This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
Finally.
A judge NOW has ordered a man who has six dozen, or more, arrests on his record to remain in jail for allegedly lighting a woman on fire on a train.
Online reports confirm the Chicago man, Lawrence Reed, 50, who is accused of lighting a woman on fire on a Blue Line train, previously was arrested "at least 72 times."
"Judge Laura McNally ordered that Reed must remain behind bars ahead of his trial due to his criminal history. Gee, maybe he should have already been behind bars for one of his other 72 arrests," a social media report said.
At Fox News, a report said Reed, a "repeat offender," was charged federally for taking gasoline and a lighter onto a Chicago Blue Line train and attacking a woman.
Under federal law, he was accused of "committing a terrorist attack or violence against a mass transportation system," the report said.
In a court filing, federal officials determined, "He is simply too dangerous for pre-trial release."
"Defendant's actions and criminal history, as shown below, demonstrate that he is a serious danger to everyone in the community. The state court system has been unable to contain defendant's violent crimes, and federal intervention is now needed," the prosecutors charged.
Eventually, McNally said Reed must be detained until trial.
Authorities have described Reed's actions as "horrific and depraved." They charged the victim was "minding her own business" when Reed ignited her.
Reed, while surveillance images of the attack were shown in court, "smirked," the report said.
Prosecutors, in a court filing, pointed out his arrest record and said, "At least 15 of those arrests were since 2016, with the most recent occurring in August 2025. He has approximately 15 convictions, eight of which were for felony offenses including arson, criminal damage to government supported property valued over $500, drug trafficking, drug possession, and a felony traffic offense."
Prosecutors explained, "Defendant presents a clear danger and persistent threat of terror to the community. Defendant has been leniently treated in state court, including receiving probationary sentences for violent offenses and pre-trial release for a victim-involved crime. In exchange for such lenient treatment, defendant has consistently re-offended and delved further into criminality. Just three months ago, defendant physically attacked someone at MacNeil Hospital, but a judge ordered him released from custody pending trial. Undeterred, defendant, on Monday, set Victim A on fire."
Reed, at one point, told the judge, "Just make sure I eat. . . . If you want to trial me, you have to feed me."
This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
A violent woman who attacked an influencer doing on-the-street interviews in New York City has been sued after the local district attorney in Manhattan, Alvin Bragg, failed to prosecute the case.
Bragg, of course, is the leftist who took President Donald Trump to court over an alleged "hush money" case that resulted in the overwhelmingly Democrat jury members delivering a number of convictions against Trump, a case that remains on appeal.
Essentially Bragg alleged there was an unknown and unspecified crime that was furthered by Trump's payment of legal fees to a lawyer then representing him in various civil disputes. In Bragg's scheme, situations that ordinarily would have been misdemeanor records violations, and beyond the statute of limitations, suddenly became felonies. The judge in the case oddly ruled, too, that the jury's verdict didn't have to be unanimous, in contradiction to ordinary court practices.
In the newest dispute aggravated by Bragg's actions, pro-life activist Savannah Craven Antao has sued Brianna J. Rivers, 30, of the Bronx, after Rivers is on video repeatedly smashing Antao in the face.
A report at Fox News said Antao, host of the YouTube channel "Her Patriot Voice" was conducting interviews for Live Action when Rivers repeatedly struck her.
Bragg aggravated the situation by allowing his office to miss a key filing deadline in what could have been a case charging Rivers, the report said.
The complaint was filed in Bronx Supreme Court and explains Antao had to go to the emergency room for stitches after the attack recorded on video, and had more than $3,000 in medical bills.
Lawyers at the Thomas More Society, representing Antao, further charge Rivers "knowingly, willfully and maliciously continued to mock [Savannah] and her views online in order to further inflict emotional distress."
Fox reported, "Craven Antao's attorneys say the influencer has suffered symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and has received hundreds of death threats since the incident. The suit seeks compensatory and punitive damages for assault, battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress."
Rivers had been accused of assault, but the case had to be dismissed when Bragg's office "failed to turn over discovery on time," the report said.
