Thursday, December 4, 2025. Kristi Noem took time out from lying and from her apparent extra-martial affair to kidnap a second grader in Vermont and now detain him in Texas, a MEIDASTOUCH NEWS video exposes one of her threads of lies, Pete Hegseth is found to have endangered the troops -- put their lives at risk -- by an inspector general in a newly released report, he continues to lie about the War Crime where he killed survivors of a strike, the family of one the murdered has filed legal charges against him, and much more.
"“I strongly condemn the abduction of one of our 2nd
graders and his mother by ICE while traveling during the school
vacation. This is yet another example of the terror our families face
simply by doing things other people take for granted-going to school,
shopping for groceries, or just visiting family. I call for their
immediate release and for the US government to bring basic humanity and
due process back. Our 2nd grader should be in his classroom, not in a
detention cell." That's Wilmer Chavarria, Superintendent at JFK Elementary School in Winooski, Vermont. Chavarria is quoted in
Billal Rahman's NEWSWEEK report:
A
7-year-old student in Vermont and his mother were detained by
immigration authorities while traveling over the Thanksgiving break,
according to the superintendent of Vermont’s Winooski school district.
The
boy, who attends JFK Elementary School in Winooski, failed to show up
for classes on Monday after the holidays, according to the school.
School officials contacted his home, and his father reported that he had
been unable to reach his wife and son since Thursday, according to
Superintendent Wilmer Chavarria.
[. . .]
The
pair are being held at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in
Texas, pending a hearing before an immigration judge, who will decide
whether they may remain in the United States.
To
support the boy and his mother, the district located the detainees,
helped connect them with legal assistance, and provided their father in
Winooski with US$1,000 from a private emergency fund, according to
VTDigger.
Earlier this year, the Winooski
School District became the first in Vermont to pass a “sanctuary
schools” policy aimed at protecting immigrant students and families from
federal immigration enforcement actions, according to the school.
The
family has a court date scheduled for early January, but will be
staying in the Texas detention facility until then. Chavarria says their
primary goal is to get the student back in Vermont until the court
date, so they can go to school while they wait. “Being in a detention
center is less than ideal. I don’t think any child, any second grader
should be held in detention, basically in jail for weeks,” he said.
Eric
Paquette, a Winooski native, said he was saddened by the news and is
worried for the child’s mental health. “It’s just not right,” Paquette
said. “People need to recognize this is going to create trauma for the
child to overcome, and then to trust people? He’s really going to need
everybody’s support.”
Paquette said he’s proud
of how the community is trying to help. “I expect that out of Winooski, I
expect that out of Vermont,” Paquette said.
I
need to note that I'm lucky. Senators Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff
would raise this issue if it happened to a 7-year-old in California.
ICE is very lucky it happened in Vermont where Senator Bernie Sanders
tends to give ICE a pass -- on its actions in Vermont and on its
property in Vermont. In fact, the last time Sanders issued a press
release to call out ICE was April 23rd when 8 farm worked in Vermont
were detained by ICE. April 23rd. I didn't realize that Gaza had been
annexed by the state of Vermont. I see over ten press releases since
April 23rd on Gaza. But none on ICE. Someone might want to let Bernie
know that ICE has national headquarters and local offices in Vermont.
Might want to pass on that
The Vermont Asylum Assistance Program maintains this page to keep track of ICE activity in the state.
Looking at their info, I'm seeing over 800 people detained by ICE in
Vermont. That's a significant number especially when the population of
the state isn't even 650,000.
In fact, let's note a November 20th press release from Senator Padilla's office:
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senators Alex Padilla
(D-Calif.), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Immigration
Subcommittee, and Cory Booker (D-N.J.), a member of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, demanded answers from Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
leadership on the hiring standards and training protocols for newly
hired ICE agents. The Senators argued that by significantly lowering
hiring and training standards for new federal agents, the Administration
has already compromised the integrity, professionalism, or operational
readiness of the federal immigration law enforcement workforce.
