Intent has been stated

Netanyahu orders Israeli army to seize ‘70% of Gaza Strip’, violating ceasefire deal

Speaking in West Bank settlement, Israeli PM, who is fighting for political survival before elections, says ‘we are squeezing Hamas’

Seham Tantesh in Gaza and Julian BorgerThu 28 May 2026 19.14 BSTShare

Benjamin Netanyahu has said he has given orders to the Israeli army to seize control of 70% of the Gaza Strip in a move that threatens to torpedo an already fragile ceasefire and create catastrophic humanitarian conditions in the already devastated territory.

Under the US-brokered ceasefire in October, the Israeli army withdrew to a demarcation line which gave Israel direct control of 53% of the occupied territory. Since then, Israeli forces have steadily advanced their positions westward into the Hamas-controlled half of the strip, and declared an ever-expanded no man’s land west of that, within which they claim the right to decide who can enter and open fire on anyone perceived as a threat.

In recent days, Israeli-backed armed militias have taken a leading role in emptying the territory along the ceasefire line, telling residents to vacate their homes or shelters.

Throughout the eight months of the ceasefire, Israeli forces have continued to open fire on Palestinians within range of the “yellow line” splitting the strip, and carry out airstrikes deeper inside western Gaza, killing more than 900 Palestinians since the truce began.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/28/netanyahu-orders-israeli-army-seize-70-gaza-strip-violating-ceasefire-deal

To prove genocide, first you have to state intent:

Canary

Israel’s far-right defence minister openly pledges to ethnically cleanse Gaza

 by Joe Glenton

 29 May 2026

The settler-colonial state’s far-right defence minister, Israel Katz, has openly stated Israel’s intention to ethnically cleanse Gaza. Genocidal intentions have being central to Israeli state ideology. Lawyers and human rights groups attacked Katz.

The Guardian reported on 29 May:

Katz said the mass departure of Palestinians from Gaza would go hand in hand with the exclusion of Hamas from power.

Katz himself said:

We committed that Hamas will not rule Gaza civilly or militarily, and so it shall be, and also the voluntary emigration plan from Gaza will be implemented.

Everything at the right timing and in the right manner.

Yet Israeli human rights groups warned that the conditions created in Gaza by Israel mean there would be nothing ‘voluntary’ about a removal scheme.

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel said:

Creating living conditions that do not allow for survival, freedom and dignity, and subjecting civilians to them until they say they want to leave is not a plan for ‘encouraging voluntary emigration’ but a plan for forced evacuation and expulsion.

In Israel, elections hinge on racism and militarism

One expert warned that the context around a US-Iran peace deal and upcoming Israeli elections could dictate what happens to Gazans.

International Crisis Group analyst Mairav Zonszein said:

Because we are looking at an extension of the ceasefire and de-escalation of the situation in Iran and Lebanon, Israel – and Netanyahu specifically – will be looking for ways to show that they’re doing something on the security front, and that means exercising military power.

In a bleak commentary on the racist and militarist nature of Israeli politics, she added:

Unfortunately talking about ethnic cleansing in Gaza is not necessarily something that will hurt you in domestic politics. In fact it might even help you.

The Canary reported on 21 May:

And there are fears that Israel could remove Palestinians from their land, depositing them in Somaliland.

Somaliland and Israel have agreed to normalise relations and open embassies in their respective capitals.

Some would that Gaza’s future hinging on Israeli voter prejudice speaks to the failure of the so-called ‘international community’. Yet this can just as easily be read as sign of its success. That is, if we view the global ‘liberal’ order as being built upon the suppression and expropriation of indigenous populations around the world. Which — on this evidence, at least — we certainly should.

The crime of the century is underway and the supposed guardians of human rights aren’t just indifferent. They are complicit. Palestinian lives simply do not factor in their grand calculations.

Featured image via Kobi Gideon/GPO/Getty Images

https://www.thecanary.co/global/world-news/2026/05/29/israel-far-right-defence/

Israel is not helping itself:

Support for Israel hits new low in US, new poll shows


Pew Research Center surveyed Americans about a month into the United States and Israel’s war in Iran.

Eduardo Cuevas   USA TODAY

Americans continue to increasingly view Israel negatively amid ongoing conflicts in the Middle East, according to a new Pew Research Center survey.

The results published April 7 found 60% of all American adults had an unfavorable opinion of Israel, compared with 53% a year earlier. Just 37% of respondents had a favorable view of Israel, a longstanding ally of the United States in the region and a historic beneficiary of foreign aid.

Pew’s latest polling is a 20-point shift since 2022, when most Americans had favorable views of Israel. Then, just 42% had an unfavorable opinion of Israel.

