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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Data Centers planned by US in Greenland

Project Greenland:

Ex-Trump Official Plans 1.5GW Greenland Data Center

Former Trump aide Drew Horn targets massive Arctic facility amid AI infrastructure race

by The Tech Buzz

PUBLISHED: Fri, Jan 23, 2026, 4:27 PM UTC | UPDATED: Tue, May 19, 2026, 7:21 PM UTC

https://www.techbuzz.ai/articles/ex-trump-official-plans-1-5gw-greenland-data-center

Another report:

As Trump eyes Greenland, former aide pushes for billion-dollar AI data center in Arctic Island — Here’s all we know

Aiming to reach 300 MW operation by mid-2027 and expand to 1.5 GW by 2028-end, the Greenland AI data centre is being positioned as the solution to world’s artificial intelligence expansion related power requirements.

Jocelyn Fernandes

Updated24 Jan 2026, 10:33 AM IST

https://www.livemint.com/news/world/donald-trump-eye-greenland-us-former-aide-drew-horn-billion-dollar-push-ai-infra-data-centre-critical-mineral-rare-earth-11769227090667.html

And

These Billionaires Bet Big On Greenland—After Trump Took Interest

ByMartina Di Licosa,Reporter. Martina Di Licosa is a reporter covering consumer businessesFollow AuthorJan 09, 2026, 06:30am ESTJan 21, 2026, 03:09pm EST

https://www.forbes.com/sites/martinadilicosa/2026/01/09/these-billionaires-bet-big-on-greenland-after-trump-took-interest/

And

Who owns Greenland?

Denmark’s claim is unimpeachable. In the 1951 Defense of Greenland Agreement with Denmark, the US unambiguously recognizes ‘the sovereignty of the Kingdom of Denmark’ over Greenland.

Explainer

Published 9 January 2026 —

https://www.chathamhouse.org/2026/01/who-owns-greenland

And

Gov. Jeff Landry Gets Magnificently Dissed By Kids In Greenland: NY Times Report

That was cold, Governor.

By Ron Dicker

20/05/2026 04:11pm BST

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry (R) got gumbo on his face during an uninvited visit to Greenland, according to The New York Times.

Landry, President Donald Trump’s special envoy to the semiautonomous Arctic island, was strolling through the capital city of Nuuk on Sunday when one resident gave him the finger, the newspaper reported. But that wasn’t the worst indignity he suffered, apparently.

“After he offered some MAGA hats to Greenlandic children, several shook their heads,” the Times wrote.

There were other signs that Landry’s diplomatic visit wasn’t fully connecting.

In an exchange caught on video, Landry also asked a child if he wanted to take a picture of him. “No,” the youngster seemed to reply.

The state leader even resorted to trying to win over youngsters with the promise of baked goods.

“If you come to Louisiana and you come to the governor’s mansion, [you can have] all the chocolate chip cookies you can eat,” he said in another clip making the rounds.

From Huffingtonpost.com

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1909 Greenland: Matthew Henson, first person to reach North Pole

SWmaps.com

From Black History online:

The First Person to Reach The North Pole Was a Black Man

Matthew Henson, an African American explorer who was born in Charles County Maryland on August 8, 1866, was the first person in history to reach the North Pole.

At a young age, he was orphaned and lived with his aunt in Washington DC. However, he quit school in order to be a sailor. At the age of 12, he joined Captain Child’s crew on the merchant ship Katie Hinds traveling around the world for six years. He became an expert at charting and navigating.

At age of 20, Henson was discovered by an explorer named Robert E. Peary, who was impressed with the breadth of his geographical knowledge and experience. As a result, Peary invited Henson to join him for an expedition designed to investigate the feasibility of a canal linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans through Nicaragua. After that expedition, Henson and Peary undertook seven more expeditions with the goal of becoming the first to reach the North Pole, which was Peary’s dream.

Because of how difficult the mission was, they failed six times. Nevertheless, this didn’t stop them from planning the seventh expedition. For it, Henson taught himself how to build sleds, how to master a team of dogs, and how to speak the Inuit language. Henson invested many hours of study to make the corresponding calculations.

All of the hard work and planning paid off because, on April 6, 1909, Matthew Henson arrived at the North Pole and planted the American flag. He arrived 45 minutes ahead of Peary whose progress was a lot slower because he lost several toes to frostbite.