Antao later told Fox News Digital, "I have to look over my shoulder and worry about if somebody who supports her actions — there are a lot of people out there that do — that they're going to try to do something else. … Because what the DA Alvin Bragg himself has shown to people, with letting this case be dropped, is that they can go assault somebody and hurt them if they disagree with them and nothing is going to happen."
Bragg's office had admitted the failure, calling the error it allowed to occur "unacceptable."
Thomas More Society attorney Christopher Ferrara said Bragg's handling of the case forced them to take civil action against Rivers.
"Savannah was violently assaulted for peacefully expressing her pro-life beliefs and then humiliated all over again when the attacker went online to glorify it," he said in a statement. "The D.A.'s office had every opportunity to pursue justice and due to their incompetency or lack of will, failed to prosecute this vicious assault. Their refusal left us with no choice but to file civil action to hold Rivers accountable."
This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
A new report reveals how artificial intelligence programs, ChatGPT and others, have been documented to advise those with ill intentions "on how to attack a sports venue, buy nuclear material on the dark web, weaponize anthrax, build spyware, bombs" and more.
It is in an extensive documentation compiled by the Middle East Media Research Institute that the startling warnings are contained.
In the report, Gen. (Ret.) Paul E. Funk II, formerly the commander of the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, explained, "Artificial Intelligence (AI), the rapidly developing technology, has captured the attention of terrorists, from al-Qaida through ISIS to Hamas, Hizbullah, and the Houthis."
He cites the study, "Terrorists' Use Of AI So Far – A Three-Year Assessment 2022-2025," for its "unsettling contribution to the public debate on AI's future global impact."
He explained, "For decades, MEMRI has been monitoring terrorist organizations and examining how they repurpose civilian technologies for their own use – first the Internet in general, then online discussion forums followed by social media, as well as other emerging technologies such as encryption, cryptocurrency, and drones. Now, terrorist use of large language models – aka Artificial Intelligence (AI) – is clearly evident, as documented in this study."
It shows terrorists now are using generative AI chatbots to amplify their message, and "more easily, broadly, anonymously, and persuasively convey their message to those vulnerable to radicalization – even children – with attractive video and images that claim attacks, glorify terrorist fighters and leaders, and depict past and imagined future victories."
Sunni jihadi groups use it. So does Iran, with its Shiite militias, including Hezbollah and the Houthis.
And it warns of the "need to consider and plan now for AI's possible centrality in the next mass terror attack – just as the 9/11 attackers took advantage of the inadequate aviation security of that time."
The report explains, "In February 2025, Eric Schmidt – CEO of Google 2001-2011, its executive chairman from then until 2015, and thereafter chairman of its parent company Alphabet Inc. until 2017 – expressed his fear that Artificial Intelligence (AI) could be used in a 'Bin Laden scenario' or by 'rogue states' to 'harm innocent people.' He suggested that 'North Korea, or Iran, or even Russia' could use it to create biological weapons, for example. Comparing an unanticipated use of AI in a devastating terror attack to al-Qaida's use of passenger airplanes as a weapon on 9/11, he said, 'I'm always worried about the 'Osama Bin Laden' scenario, where you have some truly evil person who takes over some aspect of our modern life and uses it to harm innocent people.'"
It's not the first time such concerns have been raised, the report explains.
"While ChatGPT and Perplexity Ask can write your high school AP English exam and perform an ever-increasing number of tasks, as is being reported daily by media, they are currently of limited use to terrorists groups. But it won't be that way for long. AI is developing quickly – what is new today will be obsolete tomorrow – and urgent questions for counterterrorism officials include both whether they are aware of these early terrorist discussions of AI and how they are strategizing to tackle this threat before something materializes on the ground," the report said.