In their letter
to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, Acting Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) Director Todd Lyons, and Customs and Border Protection
(CBP) Commissioner Rodney Scott, the Senators pushed for answers on
DHS’ changes to its hiring and training policies to rebuild the public’s
trust and ensure integrity in law enforcement.
“The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) bears full responsibility
for ensuring that every individual placed in a position of federal
authority has undergone thorough vetting, comprehensive training, and is
subject to robust oversight. The authority to detain and use force,
including, in extreme circumstances, deadly force, is not a game, and it
is not a performance,” wrote the Senators. “Deploying
personnel who lack the qualifications and training long required of
federal officers all but guarantees breaches of constitutional,
statutory, and regulatory obligations, threatens public safety and civil
rights, endangers officers, risks repeating historical abuses of
federal power, and undermines the legitimacy of law enforcement and
democracy.”
“In addition to lowering hiring standards, public reports of
misconduct among current officers call into question the Department’s
ability to adequately train thousands of new hires on an accelerated
timeline. American citizens and noncitizens alike are already
experiencing the consequences of DHS’s undermining of accountability and
failure to maintain even basic professional standards,” continued the Senators.
Reporting last month indicated that ICE dismissed
more than 200 newly hired recruits after they failed to meet even the
newly lowered hiring requirements. Many of these issues arose during
training after many of the recruits admitted that they had not been
fingerprinted or drug tested. This revelation raises concerns that other
recruits already on the job were not properly vetted, threatening
public safety.
Senators Booker and Padilla demanded answers to a series of questions
regarding the Department’s vetting, training, and supervision protocols
for all current, newly hired, and reassigned personnel so that Congress
can assess whether DHS is meeting its constitutional obligations.
“DHS has a duty to ensure that all officers — both new and currently
in service — are properly trained, effectively supervised, and held
accountable for their actions. In only months, DHS’s failure to meet its
obligations has tarnished the reputation of federal law enforcement,
endangered and victimized the public, and eroded public trust in the
rule of law. This is unacceptable, and DHS must act swiftly to correct
these failures, uphold the rule of law, and respect the Constitutional
rights of all people in America,” concluded the Senators.
Senator Padilla has been a leading voice in opposition to President
Trump’s cruel and indiscriminate mass deportation agenda, including against his unprecedented, illegal militarization of Los Angeles and other American cities. Yesterday, Padilla walked out
of Senate Republicans’ unserious subcommittee hearing entitled “ICE
Under Fire: The Radical Left’s Crusade Against Immigration Enforcement,”
in protest of the Trump Administration’s violent immigration
enforcement actions across the country. In July, Padilla and Senator
Booker introduced the VISIBLE Act to require immigration enforcement officers to display clearly visible identification during public-facing enforcement actions.
Full text of the letter is available here and below:
Dear Secretary Noem, Acting Director Lyons, and Commissioner Scott,
We write regarding the surge in hiring of thousands of new
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) officers by the end of 2025. Given the magnitude and
pace of this expansion of federal law enforcement forces, we are seeking
information on the hiring standards and training protocols in place to
ensure that this rapid expansion does not compromise the integrity,
professionalism, or readiness of the federal immigration law enforcement
workforce. Of particular concern is the potential deployment of
inadequately trained or insufficiently vetted enforcement officers in
cities across the country.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) bears full
responsibility for ensuring that every individual placed in a position
of federal authority has undergone thorough vetting, comprehensive
training, and is subject to robust oversight. The authority to detain
and use force, including, in extreme circumstances, deadly force, is not
a game, and it is not a performance.
Deploying personnel who lack the qualifications and training long
required of federal officers all but guarantees breaches of
constitutional, statutory, and regulatory obligations, threatens public
safety and civil rights, endangers officers, risks repeating historical
abuses of federal power, and undermines the legitimacy of law
enforcement and democracy.