Sadly, it wasn’t until more than 30 years later in 1945 that Henson received the Navy Medal from Congress, and it wasn’t until 1961 that a plaque was erected in his honor at the State House at Annapolis, Maryland.

Henson died in the Bronx, New York City on March 9, 1955, at the age of 88. In 1988, his remains were moved to Arlington National Cemetery, where he was buried with full honors next to his friend, Robert Peary.

See also detailed description of the dangerous journey to the North Ple at:

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/profile-african-american-north-pole-explorer-matthew-henson

And in recent years a commemorative stamp:

Matthew Henson’s great-granddaughter Aviaq Henson worked with the Greenlandic postal service on the release of this 2009 stamp commemorating the centennial of the African American explorer’s discovery of the North Pole, alongside Commander Robert Peary. Stamp image courtesy POST Greenland. Background photo by Norbert Eisele-Hein/JAI/Corbis

See

https://hakaimagazine.com/article-short/racism-and-race-north-pole/

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Made it, Ma, top of the world!

As Trump seems to be winning tax payers money into his coffers, maybe he feels he is ‘top of the world’ which the character in the famous crime movie shouted:

Encyclopedia Britannica

White Heat

film by Walsh [1949]

 

Lee Pfeiffer

 

Britannica Editors

 

Ask Anything

White Heat, American crime film released in 1949 that is considered the definitive James Cagney vehicle and perhaps the best of the Warner Brothers crime dramas.

Cody Jarrett (played by Cagney) is a cold-blooded killer who has an uncomfortable oedipal relationship with his domineering mother (Margaret Wycherly). When Jarrett learns of her murder while he is in prison, he virtually wrecks the mess hall in a fit of uncontrolled rage. Soon after, he and several other inmates—one of whom is actually an undercover agent (Edmond O’Brien)—escape from prison. After Jarrett’s gang decides to rob a chemical factory, the agent alerts the police to their plans. In the ensuing gunfight, Jarrett becomes cornered atop an oil-refinery tank. He screams, “Made it, Ma! Top of the world!” as he unloads his gun into the tank, and he dies in the resulting inferno

https://www.britannica.com/topic/White-Heat

Trump and the IRS:

3 Key Takeaways From Trump’s IRS Settlement & Tax Immunity Controversy

ByNathan Goldman,Contributor. Nathan Goldman is a tax prof. at NC State Univ.Follow Author

May 20, 2026, 03:36am EDT

Trump

Like any other taxpayer, the United States President must file their tax return and pay taxes on their income. However, the outcome of Trump’s recently settled lawsuit may put that into question for Trump and his family. According to CNBCthe lawsuit settlement contains a provision that Trump and his family’s past tax returns cannot be prosecuted, meaning that whatever was paid cannot be challenged by the IRS. This provision puts a select few people in a rare category of individuals who are immune to taxation.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/nathangoldman/2026/05/20/3-key-takeaways-from-trumps-irs-settlement–tax-immunity-controversy/

Funding J6ers:

Todd Blanche gets feisty over Trump’s $1.7B ‘slush fund’ and won’t tell Congress if Jan 6 rioters will be paid

Trump’s former criminal defense attorney says ‘anybody can apply’ but refuses to rule out taxpayer money for people who assaulted police

Alex Woodward in New YorkTuesday 19 May 2026 15:34 BST

Todd Blanche refuses to rule out J6ers who assaulted police getting slush fund payouts

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche won’t commit to denying million-dollar payouts to January 6 rioters who assaulted law enforcement officers and stormed the Capitol after the Department of Justice announced a $1.7 billion fund to compensate Donald Trump’s allies.

Donors to the president’s campaign are also not barred from applying for taxpayer money from the newly created fund open to people who claim to be victims of government “weaponization,” Blanche said Tuesday.

“Anybody in this country is eligible to apply if they believe they were victims,” he told the Senate Appropriations Committee as he seeks to justify a Justice Department budget that slashes funding for domestic violence survivors.

……………

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche hasn’t ruled out January 6 rioters and Donald Trump’s donors from receiving taxpayer funds from what critics have called a $1.7 billion ‘slush fund’ for the president’s allies
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche hasn’t ruled out January 6 rioters and Donald Trump’s donors from receiving taxpayer funds from what critics have called a $1.7 billion ‘slush fund’ for the president’s allies (Getty Images)

Blanche would not say whether a rioter pardoned by Trump who was later found guilty of five counts related to sex crimes against children would be eligible for a payout.