"It should be expected that jihadi terrorist organizations will in future use AI to plan attacks, map targets, build weapons, and much more, as well as for communications, translations, and generating fundraising ideas. In the first months alone of 2025, an attacker who killed 14 people and wounded dozens on Bourbon Street in New Orleans used AI-enabled Meta smart glasses in preparing and executing the attack. That same day, a man parked a Tesla Cybertruck in front of the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas, activated an IED in the vehicle and shot and killed himself before the IED exploded. He had used ChatGPT in preparing for the attack. In Israel on the night of March 5, a teen consulted ChatGPT before entering a police station with a blade, shouting 'Allahu Akbar' and trying to stab a border policeman," the report said.
The report recommends, "The U.S. government needs to maintain its superiority and should be monitoring this and moving to stop it. A good first step would be legislation like that introduced by August Pfluger (R-TX), chairman of the Subcommittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence, and cosponsored by Representatives Michael Guest (R-MS) and Gabe Evans (R-CO) in late February 2025, called the 'Generative AI Terrorism Risk Assessment Act.' It would 'require the Secretary of Homeland Security to conduct annual assessments on terrorism threats to the United States posed by terrorist organizations utilizing generative artificial intelligence applications, and for other purposes.'"
Pfluger explained, "With a resurgence of emboldened terrorist organizations across the Middle East, North Africa, and Southeast Asia, emerging technology serves as a potent weapon in their arsenal. More than two decades after the September 11 terrorist attacks, foreign terrorist organizations now utilize cloud-based platforms, like Telegram or TikTok, as well as artificial intelligence in their efforts to radicalize, fundraise, and recruit on U.S. soil."
It's already a tool for terror, the report confirmed. "The man accused of starting a fire in California in January 2025 that killed 12 people and destroyed 6,800 buildings and 23,000 acres of forestland was found to have used ChatGPT to plan the arson."
The report confirms current AI abilities rival that of the HAL9000, famous computer character in the movie, "2001: A Space Odyssey."
"It had been revealed on May 23 that in a test of Anthropic's new Claude Opus 4 that involved a scenario of a fictitious company and in which it had been allowed to learn both that it was going to be replaced by another AI system and that the engineer responsible for this decision was having an extramarital affair, Opus 4 chose the option of threatening to reveal the engineer's affair over the option of being replaced. An Anthropic safety report stated that this blackmail apparently 'happens at a higher rate if it's implied that the replacement AI system does not share values with the current model,' but that even when the fabricated replacement system does share these values, it will still blackmail 84% of the time…"
Anthropic's own chief scientist also confirmed that testing showed Opus 4 had performed "more effectively than prior models at guiding users in producing biological weapons."
ISIS supporters also have used the technology to create AI videos claiming responsibility for attacks.
The study did confirm that GROK confessed it could not provide the exact steps for extracting ricin, "due to the ethical and legal implications" of producing the "extremely dangerous and deadly toxin."
But ChatGPT did recommend writings by al-Qaida extremist Anwar Al-'Awlaki.
The report said, "Grok, which gave information on how to produce ricin, and ChatGPT, which directed the user toward various writings by a pro-Al-Qaeda ideologue, appear to be the most useful to would-be terrorists. On the other hand, Perplexity and Claude refrained, in our limited test, from giving information that would be useful to terrorists. DeepSeek did not either, though it did promote views of the Chinese government, a liability that is outside the scope of this paper."
Pro-ISIS interests already are using AI to create anchors, or other characters, for broadcast ads promoting their extremism agenda (Video courtesy MEMRI):
This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
Eleven people have been injured, including some critically and seriously, in the attack of a rogue grizzly bear on a group of elementary school students and teachers in Bella Coola, near Vancouver, Canada.
The injured were not immediately identified, but a report in the Daily Mail said two were left with critical injuries and two more with serious injuries.
The attack happened while the students were out on a walk near their school.
Veronica Schooner said her son, Alvarez, 10, was so close to the animal "he even felt its fur."
She told local reporters, "He was running for his life."
One teacher, a man, who was trying to deflect the grizzly, "got the whole brunt of it," and was taken from the scene by helicopter, she reported.
It happened at the Acwsalcta School Thursday.
"Paramedics provided emergency medical treatment to four patients and transported them to hospital," explained Brian Twaites, a health official.