For decades, federal law enforcement officers have been held to
the highest eligibility standards, often exceeding those of state and
local agencies, and have undergone a stringent vetting process. Once
hired, they have received extensive training to ensure they meet
baseline performance standards required for law enforcement. By all
accounts, since the beginning of this year, DHS, ICE, and CBP have
dropped the eligibility criteria and training requirements to
dangerously low levels, creating the potential for a poorly trained
force consisting of thousands of new officers, deployed in communities
across America, with the legal authority to use deadly force. Last
month, reports indicated that more than 200 newly hired recruits were
dismissed after failing to meet ICE’s own hiring requirements. Many of
the issues surfaced during training only after the recruits admitted
during training that they had not been fingerprinted or drug tested,
raising the alarming possibility that individuals who did not disclose
such lapses may already be on the job. This amounts to government
malpractice that endangers public safety.
Since January, the Administration has significantly expanded ICE
and CBP operations, deploying officers to communities nationwide to
locate and deport noncitizens. More than 70 percent of detained
noncitizens have no criminal record, and many were actively engaged in
the process to legalize their status. ICE and CBP personnel have been
further supplemented by agents diverted from other federal agencies that
do not conduct immigration enforcement. However, the Administration’s
quota of 3,000 arrests per day – in addition to fueling indiscriminate
arrests of immigrants – has created a demand for thousands more
officers. To fulfill this “mission,” ICE has received $170.1 billion for
immigration enforcement and the hiring of 10,000 officers under the
Republican spending bill deceptively titled the “One Big Beautiful Bill
Act,” making it the highest funded federal law enforcement agency in
history. This infusion of funds has seemingly triggered a hiring frenzy
that raises serious concerns about DHS’s recruitment standards and
training protocols. In August, Secretary Noem announced that ICE planned
to end all age restrictions by changing the minimum age for ICE agents
from 21 years old to just 18 years old, a move widely criticized as
reckless and politically motivated.
In addition to lowering hiring standards, public reports of
misconduct among current officers call into question the Department’s
ability to adequately train thousands of new hires on an accelerated
timeline. American citizens and noncitizens alike are already
experiencing the consequences of DHS’s undermining of accountability and
failure to maintain even basic professional standards. In September, an
ICE officer violently threw a woman to the ground at a New York
immigration court. Although he was placed on administrative leave
pending investigation, he was back in the field within days and faced no
disciplinary action. Just weeks later, ICE officers grabbed and shoved
journalists reporting from a hallway outside a New York City immigration
court, hospitalizing one of the journalists. Poor training has also
jeopardized federal law enforcement officers. In October, an ICE officer
discharged their firearm, injuring two people including a United States
Marshal. These incidents reveal systemic deficiencies that necessitate
immediate and comprehensive review and reform to prevent endangering the
public. They also raise questions about the effectiveness of
supervisory structure, training of supervisors themselves, and the
robustness of accountability systems to address misconduct. It is
imperative to ensure that officers, particularly those hired under
diminishing standards, are not granted unchecked authority to use
unnecessary and excessive force or physical aggression.
Rather than prioritizing comprehensive training and effective
supervision, the Department reportedly is cutting corners and loosening
its training requirements. In August, ICE ended its five-week mandatory
in-person Spanish language course in favor of unspecified translation
technologies. On August 8, Secretary Noem suggested DHS plans to open
new training centers in cities across the country to meet the demand
created by the unprecedented influx of new recruits that cannot, despite
DHS’s claims to the contrary, be met by the Federal Law Enforcement
Training Center. ICE leadership has also suggested that the agency is
exploring additional ways to streamline training in its rush to deploy
new recruits into the field. Alarmingly, while ICE officers previously
received nearly five months of training, reports indicate they now
receive just 47 days, a number chosen for its symbolic connection to
President Trump being the 47th President, not any legitimate law
enforcement metric to assess. This failure to adequately train officers
strongly suggests that the Department is demonstrating deliberate
indifference to the rights and safety of the individuals with whom ICE
officers interact.