“You can’t tell us today that this individual would not be eligible for a payout from this fund,” Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen told him.

“I find that obscene,” he said.

Blanche, Trump’s former criminal defense attorney, is overseeing the nation’s top law enforcement agency after the president ousted Pam Bondi following her 14 months on the job. The DOJ announced the fund on Monday as part of a settlement after Trump abandoned his $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS.

“The machinery of government should never be weaponized against any American, and it is this department’s intention to make right the wrongs that were previously done while ensuring this never happens again,” Blanche said Monday.

The fund opens a “lawful process for victims of lawfare and weaponization to be heard and seek redress,” he said.

A five-member commission — with members appointed by Blanche — will manage the fund.

Trump told reporters on Monday that who gets paid will be “dependent on a committee” made up of “very talented people, very highly respected people.”

The administration’s announcement offered few details about how the fund would disburse money to eligible victims, or who would even be eligible.

But the list of recipients will remain “confidential,” Blanche told senators Tuesday.

The proposal has alarmed critics and watchdog groups who fear the Trump administration is effectively handing American taxpayers’ dollars to the president’s allies after an unprecedented series of pardons and commutations for his supporters.

Brian Morrissey, the general counsel of the Treasury Department, resigned hours after the fund was announced.

“The record is crystal clear. You are still acting as the president’s personal lawyer,” Van Hollen told Blanche Tuesday. “It’s hard to justify giving you any funds.”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/todd-blanche-trump-fund-jan-6-rioters-b2979583.html

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911 calls can get you deported

National

ICE is giving local police big money to help with immigration enforcement

May 5, 2026

https://www.npr.org/2026/05/05/nx-s1-5805996/ice-pays-local-police-incentives-immigration

911 not trusted now:

The New Republic

Breaking News

from Washington and beyond

Edith Olmsted

May 11, 2026/12:45 p.m.

People Are Calling 911—Only to End Up in ICE’s Clutches

Local law enforcement agencies are cooperating with Donald Trump.

Immigrationan agents wear vests that say "ICE police" and "ERO"

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Under President Donald Trump’s strict immigration policies, immigrants who call 911 are being detained, and those who are too afraid to call are dying as a result.

In December, Axel Sanchez Toledo was violently arrested by police officers after he called 911 to request a welfare check on his 4-year-old daughter after hearing she’d fallen sick while staying with his ex-girlfriend, The Marshall Project reported Monday.

Sanchez Toledo greeted two officers from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office with his girlfriend and their infant son. One of the officers took Sanchez Toledo’s ID and retreated back to the patrol car. When he returned, he accused Sanchez Toledo of being undocumented, and said he was being detained for ICE.

Police body camera footage obtained by The Marshall Project showed Sanchez Toledo take off running. The two deputies pursued him, shocking him with a Taser, and kicking and tackling him while his girlfriend sobbed. As Sanchez Toledo was pinned to the ground, he moaned: “Please, guys, I’m not a criminal,” insisting he had documentation. (His lawyer confirmed to The Marshall Project that he had a pending asylum case.) “I don’t want to go,” he begged.

“Too fucking bad now!” one deputy screamed.

Sanchez Toledo was charged with resisting arrest. Those charges were dropped on April 29. He currently remains in ICE custody.

The officers who arrested Sanchez Toledo were part of the sheriff’s office 287(g) Task Force, through an agreement that grants state and local law enforcement to operate with federal immigration powers in return for reimbursements and other incentives.

Of the 1,500 officers at the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, only 150 are deputized to make immigration arrests. But between September 2025 and March, they have been responsible for arresting 60 immigrants per month, the highest arrest rate in the state, and have received almost $1 million for their work, according to The Marshall Project. More than 1,100 law enforcement agencies across the country have signed 287(g) agreements.

These bleeding boundaries between state and local enforcement, combined with Trump’s sweeping deportation efforts, are actively putting people in danger.

The family of a Virginia woman who died after she was allegedly assaulted by her partner are claiming the woman was afraid to report her domestic abuse to the police over concerns she’d be detained over her immigration status, according to NBC Washington. The Tahirih Justice Center, a nonprofit that supports immigrants fleeing gender-based violence, told the outlet that 76 percent of its clients were afraid to go to the police.