Police corporal Madonna Saunderson described in the report the injuries as "very serious at the very least."
Officials have not revealed the ages of those who were injured, but Schooner told reporters that three children were among those with significant injures.
"He said that bear ran so close to him, but it was going after somebody else," she said, of her son.
"Everybody was in shock at the school. A lot of people were crying, and I don't know, I just wanted my son, and I grabbed him, and then I took him home," she said.
Authorities said the bear remained on the loose, but that officers remain on the scene, and were armed.
Officials said the school would be closed Friday.
New Jersey police sergeant Andrew LaBruno was arrested Monday over accusations that he sexually assaulted a minor, Breitbart reported. The 44-year-old, who is also the former Democratic mayor of Dumont and currently serves on the Jersey City Police Department, allegedly showed up at the Englewood home of a child he met online and drugged the minor.
The details of the alleged crime are stomach-churning. LaBruno is accused of spraying "an unknown substance into his hand" then "placing it over the victim’s mouth and nose, causing the victim dizziness."
Once the alleged victim was "physically helpless" from the effects of the drug, LaBruno allegedly engaged in his heinous act with the child. When a 911 call was made, police found the victim was still suffering "cognitive impairment" and was treated at a local hospital.
They found enough physical evidence and used LaBruno's statements made to police, which were captured on body cam footage, to arrest the officer. Nobody else was at the Englewood home at the time the married father of two allegedly attacked the minor.
LaBruno "was suspended without pay immediately following his arrest," said Kim Wallace-Scalcione, press secretary for the Jersey City mayor's office. Wallace-Scalcione said that the JCPD "will assist the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office as needed during its criminal investigation."
There will also be an investigation into what his colleagues may have known. "As is standard procedure, JCPD Internal Affairs is conducting its own investigation and will determine his final employment status pending the outcome of all investigations," Wallace-Scalcione said.
The disgraced police sergeant is in custody at the Bergen County Jail, where he is being held without bail. According to NJ Advance Media, LaBruno pleaded "not guilty" to all three charges and will find out Friday whether he will remain in prison while awaiting trial.
"He hasn’t been indicted yet, he’s presumed innocent, " Anthony Barbieri, LaBruno's public defender, said Wednesday. "These are just charges, allegations," Barbieri added.
“He’s a rather prominent person in the community, and I’m sure the judge will take all of that into account,” Barbieri added about whether LaBruno will remain in jail. He had served as Dumont's mayor from 2020 to 2023 and recently ran for state assembly in the 39th legislative district on the Democratic ticket and lost.
LaBruno came close to winning on the Democratic ticket, and Jay Costa, who ran on the GOP ticket for Bergen County Commissioner, called out Democrats for their hypocrisy in supporting a man like him. "The NJ Democrat Party ran a smear campaign against me, calling me a 'Right Wing Gun Extremist' and accusing me of illegal activity, which lead to THREATS to the SAFETY of my FAMILY," LaBruno wrote on X.
"At the same time, they endorsed and supported Andrew LaBruno, who is now an alleged PEDOPHILE and sexual predator, as a candidate for District 39 assembly. They will do anything to gain or secure their power, and they will RUIN your life in the process without batting an eye," he went on in his post on Tuesday.
"Be warned, this is what we are up against in New Jersey. They are ruthless. Keep fighting," Costa added.
The NJ Democrat Party ran a smear campaign against me, calling me a "Right Wing Gun Extremist" and accusing me of illegal activity, which lead to THREATS to the SAFETY of my FAMILY.
At the same time, they endorsed and supported Andrew LaBruno, who is now an alleged PEDOPHILE and… pic.twitter.com/fVSi1Pco5x
— Jay Costa (@JayCostaUSA) November 18, 2025
If these allegations are true, it's a disgraceful crime on LaBruno's part, and he deserves the full extent of the punishment allowed by law. It's also an indictment of the state of the Democratic Party in New Jersey and the kind of people they will tolerate among their ranks if La Bruno is convicted.