The credibility of ICE and CBP as law enforcement agencies
depends on the quality and professionalism of their officers. Strong
recruitment standards and rigorous training are essential not only to
prepare officers for the challenges of the job but also to foster public
confidence in the agency’s mission. We urge your agencies to commit to
the highest possible standards for all officers, both newly hired and
already in the field, and particularly for officer recruitment and
training. Accordingly, we request detailed responses to the questions
below regarding the Department’s vetting, training, and supervision
protocols for all newly hired or reassigned personnel within 14 days, so
that Congress can assess whether DHS is meeting its constitutional
obligations. For each question, please provide information for recruit
training and in-service training.
1. What specific changes have been made to the eligibility
requirements for new ICE and CBP officers, and what is the rationale for
those changes?
2. Have minimum educational or prior law enforcement experience
requirements been altered, and if so, how? What is the rationale for
those changes?
3. Have drug testing standards been modified, and if so, how? What is the rationale for those changes?
4. Have ICE or CBP changed the social media screening practices
for applicants? Do social media screening practices include looking for
and excluding applicants who hold any extremist views? Please describe
the screening process and factors that may disqualify an applicant.
5. What modifications have been made to the training curriculum,
and how do they differ from prior standards? Please specify the topics
covered, changes to the training modules, including method of delivery,
and the total duration of the training prior to and after the hiring
surge.
6. What on-the-job training with a field officer did new recruits
receive prior to the hiring surge? Under the hiring surge, do new
recruits still receive this training?
7. What training or other resources have replaced the formerly
mandatory five-week Spanish language course to ensure effective
communication between officers and individuals who speak Spanish?
8. Please describe the existing training program for any ICE
contractors who directly interact with detained people. Include details
on the topics covered, training modules, including method of delivery,
and the total duration of the training.
9. Are there proposals to streamline the training for these
contractors? If so, please describe those proposals and provide the
rationale for the changes proposed.
10. What specific changes have been made to metrics to evaluate
the effectiveness of ICE and CBP officer training, and what is the
rationale for these changes?
11. How will you ensure that any recent changes to performance
and training metrics do not compromise officer preparedness or public
safety?
12. What training do ICE and CBP provide to employees from other
federal agencies reassigned to immigration enforcement operations? When
are these employees required to complete such training? Include details
on the topics covered, training modules, including method of delivery,
and the total duration of the training.
13. For each of the following topics, (i) confirm whether
officers from other federal law enforcement agencies assigned or
reassigned to immigration enforcement receive training related to that
topic; (ii) provide the number of hours of required training; and (iii)
identify the platform on which these trainings will be delivered (e.g.,
classroom, scenario-based, virtual):
1. Constitutional law
2. Immigration law
3. Criminal law
4. Investigations
5. Witness interviews
6. Interactions with youth
7. Report writing
8. First aid and safety training
9. Crisis intervention
10. Firearms
11. Use of force
12. Deescalation
13. First amendment protected activity
14. Stops, searches, and arrests
15. Misconduct reporting
This Administration has been actively flaunting an aggressive,
militarized approach to immigration enforcement, sending the message
that it can use federal force against communities with impunity. At the
center of this effort are thousands of officers who appear to lack the
professionalism, tactical skill, and judgment required of federal law
enforcement, yet have been given broad authority to operate unchecked,
while the Department ramps up recruitment and hiring of an unprecedented
number of new officers. DHS has a duty to ensure that all officers –
both new and currently in service –are properly trained, effectively
supervised, and held accountable for their actions. In only months,
DHS’s failure to meet its obligations has tarnished the reputation of
federal law enforcement, endangered and victimized the public, and
eroded public trust in the rule of law. This is unacceptable, and DHS
must act swiftly to correct these failures, uphold the rule of law, and
respect the Constitutional rights of all people in America.
Sincerely,
###
Some Americans are standing up against ICE's attacks on immigrants and US citizens. More need to be. And while Noem stonewalls Congress, yesterday,
Shawn Cohen (DAILY MAIL) reported:
The Trump administration's frantic push to hire 10,000 new deportation officers by year's end
has spiraled into what insiders describe as a national embarrassment -
with lax vetting and a signing bonus of up to $50,000 luring in a wave
of woefully unfit recruits.