Law enforcement’s collaboration with federal immigration enforcement has eroded many immigrants’ sense of safety and their reliance on the police. In another story, one asylum-seeker told The Washington Post she’d been contacted by a man who assaulted her at a previous job. But since immigration agents had raided her workplace and started sweeping up neighbors, she said she wouldn’t consider calling law enforcement if anything happened to her.

https://newrepublic.com/post/210244/people-call-911-ice-arrest

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Trump’s personal gains after trip to China

Trump Bought Boeing Stock, Then Announced New Order for 200 Planes

Rich Duprey

Fri, May 15, 2026 at 5:31 PM GMT+1 5 min read

https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/stocks/articles/trump-bought-boeing-stock-then-announced-new-order-for-200-planes-163147155.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9kdWNrZHVja2dvLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAJGPM3NfT36WoS6VihHAOEHBY6Bq88E7cirVzQ6v25Tf2QcWC_WP5paZIY4ZsLxAm0bquCViGrwmae2gtwKw4L1KH0P1n1FzhpvSzlHYPsA9MWvxt0zunzZjVrPb47lUlBE2F6mPuwkV41tIMpZ-yAgFVor7CScxBwewRs5mAuya

Keeping the Piggy bank full:

Trump Bought Palantir Stock Before Praising It on Truth Social, Ethics Records Show

President Donald Trump purchased shares of AI software company Palantir Technologies weeks before publicly endorsing the stock on his Truth Social platform, according to financial disclosure records released this week by the U.S. Office of Government Ethics.

 

The documents show Trump made between $247,008 and $630,000 worth of Palantir purchases during the first quarter of 2026. In March alone, he made at least seven separate purchases of the stock totaling as much as $530,000.

 

The following month, Trump praised Palantir on Truth Social by name and ticker symbol as shares were experiencing their worst week in more than a year, a stretch during which the software selloff accelerated amid the Iran war and famed short-seller Michael Burry had taken aim at the company.

 

“Palantir Technologies (PLTR) has proven to have great war fighting capabilities and equipment,” Trump wrote on the platform at the time. “Just ask our enemies!!!”

 

The OGE filings also show Trump sold as much as $5 million worth of Palantir on Feb. 10, with several additional sales of the stock made over roughly the following two weeks.

https://www.techechelon.com/post/trump-bought-palantir-stock-before-praising-it-on-truth-social-ethics-records-show

On the way to China:

Trump Discloses Large Stock Purchases in Nvidia, Robinhood, Palantir and Other Tech Firms

By: Matthew Kerr, Quiver Data AnalystPosted: 3 days, 16 hours ago / May 14, 2026 3:26 p.m. UTC

NVDAHOODPLTR

Quiver Data Analyst

President Donald Trump just disclosed thousands of stock transactions through Office of Government Ethics filings, including purchases of Nvidia ($NVDA)Robinhood ($HOOD)Boeing ($BA)SanDisk ($SNDK), and GE Aerospace ($GE)

He bought up to $5 million of stock in Dell Technologies ($DELL) on February 10th. It has risen 96% since then.

He bought stock in Intel ($INTC) on March 2nd. It has risen 150% since then.

Several disclosed trades occurred before later administration actions, trade negotiations, or corporate developments tied to AI, defense, crypto, and brokerage markets.

  • To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time Trump has actively traded individual stock while in office.
  • Nvidia purchases were made before CEO Jensen Huang joined Trump’s China trip, where AI chip exports and semiconductor policy were expected to be discussed.
  • Robinhood purchases happened while investors are paying attention close to the administration-backed Trump Accounts program, where Robinhood is serving as brokerage and initial trustee.
  • Palantir, GE Aerospace, Boeing, and other defense-linked purchases happened while there is heightened defense-sector focus tied to the Iran conflict and expanding Pentagon procurement plans.
  • Coinbase and Robinhood trades also stand out as the administration advances crypto and retail-investing policy initiatives.
  • Intel, SanDisk, Dell, and other semiconductor or AI-infrastructure names were made ahead of renewed U.S.-China trade negotiations and AI supply-chain announcements.

https://www.quiverquant.com/news/Trump+Discloses+Large+Stock+Purchases+in+Nvidia%2C+Robinhood%2C+Palantir+and+Other+Tech+Firms

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South of the border, down Mexico way: CIA?