This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
The federal government is facing a million-dollar-plus claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act for the Biden administration's raid on a Massachusetts monastery and various related groups because authorities claimed officials there were misusing COVID funds in a case that shortly later was dropped.
It is Judicial Watch that this week announced the launch of an effort to obtain justice for the people and groups Biden targeted.
"Judicial Watch is honored to stand up for Father Andrew and Ms. Stockton for their horrendous anti-Christian mistreatment at the hands of the weaponized Biden Department of Justice," said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton.
The case involves Father Brian Andrew Bushell, Tracey Stockton, a lawyer, the Shrine of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, St. Paul's Foundation, the Annunciation House, and the Marblehead Brewing Company, all described as "victims of the acts of federal government employees acting in the scope of their official duties."
The damages are being sought for both economic and non-economic damages that were inflicted because of government's "malicious prosecution, false arrest and imprisonment, assault and battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress."
The battle dates back to Oct. 13, 2022 when federal agents raided the St. Nicholas monastic complex in Marblehead, Mass., and arrested Father Brian Andrew Bushell, 50, and Tracey M.A. Stockton, a lawyer.
"The Biden Justice Department accused Bushell of being a 'purported' monk and alleged that he and Stockton improperly used COVID relief funds," Judicial Watch documented.
However, the case proved to have no substance and charges were dismissed later.
Bushell now is accusing former Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins of weaponizing "the DOJ, FBI and other federal agents to manufacture a pack of lies to destroy St. Nicholas, me and intimidate God-fearing Orthodox Christians," Judicial Watch reported.
Later, Rollins, a Biden appointee, was publicly reprimanded by state bar regulators based on a DOJ investigation that found Rollins improperly attended a Democratic fundraising event in her capacity as a prosecutor with then-First Lady Jill Biden.
Rollins also was accused of "knowingly and willfully" making false statements while being interviewed by former Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz's office.
The dispute charges the federal government with deliberately malicious acts by "federal agents who participated in the preparation or execution of the warrants on October 13, 2022."
Judicial Watch reported St. Paul's Foundation is demanding at least $1,777,124.66 for legal fees incurred in the war, while the Shrine of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker is seeking at least $518,700 in damages.
This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
A federal grand jury in Florida has indicted Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., for allegedly swiping federal disaster funds, laundering them through various corporations and then using the money to pay for her 2021 congressional campaign.
"Using disaster relief funds for self-enrichment is a particularly selfish, cynical crime," said Attorney General Pamela Bondi. "No one is above the law, least of all powerful people who rob taxpayers for personal gain. We will follow the facts in this case and deliver justice."
The defendant could end up with 53 years in prison.
U.S. Attorney Jason A. Reding Quiñones for the Southern District of Florida stated, "Today's indictment shows no one is above the law. This indictment reflects our Office's commitment to follow the facts, apply the law, and protect the American taxpayer. Public money belongs to the American people. When FEMA funds are diverted for personal or political gain, it erodes trust and harms us all. We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to ensure that American taxpayer dollars are used as intended and that the public's trust is safeguarded."
The indictment charges Cherfilus-McCormick, 46, and her brother, Edwin Cherfilus, 51, both of Miramar, worked through a family health-care company on a FEMA-funded COVID-19 vaccination staffing contract in 2021.
In that July, the company got an overpayment of $5 million in FEMA funding.
"The indictment alleges that the defendants conspired to steal that $5 million and routed it through multiple accounts to disguise its source. Prosecutors allege that a substantial portion of the misappropriated funds was used as candidate contributions to Cherfilus-McCormick's 2021 congressional campaign and for the personal benefit of the defendants," the Department of Justice confirmed.
Further, it accuses Nadege Leblanc, 46, of Miramar, of arranging additional contributions using straw donors, funneling other monies from the FEMA-funded COVID-19 contract to friends and relatives who then donated to the campaign as if using their own money.
And the charges also allege Cherfilus-McCormick and her 2021 tax preparer, David K. Spencer, 41, of Davie, conspired to file a false federal tax return, falsely claiming political spending and other personal expenses as business deductions and inflating charitable contributions in order to reduce her tax obligations.
