The One Spa

update - Trump considers $14B famers' bailout as sector collapses

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The chairman of a House committee that pushed for the law demanding TikTok be spun off from its Chinese owners has requested an urgent briefing from the White House, one day after President Donald Trump signed an executive order supporting a proposed deal that would put the popular social video platform under U.S. ownership.

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In a statement released Friday, Rep. John Moolenaar, the chairman of the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, praised the proposed deal as "an important step” in transitioning ownership of the TikTok platform to American hands but he emphasized that “divestment was not the law's only requirement.”

“The law also set firm guardrails that prohibit cooperation between ByteDance and any prospective TikTok successor on the all-important recommendation algorithm, as well as preclude operational ties between the new entity and ByteDance,” Moolenaar said.

The Michigan Republican's statement marks the first congressional effort to conduct oversight into the negotiations over TikTok, coming nearly two weeks after Chinese and American officials met in Spain to discuss a framework divestment deal for TikTok. Trump on Thursday signed an executive order providing support for the deal, and said Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to move forward with negotiations.



Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent speaks after President Donald Trump signed an executive order regarding TikTok in the Oval Office at the White House, Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025, in Washington, as Attorney General Pam Bondi and Vice President JD Vance listen. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)© The Associated Press
The White House didn't respond to an inquiry from the Associated Press regarding the urgent briefing.

It's more than the algorithm

Much is still unknown about the actual deal in the works, but the new U.S. venture would license the famed ByteDance-owned algorithm that currently keeps TikTok users engaged. U.S. tech giant Oracle, a confirmed partner in the U.S. investment consortium that would own TikTok, would audit the copy of the algorithm and monitor it for security purposes.



President Donald Trump signs an executive order regarding TikTok in the Oval Office at the White House, Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)© The Associated Press
Vice President JD Vance on Thursday assured the public that the deal would not only keep TikTok operating but also protect Americans' data privacy as required by law. Moolenaar on Friday said he would like to know more.

While algorithms are valuable assets, the real value of TikTok is its users, which is likely why the consortium won’t just start from scratch to build a new app, said computer scientist Bart Knijnenburg, an associate professor at Clemson University who has studied how recommendation systems steer people to online content.




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Knijnenburg said all algorithms are biased in some way and if the administration is serious about retraining the TikTok algorithm to avoid Chinese influence, it should push for “radical openness” in TikTok’s mechanics so that users have a window into how bias might be influencing their feeds.

More than politics, Knijnenburg said the biggest problem with TikTok’s algorithm is that it’s geared toward addictive engagement and overuse.

“Moving it to the U.S. is not going to magically solve these types of problems,” he said. “Any company might put undue influence on these applications and from a business perspective, the best way to engage users is to make them addicted to watching these videos, which is not a good idea.”

ByteDance's representation in the new venture

Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the Washington-based think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies, doubts that the deal, as revealed so far, complies with the law.


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“The law is clear: divestiture means severance, not supervision,” Singleton said. “A board seat for ByteDance or any continued role in maintaining the algorithm would flout Congress’s mandate."

Though the details have yet to be finalized, the U.S. investment group’s controlling stake in the new venture would be around 80%. While ByteDance is expected to have a stake in the new venture, it would be less than 20% — a portion of the ownership reserved for foreign investors. The board running the new platform would be controlled by U.S. investors. ByteDance will be represented by one person on the board, but that individual will be excluded from any security-related matters.

Singleton argues that a board foothold by ByteDance is not merely symbolic. “ByteDance’s reported role as the largest single shareholder in a restructured TikTok U.S. venture, combined with a board seat, ensures continuing Chinese influence over the app,” he said. “Plainly put, ByteDance on the board means Beijing in the building.”


Zack Cooper, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, said details are still lacking but the law “is quite clear that there be no ongoing cooperation on the algorithm and no data access.”

Is TikTok undervalued in this deal?

Vance said he expects the new U.S.-based TikTok to be valued at about $14 billion, describing it as a “good deal” for investors who must ultimately decide “what they want to invest in and what they think is the proper value.”