This article caught my eye:

Cartel car bomb: the CIA is fighting Trump’s colonial shadow war in Mexico

 by Joe Glenton

 13 May 2026

The CIA used a car bomb to kill a mid-level cartel leader in Mexico’s capital, insiders claim. The US foreign intelligence agency is pursuing clandestine operations as part of president Donald Trump’s war on so-called ‘narco-terrorists’. In reality, the operations are about extending US control over the Americas.

Cartel boss Francisco Beltran was killed by an explosion on 28 March:

Video and pictures of the attack on March 28 show a quick burst of flames with the car continuing to roll forward, drifting off the highway.

The CIA has called accusations it was involved “false and salacious reporting”, which

serves as nothing more than a PR campaign for the cartels and puts American lives at risk.

Yet two CIA officers were killed in Mexico in April 2026. They were returning from a raid on a drugs lab in Chihuahua.

CNN said of the recent car bombing:

Mexican authorities have maintained extreme secrecy around the explosion, but multiple sources tell CNN that the attack was a targeted assassination, facilitated by CIA operations officers. An explosive device had been hidden inside the vehicle, the State of Mexico’s Attorney General told CNN.

Sowing chaos in Mexico

The US outlet quoted several figures familiar with the operation. They contradicted the official CIA response.

One said:

The lethality of their operations has been seriously ramped up. It’s a significant expansion of the kind of thing the CIA has been willing to do inside Mexico.

A former CIA officer said the US was trying to sow chaos through unattributable actions:

They definitely wanted this incident to create the question in everyone’s mind of, ‘Who did this?’

While Mexican journalist Jose Cardenas commented:

We have been living in anarchic war for many months in Sinaloa. But attacks like this, if confirmed, in an area near the country’s capital, well, I have never heard of anything similar.

In February, the killing of a senior cartel boss Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes led to widespread fighting across several Mexican states. Mexican security forces reportedly pulled the trigger, but CIA intelligence supported the operation. Here is the Canary report on that mission.

Conflating drug trafficking and terrorism

The US has increasingly tried to frame drug trafficking in the same category as terrorism. The new US counter-terrorism strategy reaffirms this:

Last year, I rightfully designated the deadly cartels as terrorist organizations, and began using the strength and power of the U.S. military to stop and destroy their operations.

This approach was also used to justify the 3 January attack on Venezuela. That action saw president Nicolas Maduro kidnapped and taken to New York for trial. The same narrative is still being used to justify illegal drones strikes on boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific. To date, 193 people have been killed at sea since September 2025.

As the Canary reported on 6 January:

The US justice department classified the Cartel De Los Soles (Cartel of the Suns) alongside ISIS and Al-Qaeda in November. 43 days later, the US has effectively admitted the organisation does not exist – at least not as a cartel in any conventional sense.

Adding:

The fact is, Cartel De Los Soles was always shorthand for high-level government corruption in Venezuela. It’s use goes back to the 1990s. The ‘suns’ refer to a rank insignia worn by grifting senior military officials. Which means the US classified a slang term in the same category as actual terror groups.

In reality, the Trump administration is aggressively pursuing hemispheric control. One writer has described this as building a ‘homeland empire’.

Trump’s homeland empire

Trump’s plan is driven by US decline, but also the increasing synergy between law enforcement, military and intelligence aims. This process is powered by the fascistic impulses of the US war on terror.

Historian Nikhil Pal Singh warned in a recent piece for Equator:

familiar analytical frameworks which rely on the distinction between foreign and domestic realms, normality and legality, policing and war, cannot provide the ‘world picture’ we need to grasp what’s happening here.

Instead, Trump:

conflates immigrants, drugs and free trade as sources of weakness coming from outside, “poisoning the blood of our country”.

Ultimately, Singh argued, Trump has combined:

the archaic geopolitics of a settler empire to the modern legal frameworks devised by his liberal predecessors.

US operations in South America are continuing under the name ‘Operation Total Extermination’. CanadaCuba and Greenland have all been threatened with intervention or annexation. If not for the disastrous Iran war, Trump might already have acted. US rhetoric about continental politics has centred on drugs. But scratch the surface and you’ll find the same old colonial ambitions.