Pew found younger Americans across the ideological spectrum in particular have negative views toward Israel. About 70% of respondents younger than 50 had unfavorable opinions of Israel.

https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2026/04/08/israel-netanyahu-favorability-pew-poll/89519136007/

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When a rocket explodes all life is harmed

Elon Musk’s rocket explosion caused masses of dangerous chemicals to pollute atmosphere

6 February 2025

Dr Connor Barker (UCL Geography) estimated that roughly 45 metric tons of metal oxide and 40 metric tons of nitrogen oxide pollution was generated by the destruction of Space-X’s Starship shortly after launch.

Read: Star

Since Feb 2025, this on 22nd May 2026:

The largest and most powerful rocket in history exploded in a massive fireball after its successful test flight around the Earth Friday night.

Elon Musk‘s SpaceX declared the launch of Starship 12 a success and noted that the space capsule’s explosion in the Indian Ocean was planned as the aerospace company did not plan to reuse the experimental craft.

https://www.dailymail.com/sciencetech/article-15839187/spacex-starship-moon-launch-texas.html

And

Blue Origin rocket explosion: NASA administrator says ‘spaceflight is unforgiving’ in new update

NASA administrator Jared Isaacman has said “spaceflight is unforgiving” in an update on the explosion of the Blue Origin New Glenn rocket at Kennedy Space Center last night

NewsPaige Ingram04:38, 29 May 2026Updated 04:40, 29 May 2026

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/us-news/nasa-blue-origin-rocket-explosion-37219851

Why dismantling environmental regulation results in our being no longer protected from poisoning of this planet. The oceans circulate the planet, they have no contained borders. The contaminated air blows in the winds around us. Marine life cannot withstand these onslaughts.

Here is an abstract from a 2024 scientific article:

This study delves into the critical issue of water pollution caused by the presence of metal oxides, synthetic dyes, and dissolved organic matter, shedding light on their potential ramifications for both the environment and human health. Metal oxides, ubiquitous in industrial processes and consumer products, are known to leach into water bodies, posing a significant threat to aquatic ecosystems. Additionally, synthetic dyes, extensively used in various industries, can persist in water systems and exhibit complex chemical behavior. This review provides a comprehensive examination of the toxicity associated with metal oxides, synthetic dyes, and dissolved organic matter in water systems. We delve into the sources and environmental fate of these contaminants, highlighting their prevalence in natural water bodies and wastewater effluents. The study highlights the multifaceted impacts of them on human health and aquatic ecosystems, encompassing effects on microbial communities, aquatic flora and fauna, and the overall ecological balance. The novelty of this review lies in its unique presentation, focusing on the toxicity of metal oxides, dyes, and dissolved organic matter. This approach aims to facilitate the accessibility of results for readers, providing a streamlined and clear understanding of the reported findings.

Keywords: 

toxicitymetal oxidesdissolved organic matterdyeswateraquatic livesenvironmentshuman health

https://www.mdpi.com/2305-6304/12/2/111

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Trump’s frontal brain outburst

Gulf

“Oman will behave just like everybody else, or we’ll have to blow ’em up.” President Donald Trump made that threat Wednesday at a Cabinet meeting, discussing his administration’s negotiations with Iran and the near future of the Strait of Hormuz.

Past offending outbursts:

With this odd threat against Oman, Trump has now threatened or attacked one out of every 13 countries in the world, CNN Senior Reporter Aaron Blake notes.

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Double tap slaughter of the best and the good

Occupiers

Israel kills 10 people in Lebanon, including rescuers and a child in a 'double tap' strike

Israel kills 10 people in Lebanon, including rescuers and a child in a ‘double tap’ strike

Despite agreeing to cease fire multiple times, Israel has killed 3,111 Lebanese people since February, including 123 medics, over 210 children, and nearly 300 women.

Since February, Israel has killed 123 medics, more than 210 children and nearly 300 women in Lebanon. / TRT World

May 22, 2026

Lebanon’s health ministry has said that Israeli forces killed 10 people in new truce violations, including six rescuers and a child, with some of them killed in a “double-tap” attack captured on video.

In a statement on Friday, the Lebanese ministry said “six people were martyred”, including two rescuers from the Risala Scouts association and a Syrian girl, in an attack on Deir Qanun al-Nahr village near the city of Tyre.

An earlier strike on the southern town of Hanaway killed four rescuers, the ministry said.

Videos circulating on social media claim to show the killing of a father and his child in an attack by occupying Israeli forces, followed by a subsequent strike as rescuers gather at the scene.

Footage captured by a resident from her window shows the moment paramedics were killed by Israel in Deir Qanun al-Nahr, southern Lebanon.

Rescuers are seen trying to assist casualties, including a child, lying in the street following an earlier Israeli attack.

“An innocent child… what did she ever do?” the woman asks in the video documenting the aftermath of an Israeli attack.

Then an ambulance arrives.

Moments later, another missile from Israeli forces directly hits the site. A sudden flash and explosion are immediately followed by widespread panic.