That’s a “surprisingly low” valuation, said Daniel Keum, a management professor at Columbia University’s business school.

Keum said it’s possible that “politics overrode the business case” or that the licensing structure, which hasn’t yet been disclosed, could have been designed with high fees or profit-sharing that depressed the value of TikTok’s app in the U.S.

Keum said TikTok had an early edge in attracting youth to its innovative video-sharing format, but its competitiveness has “fundamentally eroded” as social media creators and influencers increasingly post their videos on many different apps.


As TikTok’s popularity soared among young Americans in the past several years, U.S. lawmakers grew concerned that Beijing — viewed by many on the Capitol Hill as the biggest geopolitical rival to the U.S. — could use the platform to influence public discourse in the United States or spy on its users.

“ByteDance has shown time and again that it is a bad actor, and the Chinese Communist Party’s ultimate goal is to see America divided and weakened,” Moolenaar said in his statement. “That is why, on an overwhelming bipartisan basis, Congress required ByteDance to divest control of TikTok.”

President Joe Biden signed legislation passed by Congress last year that would ban TikTok unless ByteDance sold its U.S. assets to an American company by early this year. The U.S. Supreme Court in January unanimously upheld the TikTok law.

Trump, after he returned to the White House, has repeatedly signed orders that have allowed TikTok to keep operating in the U.S. as his administration tries to reach an agreement for the sale of the company.


On Friday, the Chinese Foreign Ministry didn't provide any new information but repeated China's position on TikTok.

“The Chinese government respects the will of enterprises and welcomes them to conduct sound commercial negotiations based on market rules, reaching solutions that comply with Chinese laws and regulations and achieve a balanced outcome of interests,” said Guo Jiakun, a ministry spokesperson. "We hope the U.S. will provide an open, fair, and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese enterprises investing in the United States.”

Chair of a House committee on China demands urgent White House briefing on TikTok deal
 

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PORTLAND, Oregon (AP) — President Donald Trump said Saturday he will send troops to Portland, Oregon, "authorizing Full Force, if necessary” to handle “domestic terrorists” as he expands his controversial deployments to more American cities.

He made the announcement on social media, writing that he was directing the Department of Defense to “provide all necessary Troops to protect War ravaged Portland.” Trump said the decision was necessary to protect U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities, which he described as “under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists.”



FILE - The "Portland, Oregon" sign is seen atop in building in downtown Portland, Ore., Jan. 27, 2015. (AP Photo/Don Ryan, File)© The Associated Press
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for details on Trump’s announcement, such as a timeline for the deployment or what troops would be involved.

At a Friday night news conference, Democratic U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley warned the public that Trump would try to create chaos. “Don’t take the bait,” he said.



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“Our responsibility is to, yes, express our views. Yes, protest,” Merkley said. "But best done at a distance from these federal troops, wherever they might be and whatever they are doing, because their goal is to create an engagement, an engagement that will lead to conflict.”



FILE - A woman stands off with a law enforcement officer wearing a Houston Field Office Special Response Team patch outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs (ICE) building during a protest Saturday, June 14, 2025, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)© The Associated Press
Trump previously threatened to send the National Guard into Chicago but has yet to follow through. A deployment in Memphis, Tennessee, is expected soon and will include only about 150 troops, far less than were sent to the District of Columbia for Trump’s crackdown on crime or in Los Angeles in response to immigration protests that turned violent with the troops' arrival. Trump also sent Marines to Los Angeles.



FILE - A law enforcement officer points a taser at a person wearing a hot dog costume during a protest Saturday, June 14, 2025, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)© The Associated Press
Pentagon officials did not immediately respond to requests for information. Nor did the office of Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek, a Democrat.

Portland Mayor Keith Wilson said Friday night that the city already was seeing a sudden surge in federal agents, describing armored vehicles and agents arriving on the streets.



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“We did not ask for them to come,” the Democratic mayor said. “They are here without clear precedent or purpose.”