Featured image via N+

https://www.thecanary.co/global/world-analysis/2026/05/13/cartel-car-bomb/

Venezuela, 51st State?

Trump’s talk of 51st US state met with near-silence in Venezuela

By  REGINA GARCIA CANO and JUAN PABLO ARRAEZUpdated 2:16 PM BST, May 14, 2026

Leer en español

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Twice this week, U.S. President Donald Trump has expressed interest in turning Venezuela into his country’s 51st state. The latest came via a Truth Social post Tuesday with a map showing the South American country filled with the U.S. flag.

Previous statements doubting Venezuela’s sovereignty over the past 25 years have been met with immediate derision from senior government officials, including the president. The ruling party even organized demonstrations in the capital, Caracas, as recently as Jan. 3, hours after then-President Nicolás Maduro was captured by the U.S., that included chants of “Gringo go home.” This time around, however, the government has mostly kept quiet, save for a brief statement to reporters Monday from acting President Delcy Rodríguez.

The approach demonstrates the balance Rodríguez must strike between external and internal politics following the January U.S. military attack in Caracas. The Trump administration has since implemented a phased plan to try to turn around the crisis-wrecked country and has forced Rodríguez’s political movement, Chavismo, to abandon the anti-U.S. sentiment that long accompanied its teachings.

“This is probably the most public and sharp manifestation of the government’s transactional, self-survival approach above everything else right now, above even that sort of basic tenet of Chavismo,” said Christopher Sabatini, senior fellow for Latin America at the London-based Chatham House think tank. “It’s better that they hold their tongue, not offend the U.S. right now. Why overreact to a ridiculous claim by Donald Trump?”

https://apnews.com/article/venezuela-us-state-trump-rodriguez-chavismo-silence-634203c885803b018ecd8ac012bb249d

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Importance of backup generators for nuclear power plant safety

Drone strike sparks fire on perimeter of UAE’s Barakah nuclear power plant

Authorities say radiation levels remain normal, operations not affected.

(FILES) A handout picture obtained from the media office of the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant on February 13, 2020, shows a view of the power plant in the western Al Dhafra Region -formerly know as the Gharbiya region- of Abu Dhabi on the Gulf coastline about 50 kilometres west of Ruwais.

04:14

UAE reports fire near Barakah nuclear facility after suspected drone attack

By Al Jazeera Staff

Published On 17 May 202617 May 2026

A drone strike has sparked a fire on the perimeter of the Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), raising new concerns over a potential new regional escalation amid a fragile ceasefire between Iran and the United States.

Authorities in Abu Dhabi said the blaze broke out at an electrical generator outside the plant’s inner perimeter in the Al Dhafra region on Sunday. No injuries were reported, and officials said radiation levels remained normal.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/17/drone-strike-sparks-fire-at-uaes-barakah-nuclear-power-plant

So looked up what these generators do:

Diesel generators at nuclear plants serve as emergency backup power sources to ensure the operation of critical systems, such as reactor cooling, during power outages. They help maintain safety and prevent accidents by providing power until the main power source is restored. aggpower.com mtu-solutions.com

So this seems to be a warning that this was a precise targeting which, if push comes to shove, destruction of backup up power may occur leading to nuclear meltdown of the plant.

Any country with nuclear power stations must surely run this risk in conflict situations where current military drones can now be so accurately aimed.

So I asked, how many countries have nuclear power plants?

Answer:

Nuclear power plants operate in 31 countries around the world. These countries generate about a tenth of the world’s electricity from nuclear energy. World Nuclear Association Wikipedia

Here is an extract from a historical list of nuclear power plants hit by Russia:

Search

Ukraine: Current status of nuclear power installations

Published date: 24 April 2026

Chernobyl News brief Radiation safety 

Zaporizhzhia Ukraine

Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Ukraine. Image: Ralf 1969, Wikimedia Commons

Last updated: 24 April 2026

Over four years after the war in Ukraine began, the NEA continues to collect information from verifiable and reliable sources to support its members’ efforts to maintain an understanding of the state of nuclear safety and radiological protection in that country. The OECD has continued to further broaden, deepen and strengthen its engagement and co-operation with Ukraine. The NEA, in partnership with the United Kingdom, has launched an NEA-Ukraine Visiting Experts Programme, which has brought Ukrainian nuclear energy experts to the Agency.