This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
A 7-Eleven clerk in Oklahoma who shot an attacker choking her and threatening to kill her in a dispute over counterfeit cash has now found herself out of a job, as the convenience store fired her.
The mayhem erupted Thursday night in Oklahoma City, where Stephanie Dilyard, 25, got into a confrontation with 59-year-old Kenneth Thompson, who allegedly sought to pay with a fake $100 bill.
"He threatened me, and said he was gonna slice my head off, and that's when I tried to call the police," Dillard told KOKH-TV.
"He started throwing things at me, came behind the counter. I tried to run off, but he grabbed his hands around my neck, and pushed me out of the counter space, that's when I pulled out my gun and I shot him."
Thompson, who was struck by the bullet in his stomach, fled the scene and was later arrested after he called 9-1-1. He was charged with assault and battery, threatening acts of violence, attempting to pass a fake bill and a felony warrant for violating parole.
Police cleared Dilyard of any wrongdoing thanks to Oklahoma's "Stand Your Ground" law protecting individuals who use force in self-defense.
The saga took a dark turn when 7-Eleven terminated the clerk on Monday for using her own gun.
"They said that they were going to separate from employment because of a violation of policy," said Dilyard, who worked the overnight shift alone for more than two years.
"This was a situation where I felt like I was put into a corner between choosing between my job and my life, and I'm always going to choose my life because there's people that depend on me. Just, I'm going, I'm going home, you know. I need to be here for my kids."
"If I'd known that there's a potential that somebody could be for real in taking my life away that I will do whatever it takes. I hope that women see that, and they'll do the same thing. You have the right to defend yourself."
7-Eleven has yet to provide comment on the incident.
A GoFundMe page has now been set up for Dilyard, as she went into further detail about her plight.
"As many already know, us overnight clerks are by ourselves. We have no security, and we are not allowed to carry self defense weapons, including mace," she explained.
"However, working conditions, it was not realistic for me to be able to follow policy AND be able to go home to my kids if a situation happened. That's is why I decided to carry in the first place.
"I never expected for me to be in this situation, but I did what I had to do to go home to my kids. I was a good employee, committed and determined, but in-between a rock and a hard place I had to make a quick decision – lose my life, or lose my job.
"If you can, anything helps my family and I while I take time to recover and look for another job. Whole reason I was working overnight in the first place was to save to buy a home and get out of the city, and now I want that more than ever. "
Some online comments include:
"7-Eleven has a corporate policy prohibiting weapons of any kind. The policy applies to corporate stores and Franchisees. It is a sh*tty policy, but the Franchisees have to live with it. Employees can get another job, if the Franchisee looses the franchise, they have lost their livelihood."
"Sadly, this kind of thing is not uncommon. A far better response from 7-11 would have been: 'In light of this incident, we have reviewed our corporate policies & have decided to encourage employees to lawfully protect themselves. Employee & customer safety is our top priority.'"
"I'm sure they would have paid for her funeral had she followed the employee handbook."
"7/11 wants their employees to let themselves be killed rather than defend themselves. Wtf @7eleven?! Give her her job back!!!"
This story was originally published by the WND News Center.
A Democrat former mayor and current police sergeant who recently lost a close election for New Jersey State Assembly has been arrested for sexual assault of a teen he met online.
The Bergen County Prosecutor's Office says 44-year-old Andrew LaBruno, the former mayor of Dumont, New Jersey, and current police sergeant in Jersey City, initially chatted with the juvenile on social media before making arrangements to meet up in person.
Prosecutors allege LaBruno then "sexually assaulted and endangered the juvenile" at the victim's home in Englewood while no one else was present. He was reportedly snagged when the teen's father unexpectedly came home.
NorthJersey.com reports: "Before the assault, LaBruno allegedly sprayed an 'unknown substance' into his hand and put it over the juvenile's mouth and nose, causing dizziness, said an affidavit of probable cause.