Portland, population 636,000, was the site of long-running and sometimes violent racial justice protests following George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police in 2020. The Trump administration sent hundreds of agents, including from the U.S. Border Patrol, for the stated purpose of protecting the federal courthouse and other federal property from vandalism.

Recent protests have been far more muted and focused on the area around the ICE building, located outside the city’s downtown that was the heart of the 2020 protests. The building’s main entrance and ground-floor windows have been boarded up and tagged with graffiti.

Some federal agents have been injured and several protesters have been charged with assault. Some demonstrators also say they’ve been injured. When protesters erected a guillotine earlier this month, the Department of Homeland Security described it as “unhinged behavior.”



FILE - With Mount Hood in the background, the sun sets over downtown Portland, Ore., on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)© The Associated Press
Meantime, city groups and officials have sought to highlight the recovery of the downtown area since 2020.

This summer was reportedly the busiest for pedestrian traffic since before the coronavirus pandemic, and overall violent crime in Portland from January through June decreased by 17% this year compared to the same period in 2024, a recent report from the Major Cities Chiefs Association found. The downtown has seen a decrease in homeless tent encampments that defined the years immediately after the pandemic.

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Since the Sept. 10 assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, Trump has escalated his efforts to confront what he calls the “radical left,” which he blames for the country’s problems with political violence.

Trump, in comments Thursday in the Oval Office, suggested some kind of operation was in the works.

“We’re going to get out there and we’re going to do a pretty big number on those people in Portland,” he said, describing them as “professional agitators and anarchists.”

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Megerian reported from Washington, D.C.

Claire Rush And Chris Megerian, The Associated Press

Trump orders troops to Portland, Oregon, in latest deployment to US cities
 

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The DHS chief has been widely criticized for slowing down FEMA’s response after natural disasters. Texts and emails obtained by ProPublica point to an effective way to get help faster: have one of Noem’s big donors make the ask.

by Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott and Alex Mierjeski Sept. 26, 2025, 6 a.m. EDT




For months, the complaints have rolled in from parts of the country hit by natural disasters: The Federal Emergency Management Agency was moving far too slowly in sending aid to communities ravaged by floods and hurricanes, including in central Texas and North Carolina. Many officials were blaming Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, whose agency oversees FEMA.

“I can’t get phone calls back,” Ted Budd, the Republican senator from North Carolina, told a newspaper this month, describing his attempts to reach Noem’s office. “I can’t get them to initiate the money. It’s just a quagmire.” The delays were caused in part by a new policy announced by DHS that requires Noem’s personal sign-off on expenses over $100,000, several news outlets reported.

But records obtained by ProPublica show how one locality found a way to get FEMA aid more quickly: It asked one of Noem’s political donors for help.

The records show that Noem quickly expedited more than $11 million of federal money to rebuild a historic pier in Naples, Florida, after she was contacted by a major financial supporter last month. The pier is a tourist attraction in the wealthy Gulf Coast enclave and was badly damaged by Hurricane Ian in 2022.

Frustrated city officials had been laboring for months, without success, to get disaster assistance. But just two weeks after the donor stepped in, they were celebrating their sudden change of fortune. “We are now at warp speed with FEMA,” one city official wrote in an email. A FEMA representative wrote: “Per leadership instruction, pushing project immediately.”



Along with fast-tracking the money, Noem flew to Naples on a government plane to tour the pier herself. She then stayed for the weekend and got dinner with the donor, local cardiologist Sinan Gursoy, at the French restaurant Bleu Provence, according to records and an interview with the Naples mayor. This account is based on text messages and emails ProPublica obtained through public records requests.

Noem’s actions in Naples suggest the injection of political favoritism into an agency tasked with saving lives and rebuilding communities wiped out by disaster. It also heightens concerns about the discretion Noem has given herself by personally handling all six-figure expenses at the agency, consolidating her power over who wins and loses in the pursuit of federal relief dollars, experts said.

Jeffrey Schlegelmilch, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University, said that politics has long been a factor in federal disaster relief — one study found that swing states are more likely to get federal help, for example. But “I’ve not heard of anything this egregious — a donor calling up and saying I need help and getting it,” he said, “while others may be getting denied assistance or otherwise waiting in line for help that may or may not come.”