Because our Ukrainian colleagues are faced with a highly uncertain, ever-changing and very challenging situation it is to be expected that obtaining detailed information on a regular basis may not be possible.

Electricity grid

  • The electricity grids of Ukraine and Moldova were successfully synchronised with the Continental European Grid on 16 March 2022.

Nuclear power plants

  • In Ukraine 15 pressurised water reactors of Russian VVER design are operated by the State Enterprise National Nuclear Energy Generating Company “Energoatom” at four plants. These plants operate under nuclear safety regulations implemented by the State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate of Ukraine (SNRIU).

Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has six reactors.

  • 16 April 2026: The Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) lost connection to the 330 kV Ferosplavna-1 backup power line, resulting in a complete loss of off-site power for more than two hours to the plant. Emergency diesel generators ensured continued cooling and other essential safety functions were maintained until the Ferosplavna-1 line was reconnected.
  • 14 April 2026: The ZNPP lost connection to the same Ferosplavna-1 backup power line for approximately 90 minutes, during which time the plant relied on emergency diesel generators to maintain nuclear safety and security functions during the outage. 
  • 24 March 2026: The 750 kV external power line Dniprovska, which provides the electricity needed to ensure continued cooling and other essential safety functions, was disconnected due to military activity.
  • 6 March 2026: The back-up 330kV power line Ferosplavna-1 was reconnected to the ZNPP after repair works were carried out under a local ceasefire brokered by the IAEA.
  • 3 March 2026: The Russian operating entity at the ZNPP announced that IT functions at the plant were to be placed under the jurisdiction of KONSIST-OS, an integrator and IT competence centre of the Electric Power Division of Rosatom.
  • 19 January 2026: The ZNPP’s last remaining back-up 330 kV line, damaged and disconnected as a result of military activity on 2 January, was reconnected. Until its restoration the plant had been entirely dependent on its sole functioning 750 kV line for the electricity it needs to ensure continued cooling and other essential safety functions.
  • 10 February 2025: The ZNPP’s single 330 kV back-up off-site power line was disconnected, reportedly because of military activity.
  • 30 December 2025: Power transmission between the electrical switchyards of the ZNPP and the nearby Zaporizhzhya Thermal Power Plant was restored. The connection is important as it offers a key route for electricity supplied by one of the ZNPP’s two available power lines, a 330 kilovolt (kV) line.
  • 13 December 2025: Both the 750 kV kV external power line Dniprosvska and the 330 kV Ferosplavna-1 backup power line were disconnected, resulting in a complete loss of off-site power for more than two hours to the ZNPP. Emergency diesel generators ensured continued cooling and other essential safety functions were maintained until the external power lines were reconnected.
  • 6 December 2025: The 750 kV external power line Dniprosvska and the back-up external 330 kilovolt (kV) Ferosplavna-1 line supplying the ZNPP were cut at 3:21 local time on 6 December. The electricity required to cool the six reactors in their current cold shutdown state and for other nuclear safety and security functions in ZNPP was provided by on-site emergency diesel generators until external power was restored. The Ferosplavna-1 line was reconnected 29 minutes after power was lost. The Dniprovska main power line was reconnected at 11:13 local time.

https://www.oecd-nea.org/jcms/pl_66130/ukraine-current-status-of-nuclear-power-installations

Extract from Wajeeh Lion re the attack on Barakah:

The Barakah facility, constructed with South Korean technological assistance, supplies approximately 25% of the UAE’s electricity and is the first commercial nuclear power station on the Arabian Peninsula. The targeting of this facility marks an unprecedented escalation, bringing a nuclear reactor site into the crosshairs of offensive proxy warfare.

While official attribution was withheld, the strike exhibits the hallmarks of Iranian strategic signaling, likely executed by proxy forces such as the Houthi movement or the Islamic Resistance in Iraq. The UAE hosts Israeli Iron Dome missile defense batteries and U.S. Air Force assets, including MQ-4C Triton drones, at the nearby Al Dhafra Air Base. By executing a strike that caused psychological disruption without a mass-casualty radiological catastrophe, the orchestrators demonstrated their capability to penetrate Emirati airspace at will. This action operates as extreme kinetic leverage, designed to fracture the Gulf-U.S. coalition by demonstrating that the global energy supply and sovereign infrastructure of American allies will be held hostage if the blockade continues.

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