“They hit the medics… they hit the medics. The medics are gone, the medics are gone …” the woman screams in terror.

A paramedic sitting beside the wounded suddenly collapses as a woman cries out: “Oh my God… he’s dead…”

Double-tap strikes are a pattern Israel has routinely used since the beginning of its genocide in Gaza, monitors say, with the second strike intended to kill first responders and rescue workers arriving at the scene.

https://www.trtworld.com/article/21d5d7325483

Only psychopaths could enjoy carrying out double tap strikes on first responders. It is a common pattern. Like serial killers, it is the trademark of the Israeli ‘Defence’ Force.

Regarding International law of occupiers of territory – here is an extract of historically agreed laws, which are no longer adhered to by what was once a respected nation:

Relief Supplies and Actions

The occupying power has the duty to ensure that the adequate provision of food and medical supplies is provided, as well as clothing, bedding, means of shelter, other supplies essential to the survival of the civilian population of the occupied territory, and objects necessary for religious worship (GCIV Arts. 55, 58; API Art. 69).

The occupying power must allow the protecting power, or the ICRC and other impartial humanitarian organizations, to verify the state of these supplies in occupied territories, and to visit protected persons so as to monitor their condition (GCIV Arts. 30, 55, and 143). It is also under the obligation to allow the ICRC or any other impartial humanitarian organization to undertake their own strictly humanitarian relief actions aimed at this population. All States must allow and facilitate rapid and unimpeded passage of all relief supplies and must not divert them, in any way whatsoever, from their destination. The only restrictions that parties to the conflict may impose are technical ones, or they may ask for guarantees that the relief is destined to the population in need and will not be used by the adverse power.

The fact that humanitarian organizations are delivering relief in no way relieves the occupying power of any of its own responsibilities to ensure that the population is properly supplied (GCIV Arts. 59–62 and 108–111; API Arts. 69–71).

▸ Relief ▸ Right of access ▸ Right of humanitarian initiative ▸ Supplies

Forced Population Displacement

The occupying power must not transfer or deport the population of occupied territories or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies (GCIV Art. 49 and Rule 130 of the 2005 ICRC customary IHL study).

▸ Deportation ▸ Population displacemen

https://guide-humanitarian-law.org/content/article/3/occupied-territory/

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Russian Jews transforming culture in Israel

I heard someone explaining how Israel changed after Russian and Ethiopian Jews began a mass exodus to Israel since 1989. So I looked it up. There are many articles on the Internet concerning this phenomenon, and it is just that. A phenomenon.  I am reproducing this informative essay from 2020, and it links further essays the author has provided, for those interested:

MosaicMonthly Essays/Observations/Editors’ Picks/Subjects/About

YKH RUSSIANS

Soviet Jews from Moscow disembark at Ben-Gurion Airport on August 20, 1991. SVEN NACKSTRAND/AFP via Getty Images.

November 23, 2020

How One Million Russian Immigrants Revitalized Israel

At the end of the 1980s, Israel was barely managing its finances and its security. Then a substantial part of the professional and cultural elite of a superpower showed up.

By Yossi Klein Halevi

In the summer of 1989, I left my home in Jerusalem for a reporting assignment in Europe, covering the fall of Communism from Warsaw to Berlin to Prague. A year later, I returned to a different Israel. In the supermarket there were strange cheeses and yogurt drinks labeled with Cyrillic writing, and unimagined, new products like frozen blueberries and cherries. On the streets, young musicians played cello and old men with gold teeth played accordion. The country suddenly felt as though it had become both less intimate and more claustrophobic: my daughter’s first-grade class was packed with 40 children to accommodate the immigrant influx.

I joined the staff of the recently founded Jerusalem Report magazine and was given the Russian beat. My editor, Ze’ev Chafets, told me that we Israelis are opening our home to hundreds of thousands of strangers, and none of us knows anything about who these people are. And so, I went out to learn. I sought intimate stories: a couple struggling to stay together as the husband became increasingly religious and his half-Jewish wife increasingly bewildered; the editor of a new Russian-language Israeli newspaper who had sat in the Gulag for Zionist activity but who felt himself an outsider to the Jewish story; a celebrated organist in the northern town of Carmiel who divided his time touring Europe and working as an Israeli garbageman.

The early 1990s not only brought a million Russian immigrants to Israel but tens of thousands of Ethiopians, who had been gradually arriving through the previous decade. The two immigrations were opposing images of each other: the Russians, with impressive secular education but the least Jewish knowledge of any immigrant wave; the Ethiopians, with little secular education but deep religiosity. Many Russians had come to Israel because it was as far West as they could reach; the Ethiopians had come to Zion. Inevitably, they regarded each other with suspicion and even loathing. In one absorption center I visited near Haifa, Russians and Ethiopians had to be housed in different areas after coming to blows.

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Which planet are you on?

Somebody seems to still be dreaming. Is it me?