An
exhaustive Daily Mail investigation has exposed how Immigration and
Customs Enforcement has lowered standards so dramatically that the new
cohort now includes recent high school graduates and applicants who can
'barely read or write' as well as those who lack basic physical fitness
and even have pending criminal charges.
Most
of the new hires in the $30 billion initiative are retired law
enforcement who are receiving virtual training and being repurposed for
desk duty.
Meanwhile, total novices are
being fast-tracked into the Federal Law Enforcement Training Academy in
Georgia, where instructors have been left astounded at the levels of
incompetence.
'We have people
failing open-book tests and we have folks that can barely read or write
English,' one Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official told the
Daily Mail.
'We even had a 469-lb man sent to the academy whose own doctor certified him not at all fit for any physical activity.'
Insiders
say the vetting process has been so rushed that officials didn't even
wait for drug test results to come back before hiring recruits and
flying them off to Georgia, only to discover afterward that tests came
back positive.
DHS Secretary Kristi
Noem told President Trump on Tuesday that the department will hire its
10,000th ICE officer within ten days. The department had no further
comment to the Daily Mail on the story.
In one shocking incident, staff were left
shaking their heads when one student asked to be excused from class so
he could attend a court date on a gun charge.
Other
recruits were even discovered to have tattoos associated with gangs and
white supremacists when they stripped off their shirts during
workouts.
Reports from FLETC include
incidents of violence, disruptive behavior, and allegations of sexual
misconduct on campus, most handled internally.
Not a good time for Kristi who turned fifty-four last Sunday. We didn't forget to wish her happy birthday -- we just didn't want to. Which means we're a lot like her husband who also ignored the opportunity to wish her a public happy birthday.
Diksha (INQUISITR) reports:
Kristi
Noem just turned 54 on November 30, and it was a perfect occasion to
celebrate with family and friends. But her husband may not have been as
excited as he did not wish her on social media. Many popular couples
ensure that they wish each other on social media, and not doing so may
send a bigger message.
It may
signal trouble in marriage and possible conversations about divorce that
the couple may be having in private. Although it’s not a rule to wish
one’s partner on social media, doing it most years and suddenly skipping
it can be a warning sign.
The Secretary of
Homeland Security and her husband, Bryon Noem, have taken a step back
from posting for each other on social media. Although they have been
married since 1992, there have been rumors about their marriage
crumbling.
When someone’s popular, such
speculations are inevitable. Bryon did post about their 32nd anniversary
last year on Instagram, but he did not post a birthday wish last year
or this year. The last time he wished Noem on her birthday was in 2023,
posting, “She is a sweetheart and so talented and a pleasure to be
with.”
A
Marine veteran said he felt “betrayed” after U.S. Immigrations and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents detained his wife, Chanidaphon Sopimpa
of Thailand, during a green card meeting last month.
Sopimpa’s
attorney Derek Poulsen told Newsweek that she overstayed her visa but
had no other criminal record. Her arrest comes as a growing number of
immigrants have been detained during green card meetings in San Diego
over the past month.
Sopimpa
met Samuel Shasteen, a Marine veteran, in 2022, months after Shasteen
lost his wife to cancer, reported San Diego-based news station KNSD. The
couple has since got married and began Sopimpa’s green card process.
She
was detained last month while attending a green card interview with the
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), Poulsen told
Newsweek. While she did enter on a visitor visa and overstay, it is rare
for the spouses of American citizens to be detained by ICE agents, he
said. She had no further criminal record, he said.
The
H*A*R*L*O*T of Homeland Security is being mocked for claiming -- in
Tuesday's Cabinet meeting -- that her lord and personal savior Donald
Chump -- who's apparently also the patron saint of adultery -- kept the
hurricanes away over the last months. I think she should be mocked even
harder for going after a 7-year-old boy. The child? Guess he should
be glad he was a child and not a dog or Kristi would have shot him.
Kristi's an idiot and a liar which MEIDASTOUCH NEWS makes clear -- with the videos to back it up -- below.