In a statement, DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said, “This has nothing to do with politics: Secretary Noem also visited Ruidoso, NM” — where floods killed three people in July — “at the request of a Democrat governor and has been integral in supporting and speeding up their recovery efforts.”

“Your criticizing the Secretary’s visit to the Pier is bizarre as she works to fix this issue for more than 1 million visitors that used to visit the pier,” McLaughlin added. She did not answer questions about the donor’s role in expediting the funding or Noem’s relationship with him. Reached by phone, Gursoy said “get lost” and hung up. He did not respond to detailed follow up questions.

Noem has been criticized for creating a bottleneck at FEMA. When the floods hit Texas this summer — ultimately killing over 100 people — it took days to deploy critical search-and-rescue teams because Noem hadn’t signed off on them, according to CNN. Budd, the Republican senator, said this month: “Pretty much everything Helene-related is over $100,000. So they’re stacking up on her desk waiting for her signature.”


Noem has denied there were delays in the Texas flood response and has defended her expense policy, saying it has saved billions of dollars. “Every day I get up and I think, the American people are paying for this, should they?” she recently said. “And are these dollars doing what the law says they should be doing? I’m going to make sure that they go there.”


Once a sleepy fishing town, Naples is now home to CEOs and billionaires (a property listed for $295 million recently made headlines as the most expensive home in the U.S.). The city is known as an important stop for Republican politicians raising money, and Noem has held multiple fundraisers in the area. State credit card records suggest she visited Naples at least 10 times during her last four years as South Dakota governor.


Noem’s top adviser, Corey Lewandowski, also appears to own a home in Naples near the city’s pier, according to property tax records. Lewandowski is an unpaid staffer at DHS serving as Noem’s de facto chief of staff. (Media reports have alleged the two are romantically involved, which they have both denied.) Lewandowski told ProPublica that he was not involved in the pier decision and that he was not in Naples during Noem’s visit.


For the first seven months of the Trump administration, the pier reconstruction was in bureaucratic purgatory. The city had long been struggling to secure the regulatory approvals it needed to start building, and emails suggest Trump’s wave of federal layoffs had made the process even slower. “These agencies are undergoing significant reorganizations and staff reductions,” a city official told a frustrated constituent in early August. That “sometimes means starting over with new reviewers — something we’ve faced more than once.”


McLaughlin said “both past FEMA and the City bear responsibility” for the delays. She listed “several failures” since the process started in 2023, including “FEMA staff changing up” and indecision by the city government.


By this summer, Naples officials were getting desperate. In June, one tried to enlist Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., to press FEMA to move ahead. “We were told yesterday that Secretary Noem would have to ‘personally’ approve the Pier project before FEMA funding would be obligated,” the city official wrote to the senator’s staff. The Naples mayor, Teresa Heitmann, also personally wrote to FEMA. Heitmann said she was “perplexed” by the delays and begged the agency for guidance.


Heitmann had long been paying expensive Washington consultants to help her city navigate the process. But she was “feeling increasingly helpless,” she later said, until she had the idea that would finally put her project on the fast track. On July 18, the mayor emailed a Google search to herself: “Who is the head of Homeland security?” She was going to go straight to Noem.


Heitmann determined that her best bet for getting Noem’s attention was Gursoy. A Naples cardiologist, Gursoy has no obvious experience working with the federal government; much of his online footprint centers on his enthusiasm for pinball. But Gursoy gave Noem at least $25,000 to support her campaign for governor in 2022. That was enough to put him near the top of Noem’s disclosed donor list. (In South Dakota, campaign contributions remain relatively small.)


On planning documents for the 2024 Republican National Convention obtained by ProPublica, the Florida doctor is listed as an attendee affiliated with the delegation from South Dakota, a state he has no apparent connection to besides his support for Noem. Heitmann told ProPublica that Gursoy introduced her to Noem at a political event at a private home in Naples while Noem was governor.