‘Are you still there’: Trump links Abraham Accords to Iran war talks in surprise move

WASHINGTON, DC: President Donald J Trump has launched a high-stakes diplomatic gambit to leverage ongoing Iran war negotiations into a massive expansion of the Abraham Accords.

During a crucial Saturday, May 25, conference call intended to finalize a deal ending the conflict, Trump explicitly urged multiple Arab and Muslim leaders to normalize relations with Israel.

The unexpected mandate caught several participants completely off guard, signaling the administration’s intent to use the security crisis to force a total Middle East realignment.

Related video: Trump announces potential Iran deal (FOX 13 Seattle)

FOX 13 Seattle

Trump announces potential Iran deal

The high-level phone call included the leaders of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, and Bahrain.

World leaders including President Donald Trump, Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, Jordan's King Abdullah, and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, pose for a family photo, at a world leaders' summit on ending the Gaza war on October 13, 2025 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt (Suzanne Plunkett - Pool / Getty Images)

World leaders including President Donald Trump, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, Jordan’s King Abdullah, and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, pose for a family photo, at a world leaders’ summit on ending the Gaza war on October 13, 2025 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt (Suzanne Plunkett – Pool / Getty Images)

While hawkish participants, including UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed, expressed full solidarity regarding the emerging Iran pact, the atmosphere reportedly shifted when Trump linked post-war stability to Israeli normalization.

Two US officials confirmed that Trump’s request was met with dead silence on the line, prompting the president to joke and ask if the leaders were still there.

Envoys mobilize for historic normalization pacts

Specialized White House diplomatic channels have been activated to conduct direct, follow-up enforcement operations across unaligned regional capitals (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

Specialized White House diplomatic channels have been activated to conduct direct, follow-up enforcement operations across unaligned regional capitals (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

Trump informed the regional leaders that he intends to contact Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu next, expressing hope that Israel’s leader would soon join them on a unified call.

The president stressed that nations currently lacking formal diplomatic ties with Israel must prepare to sign the accords once hostilities conclude. 

To maintain momentum, Trump announced that his top envoys, Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, will directly follow up on the normalization directive over the coming weeks.

Riyadh resists pressure ahead of elections

President Donald Trump welcomes Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia during an arrival ceremony at the White House on November 18, 2025, in Washington, DC (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump welcomes Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia during an arrival ceremony at the White House on November 18, 2025, in Washington, DC (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

The administration’s primary objective is a historic Saudi-Israel peace agreement, but the regional political climate remains deeply unfavorable. 

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman previously pushed back against Trump on this issue during a tense Oval Office meeting last November.

The conflict, coupled with a deep rift between Saudi Arabia and the UAE, has driven Riyadh to adopt a much tougher stance against Israel’s far-right government.

Saudi officials continue to demand an irreversible path to a Palestinian state, a condition the Israeli government rejects. Analysts believe Riyadh will freeze any major diplomatic steps ahead of Israel’s upcoming elections in September.

Capitol leadership backs enforcement of terms

President Donald Trump shakes hands with Sen Lindsey Graham during an event in the East Room of the White House on November 6, 2019, in Washington, DC (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump shakes hands with Sen Lindsey Graham during an event in the East Room of the White House on November 6, 2019, in Washington, DC (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Despite these deep systemic hurdles, Trump doubled down publicly on Sunday via Truth Social, thanking Middle Eastern nations for their cooperation while floating the highly controversial idea of Iran eventually joining the Abraham Accords.

In Congress, Senator Lindsey Graham firmly backed the president’s play, warning that a refusal by Arab and Muslim allies to adhere to Trump’s normalization request would carry severe repercussions for future relationships with Washington and stand as a massive historical miscalculation.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/are-you-still-there-trump-links-abraham-accords-to-iran-war-talks-in-surprise-move/ar-AA23XAYN

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Friday: Trump says ‘close to a deal’. Monday: Trump says ‘war back on’. Oil prices drop, then surge. Another pattern for money making amongst friends.

The White House, official Facebook post, 23 May 2026

Response from Iran:

The Kobeissi Letter, X, 23 May 2026

Then:

Social media accounts tracking the war summed up Iran’s rejection within the hour. The underlying quotes above are sourced to Iran’s Foreign Ministry via IRNA, Fars News, and military spokesman Ebrahim Zolfaghari.

What happened on May 22?

Iran confirms Qatar-hosted talks to end US-Iran war, with Pakistan serving as lead mediator

A Qatari negotiating team and Pakistan’s army chief arrived in Tehran on May 22 to push ceasefire negotiations forward, as Iran says nuclear issues are off the table for now.

May. 22, 2026

Iran’s Foreign Ministry confirmed on May 22 that active negotiations are underway to end the US-Iran war, with Qatar hosting the talks and Pakistan serving as the lead mediator. The announcement marks the most concrete diplomatic framework to emerge since the conflict began on February 28, 2026.