Chump's
Cabinet is a wealth of unworthies. There's Pete Hegseth. On Pete, I
have frequently noted here when people wonder why his wife is attached
at his hip that it's because she's no dummy. She knows what happened
before. But apparently some people don't because they question about
Pete leaving the two previous wives. So let's note
Jennifer Tisdale's report for the INQUISITR so we're all on the same page:
In
his 2016 book, In the Arena, Hegseth wrote about how the conservative
party should focus on the sanctity of marriage in terms of lowering
divorce rates. At the time, he was divorced and married to his second
wife, whom he would also divorce the following year.
Hegseth's
first two marriages ended when he had extramarital affairs with
colleagues. In fact, the Secretary of [Defense] and the woman who would
become his third wife were welcoming their first child together before
the ink was dry on Hegseth's divorce papers.
President
Donald Trump and his administration are still in scramble mode as
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth unveils yet another revision of his
story.
After days of brutal headlines over a
Sept. 2 boat strike that left two survivors “blown apart in the water,”
Hegseth rolled out a brand-new version of events — one that flatly
contradicts his own on-camera boast that he had “watched it live.”
Standing
beside a groggy-looking President Donald Trump during a Cabinet Room
appearance on Tuesday, Hegseth insisted he never actually saw the
survivors and wasn’t aware a second strike had taken place until “a
couple hours later.”
“I did not personally see
survivors … that thing was on fire and was exploded,” he told reporters.
“You got fire, smoke, you can’t see anything. This is called the fog of
war.”
But that explanation detonated instantly
across social media — because Hegseth himself had earlier boasted on Fox
& Friends, “I watched it live. We knew exactly who was in that
boat. We knew exactly what they were doing.”
Within minutes, viewers were replaying that old clip and shredding his new version to pieces.
A
Pentagon watchdog has found Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth violated
some of the department’s regulations when he shared sensitive
information from his cellphone on Signal earlier this year, according to
Sen. Mark Kelly (D., Ariz).
However, the
Defense Department Inspector General also concluded that as Pentagon
chief, Hegseth has the authority to declassify Defense Department
information, Kelly said Wednesday after viewing the watchdog report the
department sent to Congress. That suggests the defense secretary didn’t
break the law.
[. . .]
The
watchdog report states that Hegseth declined to sit for an interview
with the inspector general, instead sending a written statement,
according to a person with knowledge of the document. In that statement,
Hegseth claimed that he intentionally declassified information that
wouldn’t pose a threat to servicemembers or the mission, the person
said.
However, the report found that the
operational details he shared on Signal would have posed a risk to
troops and the mission if it had been intercepted, according to the
person and another person briefed on the report.
The
report outlines the findings of a more than eight-month investigation
into Hegseth’s use of Signal, an encrypted but unclassified messaging
app, to share details of the planned U.S. strikes in March before they
had begun.
It found that the information could
have imperiled American troops had it been intercepted by a foreign
adversary, the two people who have read the report said. The evaluation
by the Defense Department Inspector General also concluded that Hegseth
violated military regulations by using his personal phone for official
business, according to those people.
Hegseth
has maintained that he shared no classified information on the group
chat. The inspector general did not address whether Hegseth took the
proper steps to declassify the information shared in the chat.
The Defense Department inspector
general found that while the mission ultimately was not jeopardized,
Hegseth violated his department’s own policies when he used Signal, a
commercial messaging app that is not approved for sharing classified
information. The IG’s report, scheduled to be published on Thursday, was
described to us by numerous U.S. officials familiar with its findings.
The
family of a Colombian fisherman killed in a U.S. strike in the
Caribbean is accusing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth of murder, pulling
the Trump administration’s “drug boat” campaign into an international
human rights showdown.
Alejandro Andres
Carranza Medina, a 42 year old fisherman from Colombia, was killed on
Sept. 15 when a U.S. military aircraft bombed the small boat he was
working on, according to The Guardian. His wife and four children have
now filed a formal complaint with the Washington, DC based Inter
American Commission on Human Rights, alleging the United States carried
out an “extra judicial killing” and violated his most basic rights.