“Hello it’s Teresa,” the mayor texted Gursoy in early August. “I really need your help.” She explained the tangle of bureaucracy she’d been contending with. “FEMA is holding us up,” Heitmann wrote. “Kristi Noem could put some fire under the FEMA employees slacking.”


Gursoy responded: “Okay. I will get on it.”


The next week, on Aug. 11, the doctor gave Heitmann an update. “Kristi was off for a few days for the first time in a long time, so I left her alone,” he said. “I just txted her now.” Within 24 hours, he had exciting news. He told the mayor to expect a call from Noem’s “FEMA fixer” shortly.


The identity of the “fixer” is not clear, but by Aug. 27, Naples officials were seeing a “flurry of activity” from Noem’s agency. That day, a FEMA staffer told the city that “FEMA is intending to expedite the funding” for the pier. “Secretary Noem took immediate action when I reached out to ask for help,” the mayor soon posted on Facebook.




Two days later, Noem flew to Naples. Her schedule listed a 30-minute walk-through at the pier with the mayor, followed by a nail salon appointment and dinner at Bleu Provence, which serves wagyu short ribs and seared foie gras. Noem then stayed through the weekend at the four-star Naples Bay Resort & Marina. Heitmann told ProPublica she wasn’t at the French dinner but Gursoy was. “I didn’t ask her to come, but she showed up,” the mayor told the local news. “I was very impressed.”


Before she left town, Noem posted about the Naples pier on Instagram. She was finally getting the project back on track, she said. “Americans deserve better than years of red tape and failed disaster responses,” Noem wrote. “Under @POTUS Trump, this incompetency ends.”


DHS did not answer questions about whether the government paid for Noem’s weekend in Naples.


Do you have any information we should know about Kristi Noem, Corey Lewandowski or DHS? Josh Kaplan can be reached by email at joshua.kaplan@propublica.org and by Signal or WhatsApp at 734-834-9383. Justin Elliott can be reached by email at justin@propublica.org and by Signal or WhatsApp at 774-826-6240.

 

mandrill

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Federal prosecutor Will Rosenzweig took a short break from his healthcare fraud and money-laundering cases at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami this week to observe the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, with his family. But he noticed something was amiss when his office-issued mobile phone wasn’t working on Tuesday. He called the office to find out what was wrong. Rosenzweig soon learned his phone was shut off because he had been fired by U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi. He did not see her terse email sent on Tuesday dismissing him during the Jewish holiday — making the 39-year-old lawyer the third federal prosecutor in the Southern District of Florida to be summarily fired by the Bondi-led Justice Department since Donald Trump started his second term as president in January.

But Rosenzweig — considered to be among the rising prosecutors in the office — wasn’t fired because he had been associated with the criminal investigations of Trump by the Justice Department’s special counsel during the prior Biden administration. That was why two other respected federal prosecutors in the Miami office were abruptly terminated this year. Rather, Rosenzweig was fired, according to multiple sources, because of the negative things he said about Trump on a social media blog before he became a federal prosecutor in Miami. When he was working for the prominent law firm Kobre & Kim in Washington during Trump’s first term, Rosenzweig posted criticisms of the president starting in 2017 — posts that were recently brought to the attention of the Justice Department.

On Tuesday, conservative political commentator Natalie Winters posted an “EXCLUSIVE” item on the social media platform X about Rosenzweig’s “anti-Trump” blogging in the past. Then on Wednesday, right-wing political activist Laura Loomer posted on X: “SCOOP: DOJ sources tell me that Assistant US Attorney Will Rosenzweig was FIRED yesterday [Tuesday] after he was exposed for running an anti-Trump blog.”