A Qatari negotiating team arrived in Tehran the same day, joined by a high-ranking Pakistani delegation led by Army Chief Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir. The goal is straightforward: turn a fragile ceasefire into a permanent end to hostilities.

What we know about the negotiations

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei stated that the current round of talks is focused exclusively on ending the war. Nuclear issues are explicitly excluded from the negotiating table for now.

Iran has already responded to US ceasefire proposals through Pakistani mediators, seeking a permanent end to hostilities rather than another temporary pause.

Qatar’s Foreign Ministry acknowledged on May 19 that more time is needed to resolve the negotiations.

The war’s trajectory so far

The conflict broke out on February 28, 2026, following a series of escalating confrontations that included US and Israeli strikes against Iranian targets.

A fragile ceasefire was established around April 8-12, 2026, roughly six weeks into the conflict.

What this means for markets and investors

The Strait of Hormuz, which sits at the doorstep of this conflict, is the narrow waterway through which a massive share of global oil shipments pass. The fragile ceasefire has already created a push-pull dynamic in oil markets, with traders pricing in both the possibility of a permanent peace deal and the risk of a ceasefire collapse.

https://cryptobriefing.com/iran-qatar-talks-pakistan-mediating-war/

But if Netanyahu doesn’t get the nuclear deal he wants, the deal is always off, war is back on.

Tehran has also not agreed to hand over its uranium stockpile, with a source telling the news agency that this is not part of the preliminary agreement with the US.

Source: The Independent

Iran-US war latest: Tehran brands Trump ‘inconsistent with reality’ after he announces peace deal is ‘largely negotiated’

Trump said the deal included reopening the Strait of Hormuz, adding that the details would be announced “shortly”

Stuti Mishra & Holly BancroftSunday 24 May 2026 11:20 BST

………………

Trump says peace deal with Iran ‘largely negotiated’ including Strait of Hormuz reopening

Donald Trump has said that a deal with Iran, including reopening the Strait of Hormuz, has been “largely negotiated”, with leaks of the draft details showing significant progress has been made.

The US president said on Saturday that the final aspects and details of the deal are being discussed and will be announced “shortly” but was not more specific about the timetable for a further announcement.

Reported details include the US lifting its blockade on Iran ships and issuing some sanction waivers to allow Iran to sell oil freely. The US has also agreed to negotiate over the lifting of sanctions and unfreezing of Iranian funds. In exchange, Iran will reopen the Strait of Hormuz, among other commitments.

Iran’s Fars news agency reported that it would remain under Iran’s management and ‌dismissed Trump’s announcement of reopening the Strait ⁠as “incomplete ⁠and inconsistent ‌with reality.”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-us-war-live-trump-uranium-peace-deal-hormuz-b2982366.html

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Ben Givr and thuggish pals ‘welcome’ 430 Gaza flotilla activists

Gaza flotilla activists allege sexual assault and rape in Israeli detention

Israeli prison service denies claims of abuse during detention of 430 people trying to take aid to Palestinians

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/22/gaza-flotilla-activists-allege-sexual-assault-and-in-israeli-detention

Nobody stopped this disgusting behaviour of Ben Givr and his gang of extremists:

Ben Gvir posts video of himself taunting bound and detained Gaza flotilla activists, sparks global outcry

Clip shows minister waving Israeli flag as activists forced to kneel on ground and national anthem blasts over loudspeaker; Italy, France summon Israeli envoys over treatment of their citizens

By  and  Follow
20 May 2026, 5:24 pmUpdated: 21 May 2026, 3:20 am

https://www.timesofisrael.com/ben-gvir-posts-video-of-himself-taunting-bound-and-detained-gaza-flotilla-activists/

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Inciting fear through vindictive prosecutions

I am reproducing Michael D Sellers analysis of the recent Abrego Garcis indictment, Substack, May 23, 2026

Judge Dismisses Abrego Garcia Indictment, Finds Case Tainted by Vindictive Prosecution

Michael Sellers

A federal judge in Tennessee has dismissed the criminal indictment against Kilmar Abrego Garcia, ruling that the government failed to overcome the appearance that it prosecuted him because he successfully challenged his wrongful removal to El Salvador.

In a 31-page written ruling, U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw Jr. granted Abrego Garcia’s motion to dismiss the indictment on vindictive-prosecution grounds. The indictment had charged Abrego Garcia with conspiring to transport undocumented immigrants between 2016 and 2025, and with transporting undocumented immigrants during a November 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee.

The ruling does not decide whether Abrego Garcia committed the conduct alleged in the indictment. Nor does it hold that the government lacked evidence. The judge’s concern was different: whether the government brought the criminal case for a constitutionally improper reason after Abrego Garcia’s lawsuit forced the executive branch to confront its obligation to return him to the United States.