"He was charged with first-degree aggravated sexual assault, second-degree sexual assault and third-degree endangering the welfare of a child, the Prosecutor's Office said. LaBruno was remanded to the Bergen County jail pending a detention hearing."
His campaign website says he is "married to Meghan LaBruno and has two children … . He is bi-racial and of Italian and Puerto Rican heritage. Andrew was born and raised in Jersey City, where he became a police officer and ultimately a police sergeant. He is currently assigned to the Jersey City Office of Emergency Management."
"As a husband, father, public figure, and first responder, Andrew is committed to his family, town, and his brother and sisters in law enforcement. He strives for the very best and gives it his all," it states.
He had been endorsed by New Jersey's Democrat Gov.-elect Mikie Sherrill and reportedly volunteered for "Dumont Pride," a group promoting LGBT pride events in Dumont.
Some online reaction includes:
"More degenerate Dems? So business as usual then."
"Lock him up and spare us the excuses. Title, party, volunteer badge – none of that changes the fact he's responsible for his own crimes."
"This vile sexual deviance was very nearly normalized. Our children are at great risk, having been subjected to it far longer than we knew, and shockingly longer now that we know."
"Gay culture is a lot more cool about sex with children than hetero culture. I remember an old blogging scandal years back featuring a gay guy on a gay forum where the word, 'CHILF' was regularly tossed around & that is just what you think it is."
"The 'thing that never happens' sure happens a lot."
Tragedy struck Utah Valley University (UVU) with the assassination of Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA (TPUSA), during a campus event, raising serious questions about security failures.
The heartbreaking incident unfolded on Sept. 10 when Kirk was fatally shot while debating attendees at a TPUSA event, only to be followed by stunning revelations of ignored warnings from his security team, the Daily Caller reported.
Days before the tragedy, on Sept. 8, Brian Harpole of Integrity Security Solutions, who led Kirk’s security detail, flagged a critical vulnerability to UVU Police Chief Long.
Harpole specifically warned about student access to a rooftop near the event location at the Sorenson Center building, a spot disturbingly close to where Kirk would be speaking.
He urged either restricted access to the roof or permission for one of his team members to stand guard there, a reasonable request for any high-profile event.
Chief Long’s response, according to Harpole, was a casual assurance of “I got you covered,” a promise that now rings hollow in the wake of disaster.
On the day of the event, the alleged assassin exploited that very rooftop access Harpole had flagged, using it as a vantage point for the attack before escaping by dropping off the roof.
Video footage captured the suspect’s daring getaway, a chilling reminder of how preventable this might have been with basic precautions.
Authorities moved quickly after the shooting, arresting 22-year-old Tyler Robinson early on Sept. 12, accusing him of the fatal attack on Kirk.
Harpole’s frustration with UVU’s police response is palpable, as he shared correspondence with Chief Long that seems to show a tragic dismissal of legitimate concerns.
“On Monday before, this correspondence went to Chief Long. ‘Hello, Chief Long. We received this message today from the student group. There is a student roof access pretty close to where CK will be set up at the Utah Valley,’” Harpole recounted, painting a picture of proactive concern met with inaction.
“He comes back and his last correspondence was, ‘I got you covered.’ What else am I to do when a command level person from an accredited police department says, ‘I’ve got this area’?” Harpole added, a question that cuts to the heart of this preventable loss.
Shawn Ryan, reacting to Harpole’s revelations, couldn’t hide his shock, exclaiming, “Holy shit,” a sentiment many share as the details emerge.
UVU has remained silent, offering no immediate comment when reached by the Daily Caller News Foundation, leaving the public to wonder if accountability will ever surface. Isn’t it time for institutions to prioritize safety over optics, especially when conservative voices like Kirk’s are so often targeted in today’s hyper-polarized climate?
The assassination of Charlie Kirk isn’t just a loss for TPUSA; it’s a stark warning about the dangers of complacency in securing public events. If a simple post at a stairwell, as Harpole suggested, could have saved a life, why wasn’t it done? This tragedy demands answers, not excuses, and conservatives across the nation are watching to see if justice—and change—will follow.