With his dismissal, Rosenzweig has become the latest of dozens of federal prosecutors fired by Trump’s Justice Department in Washington, New York, Miami and other cities who were believed to be at odds with the president or his political agenda. Earlier this month, Erik Siebert, the U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia, resigned from his position amid pressure from Trump administration officials to bring criminal charges against two of the president’s adversaries: New York Attorney General Letitia James and former FBI Director James Comey. Siebert reportedly cited a lack of evidence to make the cases. “He didn’t quit, I fired him!” Trump wrote on his social media platform. Trump replaced him with Lindsey Halligan, a White House aide who has never worked as a prosecutor. Dangers of ‘a government that silences its people’: ex-Miami U.S. attorney

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/article312247303.html#storylink=cpy

Marcos Jimenez, a former U.S. Attorney in Miami who was appointed by President George W. Bush, said Rosenzweig’s termination coupled with a slew of other Trump-directed firings “is clearly a sign that the Justice Department has become completely politicized.”

“They are going after people who are insufficiently loyal to the president,” said Jimenez, adding that as a Cuban refugee, he fully understands the terrible consequences of “a government that silences its people.” “It shows that Trump and Bondi care more about loyalty to the president than they do about the Justice Department,” he said. “It’s not just this prosecutor, but career prosecutors and FBI agents who have been fired, forced to resign or demoted around the country.”

Rosenzweig, who obtained his bachelor’s and law degrees from Cornell University, joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami in September 2020 — toward the end of Trump’s first term before he lost the presidential election to Joe Biden. Was working on Medicare fraud case Rosenzweig worked on dozens of complex cases as a prosecutor in the economic crimes section, which focuses on healthcare fraud, money laundering and other financial schemes. Of late, Rosenzweig was deeply involved in a Medicare fraud case that was scheduled for trial in early October in Miami federal court, so his dismissal by Bondi will likely cause disruption and delay.

His termination shocked several colleagues, who took note of the terrible timing and pettiness of his firing, calling it another “frogmarch.” They also said his loss would be a significant blow to an office that has witnessed a “brain drain” of veteran talent over the past year. On Thursday, Rosenzweig could not be reached for comment. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami and the Department of Justice did not respond to Miami Herald inquiries about his firing, including questions about the reason for his termination. The office, with more than 200 lawyers prosecuting federal cases from Key West to Fort Pierce, is known as one of the busiest in the country — but it has been under siege.

Trump’s nominee to head the office, former Miami-Dade County Judge Jason Reding Quinones, took over as the new U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida in August. Reding Quinones, a member of the conservative Federalist Society and a Trump loyalist, was sworn in by Bondi in Washington, instead of the Southern District of Florida’s chief federal judge, which is normally tradition. Bondi fires another top Miami prosecutor In July, Bondi terminated another federal prosecutor in Miami, Brooke C. Watson, a seasoned lawyer who in 2023 was honored by then-Attorney General Merrick Garland with a prestigious award recognizing her “exceptional dedication” to prosecuting a ring that used fake identities to commit about $50 million in COVID-19 loan fraud.

Last year, Watson received another Justice Department award for “exceptional service” disrupting a ransomware group that threatened to steal hundreds of millions of dollars from computer networks worldwide. As she did in Rosenzweig’s case, Bondi fired Watson in a terse email — providing no reason, according to multiple sources familiar with her termination. Watson, 46, who as deputy criminal chief was serving in one of the office’s senior positions, became another casualty in President Donald Trump’s mission to purge anyone found to have worked in some way for special counsel Jack Smith.

Smith led the prosecution of Trump for his alleged role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters trying to stop Congress’ certification of the 2020 presidential election. Trump lost to former President Joe Biden in the election. Watson was among about a dozen Justice Department employees, including a few federal prosecutors, who were terminated by Bondi in July — the latest wave of firings in the agency since Trump started his second term as president. According to sources, Watson temporarily worked on the special counsel’s team, which recruited her to evaluate financial information related to the Jan. 6 case.

The sources said Watson found no incriminating information that was used to prosecute Trump or the various right-wing, white-supremacist groups and individuals who rallied to hear the president speak that day on the Ellipse in Washington. That was the extent of her involvement in the special counsel’s investigation, which led to more than 1,500 people being charged and most convicted of trespassing, vandalism, assault or seditious conspiracy.