A fuirther distinction is central to understanding the ruling. Judge Crenshaw did not find what lawyers call “actual vindictiveness,” which usually requires direct proof that prosecutors acted to punish a defendant for exercising legal rights. Instead, he found that the objective facts created a presumption of vindictiveness — and that the government failed to rebut that presumption.

The opinion turns on a sequence of events. Abrego Garcia was removed to El Salvador in March 2025 because of what the government later described as an “administrative error.” He challenged that removal in federal court. The district court, the Fourth Circuit, and then the Supreme Court all required the executive branch to facilitate his return. Days after the Supreme Court affirmed that obligation, Homeland Security reopened a previously closed investigation into a 2022 Tennessee traffic stop. Within weeks, the Justice Department had built a criminal case and obtained an indictment.

That is the core of the ruling. The judge concluded that, absent Abrego Garcia’s successful lawsuit challenging his removal, the government would not have brought this prosecution. The opinion is therefore not just about the sufficiency of the evidence in a human-smuggling case. It is about whether the government used a criminal indictment to solve the political and legal problem created by an unlawful deportation.

It’s an important ruling. Following is a deeper look at what the judge found, and why, based on a close reading of the full 31 page ruling.

The Timeline Was the Case

Judge Crenshaw opened the opinion with a warning from former Attorney General Robert Jackson about the danger of prosecutors who “pick people that he thinks he should get, rather than pick cases that need to be prosecuted.” Crenshaw then added: “That is the situation here.”

The facts that drove him to that conclusion are mostly chronological.

The underlying traffic stop happened on November 30, 2022. Abrego Garcia was driving a vehicle in Tennessee that was registered to Jose Ramon Hernandez-Reyes, a man in Texas who had previously been convicted of aiding and abetting the illegal transportation of aliens. HSI-Baltimore opened an investigation in December 2022.

Then the case sat.

More than two years later, on March 15, 2025, the government removed Abrego Garcia to El Salvador. On March 24, he challenged that removal in federal court in Maryland. On April 1, HSI-Baltimore closed the investigation into the 2022 traffic stop, stating that investigators had “accomplished all goals for this case” and that “no further investigative efforts” would be attributed to it.

That closure mattered. It showed that, at that point, the government’s posture was: remove Abrego Garcia, do not prosecute him.

Then the courts intervened.

On April 4, Judge Paula Xinis ordered the executive branch to facilitate Abrego Garcia’s return. On April 7, the Fourth Circuit denied a stay. On April 10, the Supreme Court affirmed that the government had to “facilitate” his return. That same day, Judge Xinis clarified that the executive branch had to take “all available steps” to facilitate his return “as soon as possible.” The next day, she found that the government had made “no meaningful effort to comply” and ordered daily reports.

Six days later, on April 17, HSI-Baltimore reopened the closed investigation. The next day, DHS issued a press release about the 2022 traffic stop. Three days later, the Tennessee Star published an article about the stop. Soon after, investigators began interviewing Hernandez-Reyes, who became the government’s key witness against Abrego Garcia. By May 21, Abrego Garcia had been indicted.

The judge did not treat this as coincidence. He viewed the reopening of the closed investigation as the point at which the case became tainted.

That does not mean he found that every later investigative step was fabricated or improper in isolation. His point was more structural. Once the government reopened the case in response to Abrego Garcia’s court victory, evidence gathered through that reopening could not be used to explain away the retaliatory taint. It was the product of the tainted decision.

This is the opinion’s basic logic: the government was under court order to bring Abrego Garcia back; almost immediately, it revived a dormant criminal matter; it then used that revived matter to indict him and bring him back in a posture that recast the story from unlawful deportation to criminal prosecution.

The Government’s “New Evidence” Argument Did Not Solve the Problem

The government’s first major answer was that the reopened investigation produced new evidence. That evidence included witness statements, phone data, license-plate reader data, and corroboration from other sources.

Judge Crenshaw rejected that argument, but not because he thought the evidence was necessarily irrelevant. He rejected it because it did not answer the constitutional question.

Some of the evidence was not new in any meaningful sense. The Tennessee traffic stop happened in 2022. The body-camera video existed in 2022. The Tennessee Highway Patrol report existed in 2022. The fact that the vehicle was registered to Hernandez-Reyes was known at the time. If the government wanted to build a federal human-smuggling case from that stop, the judge reasoned, it could have pursued that evidence long before April 2025.

The more important issue was Hernandez-Reyes.

The government treated Hernandez-Reyes’ cooperation as new evidence that justified the indictment. The judge saw it differently. Hernandez-Reyes became available because the government reopened the investigation after Abrego Garcia’s lawsuit succeeded. By the time then-Acting U.S. Attorney Robert McGuire became involved, HSI had already identified and interviewed Hernandez-Reyes twice, including once under a proffer agreement.