The
petition, filed Tuesday, names Hegseth personally. It argues that the
defense secretary bears direct responsibility for Carranza’s death as
part of the Trump administration’s air campaign against suspected narco
boats operating in waters off Colombia and Venezuela.
“From
numerous news reports, we know that Pete Hegseth, U.S. Secretary of
Defense, was responsible for ordering the bombing of boats like those of
Alejandro Carranza Medina and the murder of all those on such boats,”
the filing states. “Secretary Hegseth has admitted that he gave such
orders despite the fact that he did not know the identity of those being
targeted for these bombings and extra judicial killings.”
The
complaint also argues that “U.S. President Donald Trump has ratified
the conduct of Secretary Hegseth described herein,” directly tying
Carranza’s death to the president’s push for kinetic military strikes
against alleged trafficking vessels.
The
complaint was filed by Pittsburgh-based human rights lawyer Dan
Kovalik. “On September 15, 2025, the United States military bombed the
boat of Alejandro Andres Carranza Medina,” the filing says, “which Mr
Carranza was sailing in the Caribbean off the coast of Colombia. Mr
Carranza was killed in the process of this bombing.”
Kovalik
identified Pete Hegseth, the US defense secretary, as the perpetrator,
based on Hegseth’s own statements. “From numerous news reports, we know
that Pete Hegseth, US Secretary of Defense, was responsible for ordering
the bombing of boats like those of Alejandro Carranza Medina and the
murder of all those on such boats. Secretary Hegseth has admitted that
he gave such orders despite the fact that he did not know the identity
of those being targeted for these bombings and extra-judicial killings,”
the filing goes on.
The complaint adds: “US President Donald Trump has ratified the conduct of Secretary Hegseth described herein.”
[. . .]Kovalik
said: “We think this is a viable way to challenge the killing of
Alejandro. We are going to seek redress for the family. We want the US
to be ordered to stop doing these boat attacks. It may be a first step
but we think it it’s a good first step.”
Pete
Hegseth is a fundamentally unserious person who has no business serving
as our Secretary of Defense. He has shirked responsibility in a
position of extraordinary public trust and importance. The job of
Secretary of Defense is one of the most important jobs in the world. He
lacks the experience, and he's shown again and again that he lacks the
judgment to be at the helm of the Pentagon, which is such an important
part of American public life.
Secretary
Hegseth said he had no knowledge of this, and it did not happen. It was
fake news. It didn’t happen. And then the next day, from the podium at
the White House are saying it did happen. So, either he was lying to us
… or he’s incompetent and didn’t know it had happened. Do we
think there’s any chance that … the secretary of the defense did not
know there had been a second strike? So as a country, we’re just going
to let people lie to us, to our face?
Senator Thom Tillis: I
didn’t give a damn who it was … whoever knowingly violated — that was a
violation of ethical, moral and legal code," said Sen. Thom Tillis
(R-N.C.) about the second strike. “If the facts play out the way they’re
currently being reported, then somebody needs to get the hell out of
Washington.
Senator Richard Blumenthal: Let's
be clear that making Admiral Bradley the fall guy sends a signal to our
professional military that they will be blamed for mistakes made by
political leaders and that there'll be no protection for them when they
follow those orders,
Senator Mark Kelly: Think
about it: He runs around on stage discussing lethality, warrior ethos,
and killing people. We have the most skilled and capable military this
world has ever known. That's not the message that should come from the
Secretary of Defence. He behaves like a 12-year-old pretending to be in
the army. It’s ludicrous, it’s embarrassing, and I can’t imagine what
our allies think when they see that guy in such a crucial position in
our country.
The DOJ's secret memo authorizing missile strikes on boats in the Caribbean isn't a legal analysis - it's legal laundering.
According
to leaks reported by The Guardian, the Office of Legal Counsel memo
claims the strikes constitute "collective self-defense" on behalf of
allies like Mexico and Colombia, who supposedly need us to blow up
cocaine shipments because cartels are waging "armed violence" against
their governments.
Small
problems with this theory: No ally has publicly asked us to bomb boats.