Upon taking office, Trump pardoned almost all of them and commuted the sentences of more than a dozen others associated with the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers. Watson graduated from Brown University and Northeastern University School of Law. Seven years later, she joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami and worked there for more than a decade. Watson was the second federal prosecutor in the Miami office to be fired for playing a role in the special counsel’s Jan. 6 investigation or his classified documents probe of Trump, a case that was filed in South Florida.

Other firings In late January, Miami federal prosecutor Michael Thakur, 46, a Harvard Law School graduate who worked on the documents case accusing Trump of withholding top secret materials at his Palm Beach estate, was fired along with dozens of others in the Justice Department who were members of the special counsel’s team. In addition to Thakur, Anne McNamara, a former federal prosecutor in the Miami office before joining Smith’s team in Washington, was also terminated. The Justice Department’s rolling purges of lawyers and employees who participated in the two federal criminal cases against Trump — which Smith dismissed after Trump won the 2024 presidential election — are expected to continue in Washington and other regions of the country.

Since Trump started his second term, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami has lost not only Thakur, Watson and now Rosenzweig to firings but also many other veteran prosecutors to retirement or career opportunities. Among them: Joan Silverstein, Bob Senior, Dan Bernstein, Kiran Bhat, Tom Watts-Fitzgerald, Jonathan Stratton, Tony Gonzalez, Ignacio Vazquez, Lisa Rubio, Dexter Lee, Jeff Kaplan, Paul Schwartz, Harry Wallace and Tony Lacosta.

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/article312247303.html#storylink=cpy
 

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI has fired agents who were photographed kneeling during a racial justice protest in Washington that followed the 2020 death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers, three people familiar with the matter said Friday.

The bureau last spring had reassigned the agents but has since fired them, said the people, who insisted on anonymity to discuss personnel matters with The Associated Press.

The number of FBI employees terminated was not immediately clear, but two people said it was roughly 20.

From AP’s Standards and Stylebook teams:
The AP is using anonymous sourcing to provide information for this story. Click here to hear Washington Bureau Chief Anna Johnson explain AP’s policy on the use of anonymous sources.

The photographs at issue showed a group of agents taking the knee during one of the demonstrations following the May 2020 killing of Floyd, a death that led to a national reckoning over policing and racial injustice and sparked widespread anger after millions of people saw video of the arrest. The kneeling had angered some in the FBI but was also understood as a possible de-escalation tactic during a period of protests.




The FBI Agents Association confirmed in a statement late Friday that more than a dozen agents had been fired, including military veterans with additional statutory protections, and condemned the move as unlawful. It called on Congress to investigate and said the firings were another indication of FBI Director Kash Patel’s disregard for the legal rights of bureau employees.

 

mandrill

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Sounds like Clarence Thomas is "open for business" - right when Trump is putting the birthright citizenship case before SCotUS.

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mandrill

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US President Donald Trump on Saturday said he was directing the country’s military to deploy to Portland, in the state of Oregon.

Trump said he wanted to protect federal immigration facilities against “domestic terrorists”, and authorised the troops to use “full force, if necessary.”




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Ordering the latest crackdown on a Democrat-led city, Trump said in a social media post that he was directing Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth “to provide all necessary Troops to protect War ravaged Portland, and any of our ICE Facilities under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists”.



Oregon Governor Tina Kotek speaks in Portland after the deployment of troops to the city (Picture: Claire Rush/AP)
Portland Mayor Keith Wilson, responding to Trump’s order, said: “The number of necessary troops is zero, in Portland and any other American city. The President will not find lawlessness or violence here unless he plans to perpetrate it.”

Wilson said he learned of Trump’s order when he saw it on social media. He and other local leaders have urged calm. “This may be a show of force, but that’s all it is. It’s just a big show,” he said.



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Violent crime in Portland has dropped in the first six months of 2025, data shows.

Homicides fell by 51 per cent compared to the same period a year earlier, according to preliminary data released by the Major Cities Chiefs Association in its Midyear Violent Crime Report.

That report showed Portland had 17 homicides in the period compared with 56 in Louisville, Kentucky, and 124 in Memphis, Tennessee, which have comparable population sizes.