Crenshaw’s sharpest formulation was that McGuire did not discover Hernandez-Reyes; Main Justice official Aakash Singh “delivered him.”

That line matters because it exposes the flaw in the government’s theory. The government was arguing, in effect: we indicted because we found evidence. The judge’s response was: you found the evidence because you reopened the investigation for a retaliatory reason.

Later corroboration did not cure the problem either. McGuire began drafting a charging document on April 29, before HSI-Nashville had even formally opened its own investigation on May 2. Some of the later evidence, including additional witness interviews and license-plate reader data, came after the charging process was already underway.

To Crenshaw, that meant the later evidence confirmed a decision already in motion rather than objectively explaining why the government changed course. The relevant shift was not simply from “less evidence” to “more evidence.” It was from “remove and do not prosecute” to “prosecute and do not remove.” The government never adequately explained that shift.

Main Justice Was Running the Case

The second major government argument was that McGuire independently decided to prosecute Abrego Garcia based on the evidence.

Crenshaw did not accept that.

This is one of the most important parts of the opinion because it moves the case beyond timing alone. The judge found that Main Justice, through Aakash Singh, was closely involved in the prosecution from the beginning.

Singh was an Associate Deputy Attorney General in the Office of the Deputy Attorney General. He reported to Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. On April 27, the same day HSI-Nashville first contacted McGuire about the traffic stop, Singh emailed McGuire and other U.S. Attorneys requesting time to discuss Hernandez-Reyes. According to the judge, this was the first time McGuire had heard of Hernandez-Reyes.

The next morning, an HSI official sent the Tennessee Highway Patrol report directly to Singh. McGuire was not copied. Soon after, Singh was asking how close the team was to charging, whether they had a sense of potential charges, and whether they could prepare a draft complaint. McGuire responded by saying the case was his “highest priority” and that he wanted “the high command looped in.”

Those are not the judge’s only data points. On May 17, as the indictment approached, a Justice Department task force official told Singh that the team was on track to present the indictment on May 21 and asked whether anything had changed on that timeline. Singh responded: “Let’s keep close hold until we get clearance.”

The government tried to interpret that narrowly, arguing that any “clearance” related only to whether the indictment would be sealed. Crenshaw rejected that as self-serving. He read the exchange as evidence that Main Justice retained control over the charging process “down to the finish line.”

That finding became even more significant because of Blanche’s public statement. According to the opinion, Blanche said the government began “investigating” Abrego Garcia after a Maryland judge “questioned” the deportation decision. Blanche did not testify at the evidentiary hearing, so that statement went unrebutted.

This is how the judge connected the dots: Blanche’s statement tied the reopened investigation to Abrego Garcia’s successful lawsuit; Singh’s hands-on role tied Main Justice to the indictment; and the indictment then allowed the executive branch to return Abrego Garcia to the United States under criminal process rather than simply comply with Judge Xinis’s order.

The government wanted the court to focus on McGuire’s subjective belief that the evidence supported prosecution. Crenshaw said that was not enough. The legal question was not whether McGuire personally believed Abrego Garcia had committed a crime. It was whether objective facts rebutted the presumption that the case had been brought for a retaliatory reason.

The Internal Warning Was Hard to Ignore

The opinion also places weight on an internal warning from within the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Ben Schrader, then the Criminal Division Chief in the Middle District of Tennessee, prepared a memorandum recommending against charging Abrego Garcia. He asked that the memo be sent to relevant officials in Washington. McGuire acknowledged that vindictive prosecution concerns were “in the water” and that Schrader had specifically raised them.

McGuire proceeded anyway. Schrader resigned the day of the indictment, effective immediately.

Crenshaw did not hold that Schrader’s warning or resignation alone proved vindictiveness. But he clearly treated the episode as important. It showed that the concern was not merely a litigation strategy developed after the fact by defense lawyers. Someone inside the office saw the problem before indictment and recommended against proceeding.

The government’s post-hearing brief did not meaningfully address Schrader’s recommendation. Crenshaw found that omission telling. In the conclusion of the opinion, he wrote that what the government chose not to address was as important as what it did. It barely addressed Blanche. It mentioned the Supreme Court ruling only once, in a footnote. It framed Singh mostly as a passive recipient of updates. And it did not address Schrader’s recommendation against charging at all.

That failure went to the heart of the ruling. Once the court found a presumption of vindictiveness, the government had the burden to rebut it with objective, nonretaliatory explanations. The judge’s view was that the government largely failed to engage the evidence that created the presumption in the first place.

The Actual Evidence

This ruling is not about the factual evidence. But there is, in fact, substantial factual evidence that is not being widely reported. Most of this evidence was developed by the government after they originall dropped the case.