There's no evidence that cartels are engaged in "armed conflict" with
any sovereign state. There's no evidence that cocaine sales finance a
war rather than just enrich criminals. And there's zero evidence these
strikes were "self-defense" against any imminent threat.
Yesterday,
we just focused on Pete Hegseth as he continued his public transition
from FOX "NEWS" personality to War Criminal. I understand he's
contemplating top surgery. But a number of you thought I'd share
something on the Tennessee election that took place Tuesday. A lot of
times when you expect me to comment and I don't, I'm trying to be kind.
Several
of you asked, so here goes. Matt Van Epps (MAGA) won against Aftyn
Behn (Democrat). Some people were convinced Behn was going to pull it
off. We didn't waste time on her, she was a loser. She shouldn't run
again. What does the race mean?
Republicans
should worry. Even against one of the worst candidates in years, Van
Epps had to spend millions -- they flooded that district with money.
And he almost lost.
Republicans need to worry.
You won't face many as ditzy as Aftyn Behn.
When
Chump insulted her as not a Christian, her response was weak. When he
attacked her claiming she didn't like country music, her response was
weak.
She was an idiot over and over.
Chump says you don't like country music? You step up to the mike a press
conference and start singing Patsy Cline's "Crazy." Not the whole song
if you don't want to. Then you say, "Heard somebody lying on me and
saying I didn't like country music. Can you be born in Tennessee and
not like country music? Well, what's a New Yorker like Donald know
about country music anyway? This is the fool who dances publicly over and over to the disco song 'YMCA'." That's what she should have done (and what she
was advised to do, by the way) but didn't.
Again, not very smart. Neither is the DSA chapter in Knoxville. This was always going to be a loss for Behn.
So
to recap: A ditz, a very poor campaigner and a Democratic Socialist
running in that district and yet she managed to get 45% of the vote?
Republicans across the country should be in a panic. Most of them will
face Democratic Party candidates with a functioning brain.
Tomorrow, the plan is to note Jeffrey and Ghislaine developments. For now, let's note Lawrence addressing some of them on MS NOW last night.
Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:
Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray
(D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, joined
Senator Adam Schiff (D-CA) to introduce the Temporary Immigration Judge Integrity Act,
legislation to prevent inexperienced temporary immigration judge
appointments in light of the Trump administration’s abuse of loopholes
in current regulations. U.S. Representative Juan Vargas (D, CA-52) is
introducing companion legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Following the Trump administration’s mass firing of immigration
judges and authorizing of up to 600 military lawyers to serve as
temporary immigration judges, the bill aims to close the loopholes the
administration has been utilizing to speed up their mass deportation
agenda – such as the lack of due process protections for individuals in
immigration court proceedings.
“The Trump administration has already fired or forced out
over 100 immigration judges across the country as part of their callous
anti-immigrant crusade, and now they are allowing attorneys with zero
prior immigration law experience to serve as temporary judges in
immigration cases, making hugely consequential decisions about families’
futures,” said Senator Murray. “Every person deserves a fair hearing. The Temporary Immigration Judge Integrity Act is
about making sure anyone serving as a judge in an immigration hearing
has the basic qualifications to do the job, and that the Trump
administration can’t keep unqualified temporary judges in place
indefinitely.”
The bill would:
- Cap temporary immigration judge appointments at four consecutive
six-month terms: 2-year maximum service limit with at least a 3-year
break in between services;
- Prevent military attorneys and Judge Advocate Generals (JAGs) from being appointed as temporary immigration judges;
- Authorize appointments of attorneys at the Department of Justice (DOJ) who meet the eligibility requirements;
- Establish basic training requirements.
In addition to Senators Murray and Schiff, the bill is co-sponsored
by Senators Dick Durbin (D-IL), Michael Bennet (D-CO), Cory Booker
(D-NJ), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Mark Kelly (D-AZ),
Edward J. Markey (D-MA), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Chris Murphy (D-CT), Alex
Padilla (D-CA), Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD),
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Peter Welch (D-VT), and Ron Wyden (D-OR).
The full text of the bill can be found HERE.
###
The following sites updated: