river, you’ll know that it may cause a ripple in the water, but it doesn’t stop it. It just forces the water to take a slightly different path downstream.

    Think of rejection and failure as pebbles in the journey of your success. And with that mindset, you’ll open your arms to rejection, failure and unfair decisions because you know it will toughen you up for business battles.

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    Lauren Hirsch Williams

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  • TOOTRiS Joins Forces With Military OneSource to Provide Child Care Assistance to Military Families

    TOOTRiS Joins Forces With Military OneSource to Provide Child Care Assistance to Military Families

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    To Honor Service Members on Veterans Day, the Nation’s First and Only On-Demand Child Care Platform is Providing Free Access to Military OneSource Military Members

    Press Release


    Nov 10, 2022

    For the brave men and women of the U.S. Armed Forces, who have the most mission-critical jobs in America, worrying about Child Care should be the last thing on their minds. Yet, 23% of Active Duty families can’t access care. In honor of National Veterans and Military Families Month, TOOTRiS, the largest network and first real-time Child Care platform in the country, has launched Operation Child Care – providing free year-long premium access for military families to tap into more than 180,000 state-licensed Child Care providers to secure reliable and affordable care.

    There are nearly 1 million children of Active Duty members nationwide. Of that, more than 70% are under the age of 11 years old and in need of care. Military OneSource, a Department of Defense-funded program that connects military families to valuable community resources, recognizes those challenges and has enlisted TOOTRiS to join its Community Resource Finder to help. As an approved Military OneSource national resource, more than 500,000 active duty and 300,000 Reservists will now be able to easily find and access TOOTRiS’ premium services free of charge. 

    “We tie every resource back to ‘what gives our members peace of mind?’” said Steven Darbyshire, Military OneSource Consultant. “There isn’t a more important decision a parent can make than placing their child in care. TOOTRiS provides all the options and resources needed for every parent to enroll in the best program based on their specific requirements.” 

    Starting Nov. 11, Veterans Day, TOOTRiS will be giving military families nationwide free premium memberships, allowing them to tap into the country’s largest Child Care network with more than 180,000 providers nationwide. Through TOOTRiS, military families will now be able to:  

    • Search for 24/7 Child Care near their home, base, or work.
    • Use more than 100 filters to narrow the search to exact needs.
    • See each program’s availability in real-time without the need to call.
    • Find temporary slots and drop-ins – all accessible for free online via a desktop, tablet, or mobile app.

    “Military members and their families sacrifice so much for our country,” said Alessandra Lezama, TOOTRiS CEO and select member of the ReadyNation CEO Task Force on Early Childhood. “As a San Diego-based company, we see the military ships leave the harbor every month and understand the impact of deployment on those military families. We are so proud and honored to be in a position to connect parents with the best-suited program for their children.”  

    TOOTRiS was founded in 2019 to transform Child Care so that every working parent — especially women — has the same opportunity for advancement by having access to affordable, high-quality Child Care; and so that every child, regardless of household income, has the same opportunity to early childhood education that can ensure kindergarten readiness and academic success.  

    About TOOTRiS 

    TOOTRiS is the first and only universal Child Care platform that converges private and public Child Care stakeholders (Family Child Care homes and Center-based providers, parents, agencies, and employers) into a unified, real-time technology platform enabling employers to offer fully-managed Child Care Benefits to their workforce. TOOTRiS — which has more than 180,000 providers in its nationwide network — helps working parents to connect with providers and transact in real-time, empowering parents – especially women – to secure quality Child Care, while allowing providers to fully monetize their program. 

    Source: TOOTRiS

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  • Hoverfly Technologies Names Bill Maesalu as Chief Financial Officer

    Hoverfly Technologies Names Bill Maesalu as Chief Financial Officer

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    Accomplished CFO Hired to Lead Hoverfly’s Rapidly Expanding Global Finance Organization

    Press Release


    Jul 7, 2022

    Hoverfly Technologies Inc. is thrilled to announce Bill Maesalu has joined the leadership team as Chief Financial Officer. As CFO, Bill will lead Hoverfly’s global finance organization and financial activities, including accounting and controllership, financial planning and analysis, tax, investor relations, internal audit, and treasury. Maesalu’s hire follows Hoverfly’s successful spring bridge raise and strong first half order intake. 

    “Bill’s extensive experience as a CFO for both large and small manufacturing firms makes him an ideal fit for this critical period of rapid growth at Hoverfly,” said Hoverfly President and COO Steve Walters. “We are extremely happy to welcome him to the team and look forward to his contributions in financial leadership and management during this exciting time as we transition out of start-up mode and begin to scale our operations to meet the high order demands from our DoD customers.”

    Bill, a CPA, graduated from Bentley University with a bachelor’s degree in accounting. His career started as a cost accountant at Texas Instruments in Houston before moving to Coopers & Lybrand (now PWC). After leaving Coopers, Bill moved to the Stanley Works where he spent time as an Internal Auditor before moving to the corporate accounting group where he supervised financial reporting. Next, Bill moved to Rexam PLC and had multiple roles leading to VP of Finance for a major international division. After Rexam, Bill spent the past 25 years as a CFO for multiple capital equipment manufacturing companies. Most recently he was the CFO of an environmental equipment supplier. 

    “I’ve admired Hoverfly’s team and technology, and I’m excited to join a company that has not only been successful but also has the potential for considerable growth in the near future,” said new CFO Bill Maesalu. “I look forward to working with a talented team to continue to build on the great success Hoverfly has seen in recent years.” 

    Press Contact:

    Tyler Marple

    tyler.marple@hoverflytech.com

    hoverflytech.com

    407-985-4500

    Source: Hoverfly Technologies, Inc.

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