  1. The 2022 traffic-stop materials — the THP report, body-camera video, and registration showing the car was tied to Hernandez-Reyes, a previously convicted trafficker. The judge’s key point was that all of this existed in 2022 and could have been pursued then.
  2. Hernandez-Reyes’ cooperation — after the case was reopened in April 2025, HSI-Birmingham interviewed Hernandez-Reyes. He said he knew Abrego Garcia, wanted “a lawyer and some paper” in exchange for helping, and later stated under a proffer that he had hired Abrego to transport undocumented immigrants. According to Hernandez-Reyes, Abrego transported six to eight people per trip, roughly 600 people per year, and was paid $1,300, $1,500, or $1,700 per trip — allegedly totaling $90,000 to $96,000 per year.
  3. Corroborating evidence developed after reopening — the government also pointed to phone data, license-plate reader data, additional witnesses, and interviews with another cooperating witness, CC-2, who allegedly corroborated Hernandez-Reyes. But Crenshaw found much of this came after the tainted reopening and, in some cases, after McGuire had already begun drafting charging documents.

What the Ruling Means

The government will appeal the ruling. But whatever happens on appeal, Judge Crenshaw’s opinion is an unusually detailed account of how a criminal prosecution can become constitutionally suspect even when the government has evidence.

It turns on sequence, motive, and institutional power.

The executive branch removed Abrego Garcia. Courts ordered the executive branch to facilitate his return. The government then revived a closed criminal investigation, publicly emphasized the old traffic stop, developed a cooperating witness, involved Main Justice closely in the charging process, pushed past an internal warning, and returned Abrego Garcia only after obtaining an indictment.

Judge Crenshaw’s conclusion was that this was not enough to rebut the appearance that the prosecution was brought because Abrego Garcia had successfully exercised his rights.

Near the end of the opinion, the judge returned to Robert Jackson’s warning about prosecutors who select a person and then search for an offense. “The evidence before this Court sadly reflects an abuse of prosecuting power,” Crenshaw wrote.

That is why this ruling matters beyond Abrego Garcia. The court did not merely find that the government made a litigation mistake. It found that the machinery of criminal prosecution had been used to answer a political and legal embarrassment.

And in a constitutional system, that is supposed to be the line. On appeal, we will see if it holds.


It’s been awhile since we went deep into the weeds on a legal ruling, but I felt it was warranted in this case as we’ve been following it for more than a year now. The judge’s ruling is a great pleasure to read and absorb — excellent clarity of thought on display. I enjoyed working through it. Thanks for your support to the work — it matters, and I appreciate it.

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London Metropolitan Police blocked from contracting with Palantir

Sadiq Khan refuses to approve £50m Met Police deal with Palantir

May 21, 2026 17:32

ByKumail Jaffer (Local Democracy Reporter)

London mayor Sadiq Khan. Credit: Noah Vickers/Local Democracy Reporting Service

City Hall has blocked a £50million contract between the Met Police and US tech company Palantir over a “clear and serious breach” of procurement rules.

https://harrowonline.org/2026/05/21/sadiq-khan-refuses-to-approve-50m-met-police-deal-with-palantir/

Met. Police disappointed:

Scotland Yard had been in talks about using Palantir’s artificial intelligence technology to automate intelligence analysis in criminal investigations, The Guardian reported in April.

The company, founded by tech magnate Peter Thiel, a prominent donor to US President Donald Trump, holds contracts with other UK public sector bodies.

The Metropolitan Police said the decision to stop the deal going ahead prevents it from using technology already available to the NHS, the Ministry of Defence and other police forces.

It also argued that bringing in such technology is “crucial” at a time when a financial shortfall means it faces reducing the workforce.

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/met-police-officers-cuts-palantir-ai-contract-row-sadiq-khan-b1283262.html

Palantir responding:

“right call”.

“Palantir does not reflect the values of our city,” said Allin-Khan. “We must maintain public trust and ensure that any tech partnerships truly serve the safety and rights of Londoners.”

Lewis said: “Other mayors and police and crime commissioners should take note and keep Palantir out of policing.”

But Peter Kyle, the business secretary, said Palantir could do things “no one else does around the world at the moment, and that’s something that I am really taken with”.

Kyle, who is among Labour ministers who have been lobbied by Palantir, according to records of ministerial meetings, called on the London mayor to “come out and explain” his “big decision”.

Scotland Yard appointed Palantir initially on a separate deal worth less than £500,000, which meant it did not have to be scrutinised by the mayor. That deal was to use AI to detect rogue officers by scanning to see how they might be abusing rosters and other systems.

The body that represents rank and file officers, the Metropolitan Police Federation, described it as a “big brother” system and criticised the “unchecked use of a controversial AI provider to spy on every single one of our colleagues”.

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/may/22/palantir-hits-back-sadiq-khan-contract-met-police-blocked

See one of my earlier blogs on Lord Mandelson and Palantir:

https://borderslynn.com/2026/04/20/national-security-of-the-uk-has-been-at-risk-for-far-too-long/

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