In a press conference on Saturday, Oregon Governor Tina Kotek, a Democrat, rejected the need for troops and said she has spoken with Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

“There is no insurrection, there is no threat to national security, and there is no need for military troops in our major city,” Kotek said.

“I’m going to continue communicating that to the President, and I hope he will be open to reconsidering the deployment.”



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The Pentagon did not offer any clarification about whether Trump was deploying National Guard, active duty troops or perhaps a mix of the two, as was the case in Los Angeles earlier this year.

Asked about the Portland decision on Saturday, Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said ICE agents needed to be protected amid protests against immigration raids.

“We’re not going to put up with it. This administration is not playing games,” she said in an interview on Fox News.

There have been growing tensions in major US cities over Trump’s aggressive immigration crackdown days after a shooting targeting an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas left one detainee dead and two others seriously wounded.

On Thursday, Trump told reporters that “crazy people” were trying to burn buildings in Portland. “They’re professional agitators and anarchists,” he said, without providing evidence.


Trump last week signed an executive order that declares the anti-fascist Antifa movement a domestic “terrorist organisation” as part of a crackdown on what he claims is left-wing sponsored political violence.

Trump first sought to designate the movement as a domestic terror organisation during the nationwide George Floyd protests.

The most notorious episode involving the movement occurred in Portland in August 2020, when Michael Reinoehl, a self-identified Antifa supporter, shot and killed Aaron Danielson, a member of the far-right group Patriot Prayer.

Reinoehl was then killed by federal and local law enforcement officers during an attempt to arrest him.

Trump’s crackdown on municipalities led by Democrats including Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington has spurred legal challenges and protests.

With Reuters
 

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President Donald Trump will fully embrace his role as Commander-in-Chief of America's armed forces later this week.

Trump told NBC News Sunday that he will be present at a meeting of the nation's top military leaders organized by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, which will take place this Tuesday in Quantico,Virginia.

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Speaking with NBC News over the phone, Trump shared the following about the forthcoming meeting:

'It's really just a very nice meeting talking about how well we're doing militarily, talking about being in great shape, talking about a lot of good, positive things. It's just a good message,' Trump noted.

'We have some great people coming in and it's just an 'esprit de corps.' You know the expression 'esprit de corps'? That's all it's about. We're talking about what we're doing, what they're doing, and how we're doing,' the Commander-in-Chief added.

News of the meeting being called by Hegseth last week raised some alarm, as attendees were initially not told of the reason why they were being summoned to Washington, DC, from their respective posts across the globe.

Daily Mail reported Friday that Hegseth's order to pull leaders into a meeting was kinglike.



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'He is playing mind games and wants to let them know who is boss. There is nothing big going on. They will just go over future strategies, posturing and policies. After the meeting, you might even report on some firings that will happen,' a defense official told the Daily Mail.



Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth listens as President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Sept. 15, 2025, in Washington


Vehicles drive to the entrance of Marine Corps Base Quantico, Friday Sep. 26, 2025, in Quantico, Va


U.S. President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth attend a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 26, 2025


United States President Donald J. Trump spoke to reporters before leaving the White House on Sunday, September 21st
'To me, it shows how out of depth Hegseth is,' the official added. 'He doesn't understand how the military works. It runs on structure, and that is what makes it work. To just be like, everyone is coming into town now, and on the day of the shutdown, it is poor messaging and poor planning on Hegseth's part.'


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Other individuals who spoke with the Daily Mail raised concerns of security threats.

'I think it is very concerning that you are pulling every single general and flag officer back to Quantico… that is a lot of people to pull from their duty stations,' a former official said. 'It would be very rare to have the combatant and deputy commander come into town and leave your station to be in town for whatever this is.'

A source close to Hegseth says the mystery clouding the meeting is a deliberate move, in line with the president's love of drama.

'This is a planned strategy to leave it vague,' they added. 'The mystique is part of the goal.'

Trump to preside over Hegseth's rare council of generals as commander-in-chief reveals purpose of gathering

It just gets stupider and stupider all the time. In any normal presidency, the 25th Amendment would be exercised.
 
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