Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson stood at a press conference Wednesday and announced a plan to strip a traffic lane from one of the city's busiest corridors, and hand it to buses. The Denny Way Bus Reliability Project, as the city calls it, will convert vehicle lanes along a two-mile stretch into dedicated bus lanes, add bike infrastructure, and reconfigure intersections. Motorists who already fight gridlock on Denny Way are not impressed.
The city's Department of Transportation posted details of the project online and was met with what the Daily Mail described as a barrage of negative comments. Wilson, who was elected in November as Seattle's first democratic socialist mayor, framed the project as a personal cause, not a policy tradeoff. She told reporters she has never owned a car.
That framing tells you everything about where the priorities sit. A mayor who does not drive is removing road capacity from people who do, on a corridor that links Downtown, South Lake Union, and Capitol Hill. Around 8,000 riders use Route 8 daily, the city says. But the number of drivers who depend on those same lanes every day went unmentioned.
The first phase kicks off in May. Workers will install three blocks of bus lanes running from Queen Anne Avenue North down to Second Avenue and extend an existing southbound lane on Queen Anne Avenue to Denny Way. An additional bus queue jump, a signal that lets buses move ahead of car traffic, is planned for a major intersection the city did not publicly name.
Phase two, scheduled for August, goes further. It adds nine blocks of new bus lane, extends the eastbound bus lane, and reconfigures an intersection that the city says will enhance pedestrian safety. Bike lanes are also part of the package, though the city has not specified which segments will get them.
The Department of Transportation warned residents to expect intermittent lane closures and slower speeds during working hours. Noise, dust, and vibrations may hit the area while crews are on site from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.
In other words: first the construction headaches, then the permanent lane loss. Drivers on Denny Way get squeezed both coming and going.
Wilson leaned hard on biography at the press conference. She described herself as part of what she called the 20 percent, and growing, share of Seattle households that do not own a car. She called Route 8 "a workhorse route" and one of her personal favorites.
Wilson, who previously served as general secretary of the Transit Riders Union, told the crowd:
"This is also personal for me as a transit rider. I am one of the 20 percent and growing proportion of Seattle households that do not own a car. I've never owned a car."
She went on to describe taking the bus with her daughter to explore tide pools, watch Shakespeare plays at Seattle Center, and get to daycare. It was warm, relatable, and entirely beside the point for the 80 percent of Seattle households that do own a vehicle and now face tighter roads.
The city's stated justification is that the project will "eliminate choke points" and deliver faster, more reliable trips for transit riders. What it will do to commute times for everyone else remains an open question the city has not publicly addressed.
Local ABC affiliate KOMO spoke to Seattle residents who offered mixed reactions. But the Department of Transportation's own announcement drew a wave of criticism online. The Daily Mail reported reaching out to Wilson's office and the Department of Transportation for comment on the backlash; no response was noted.
The pattern is familiar in progressive-run cities. Officials redesign streets around a preferred mode of transit, declare the move a victory for equity or sustainability, and leave drivers, who still make up the vast majority of commuters, to absorb the cost in lost time and added congestion. The tradeoff is rarely presented honestly.
Wilson's counterpart on the other coast offers a useful comparison. Zohran Mamdani, who recently won New York City's mayoral race, shares Wilson's democratic socialist politics. Mamdani has already drawn legal challenges from his own voters over fast-tracked housing decisions in the East Village.
That kind of top-down governance, moving fast, skipping buy-in, daring residents to object, seems baked into the democratic socialist playbook. Wilson's Denny Way announcement landed the same way: here is what we are doing, here is when it starts, and here is why it matters to me personally.
Mamdani has faced his own rounds of pushback. His race-based tax proposals have alarmed fiscal observers who warn the plans could chase remaining taxpayers out of New York entirely.
Wilson cited 8,000 daily Route 8 riders. That is a real number, and those riders deserve functional service. But Denny Way also carries thousands of cars, delivery trucks, and ride-share vehicles every day. Removing a lane does not make that traffic vanish. It pushes it onto side streets, adds minutes to commutes, and clogs intersections that were never designed for overflow.
The city described the project as eliminating choke points. In practice, dedicated bus lanes often just relocate the choke point from the bus to the cars behind it. Whether that tradeoff is worth it depends on whose time you value, and Wilson has made clear whose time she values most.
Meanwhile, major investors have warned that aggressive progressive governance carries real economic consequences. When cities signal that drivers, businesses, and property owners rank below ideological priorities, the money eventually finds somewhere else to go.
There is nothing wrong with riding the bus. Millions of Americans do it. But when a mayor who has never owned a car designs road policy around her own commuting preferences, the result is predictable. Transit riders get priority. Drivers get construction dust and fewer lanes.
Wilson's background at the Transit Riders Union makes the bias explicit. She came up through advocacy for exactly this kind of project. Now she holds the office that approves it. The fox did not sneak into the henhouse. She ran for the job and won.
Seattle voters chose this in November. They elected a democratic socialist who told them, plainly, that she does not own a car and never has. The Denny Way project is what that vote looks like in concrete and paint. Whether the city's drivers understood what they were signing up for is another matter.
Mamdani's early tenure in New York suggests the pattern will repeat. His administration has already pushed tax hikes framed around race, drawing scrutiny from residents and legal observers alike. Democratic socialist mayors govern the way they campaign, fast, ideological, and indifferent to the people who end up paying the tab.
Phase one begins in May. Phase two follows in August. By fall, Denny Way will look and move differently than it does today. The city has offered no public data on projected traffic impacts for drivers, no mitigation plan for displaced vehicle volume, and no timeline for measuring whether the project actually speeds up bus service.
The Daily Mail reported reaching out to both Wilson's office and the Department of Transportation for comment on the public pushback. Neither response was included. That silence is its own kind of answer.
When your mayor tells you the project is personal, believe her. It is personal, for her. For the rest of Seattle's commuters, it is just another lane gone.
A unanimous federal appeals court panel threw out the $8.2 million jury verdict that former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore won against the Democratic-aligned Senate Majority PAC, ruling Friday that Moore failed to prove the group acted with actual malice when it aired a campaign ad against him during the 2017 Alabama Senate special election.
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that Moore, a public figure under defamation law, did not meet the "clear and convincing" evidence standard required to sustain the award. The three-judge panel ordered the trial court to enter summary judgment in favor of the PAC, AP News reported.
The ruling ends, at least for now, a legal fight that began in 2019 when Moore sued the PAC over a television ad aired in the closing weeks of that bruising special election. A federal jury in Montgomery sided with Moore in 2022, concluding the PAC was liable for both libel and false-light invasion of privacy. The appeals court disagreed entirely.
At the center of the case was a TV spot that Senate Majority PAC ran against Moore as the 2017 race entered its final stretch. The election had been roiled by allegations, published in numerous news articles, that Moore had pursued relationships with teenage girls decades earlier. One account described Moore's interactions with a 14-year-old girl at a shopping mall in Gadsden, Alabama, and said he later asked her on dates when she was 16.
Moore argued that two statements in the ad, read together, implied he had solicited the girl for sex while she worked at the mall, an implication he said was defamatory. The jury agreed. But the appeals panel, led by Judge Elizabeth Branch, a Trump appointee, found the PAC's ad makers may not have even recognized that reading.
Branch wrote that the evidence showed it was possible the PAC's team "did not know that the implication even existed." The panel noted that the ad cited underlying news articles, included source references for viewers, and had gone through what Branch described as a "thorough vetting process."
The Washington Examiner noted that the judges emphasized the ad had been fact-checked and drew on existing reporting from major national news outlets, factors that cut against any finding of reckless disregard for the truth.
Under long-standing Supreme Court precedent, a public figure like Moore must prove that a defendant published defamatory material with "actual malice", meaning the defendant knew the statement was false or acted with reckless disregard for its truth. It is a deliberately high bar, designed to protect political speech.
Branch's opinion drew a sharp line between negligence and malice. Even if the PAC's wording was sloppy or misleading, the court said, that alone does not satisfy the standard.
As Politico reported, Branch wrote:
"At most, it shows that SMP made a poor choice of words... a negligent error at best. And a negligent error is not a basis for a finding of actual malice."
The panel also rejected the argument that the jury's disbelief of PAC witnesses was, by itself, enough to establish malice. Branch stated plainly:
"The jury's rejection of the SMP witnesses' testimony about the intent of the ad is not itself clear and convincing evidence of actual malice."
That distinction matters. Juries can disbelieve a defendant, but disbelief alone does not fill the evidentiary gap that the actual malice standard demands. The court found Moore's case came up short on affirmative proof of intent.
Senate Democrats have faced setbacks on multiple fronts in recent months, from blocking DHS funding over ICE demands to losing ground in fundraising battles. But this legal victory for a major Democratic PAC gives the party's operative class something to celebrate, even if the underlying conduct raises its own questions about political advertising standards.
Moore's attorney, Jeffrey Wittenbrink, called the decision disappointing and signaled the fight may not be over. He said he expects to challenge the ruling, either by asking the full 11th Circuit to rehear the case or by petitioning the U.S. Supreme Court. Wittenbrink suggested the high court might be willing to take up the matter.
Ezra Reese, the lawyer for Senate Majority PAC, was far less restrained. He hailed the ruling in a statement that leaned heavily into political messaging, saying the PAC "told Alabama voters the truth" and that voters "correctly decided that they did not want" Moore representing them in the Senate.
Reese also called the decision "a total vindication of Senate Majority PAC and a complete repudiation of Roy Moore's" legal effort. His statement's tone was more campaign press release than legal analysis, a reminder that for groups like Senate Majority PAC, courtrooms and campaign trails serve the same strategic purpose.
The PAC's approach fits a broader pattern among Schumer-aligned political action committees that blend legal defense with public messaging to shape narratives around contested races.
One detail worth noting: the panel that wiped out Moore's award was not stacked with liberal judges. Branch is a Trump appointee. Jill Pryor was appointed by President Obama. Frank Hull was appointed by President Clinton. All three agreed. The unanimity across partisan lines suggests the legal reasoning was straightforward, even if the political implications are not.
The ruling does not say the ad was fair or accurate in every respect. It says Moore did not prove the PAC knew it was publishing a false implication or acted with reckless disregard for the truth. Those are different things. A political ad can be misleading, even irresponsible, and still survive a defamation claim if the plaintiff cannot clear the actual malice hurdle.
That reality should concern anyone who cares about honest political advertising, left or right. The actual malice standard, whatever its constitutional justification, effectively gives well-funded political operations wide latitude to craft ads that skirt the line between aggressive framing and outright falsehood. As long as the ad cites real sources and goes through a vetting process, the legal shield holds.
Democrats have shown a willingness to push that latitude to its limits, whether through combative political messaging or through PAC-funded ad campaigns designed to define Republican candidates before they can define themselves.
Moore's legal options are narrowing. A petition for rehearing en banc, before the full 11th Circuit, is possible but rarely granted. A Supreme Court petition would face even longer odds, though Wittenbrink's suggestion that the justices might take interest hints at a possible argument that the actual malice standard needs refinement in the age of sophisticated, PAC-funded political advertising.
The Supreme Court has shown some appetite in recent years for revisiting defamation law, with individual justices questioning whether the actual malice framework still serves its original purpose. Whether Moore's case is the right vehicle for that debate is another matter.
For now, the $8.2 million award is gone. Senate Majority PAC walks away without paying a dime. And the ad that sparked the lawsuit, aired nearly a decade ago during one of the most contentious Senate races in modern memory, remains part of the public record, its legal status settled even if its fairness is not.
Internal Democratic factional battles may dominate the party's headlines these days, but the PAC's legal win is a reminder that the institutional machinery behind Democratic campaigns remains formidable, and well-lawyered.
When the law lets a political machine air a misleading ad, cite its own sources as cover, and then call the result "vindication," the system is working exactly as designed. Whether that design still serves voters is a question worth asking, and one no court seems inclined to answer.
New York City Council Member Chi Ossé was thrown to the ground and arrested by NYPD officers in Brooklyn on Wednesday after he physically blocked police carrying out a court-ordered eviction, according to video of the incident and a detailed police account of what happened.
Ossé, a 28-year-old Democratic socialist and close ally of Mayor Zohran Mamdani, was one of four people charged with obstruction of governmental administration and disorderly conduct during the standoff in Bedford-Stuyvesant. He now says he plans to file a misconduct complaint against the officers involved, and Mamdani moved quickly to back him up.
The incident lays bare a pattern in New York City's current political leadership: elected officials who treat lawful court orders as optional when the politics suit them, and a mayor whose instinct is to question his own police department before asking whether the law was followed.
The New York City Sheriff's Office and NYC Marshals arrived at a Brooklyn address Wednesday to execute a signed judicial order evicting an individual from the property. Police were also there to determine whether a person considered a ward of the state of Georgia, someone who had not been in Georgia for several years, was present at the residence, Fox News Digital reported.
Protesters were already on scene, blocking the gate in front of the building. Two of them were arrested first. At that point, Ossé was not standing in front of the gate.
Then, the NYPD spokesperson told Fox News Digital, things changed. Ossé pushed past officers who tried to stop him, planted himself in front of the gate, and resisted when police tried to take his hands and arms. An NYPD spokesperson described what body-worn camera footage showed:
"Once those two were arrested, Ossé pushes past officers who were attempting to block him from standing in front of the gate, and then he begins to block the gate entrance."
Officers said they had no room to maneuver, the gate was directly behind them, and took Ossé to the ground to complete the arrest. The NYPD called the takedown consistent with department guidelines for arresting someone committing obstruction of governmental administration.
Four people total were arrested and charged. Ossé was issued a desk appearance ticket, according to the New York Post.
Ossé cast himself as a defender of a longtime Brooklyn homeowner. His office released a statement saying the constituent had lived in her home for six decades and was a victim of deed theft, a scheme the New York City Department of Finance defines as criminals recording "fraudulent deeds, mortgages or other liens against a property without the owner's knowledge or consent."
His office framed the eviction in explicitly racial terms, declaring that "Black displacement is happening right now in Bed-Stuy" and that the woman "is one of many Black homeowners battling deed theft in Brooklyn."
But the deed-theft narrative is not as clean as Ossé presents it. The New York Post reported that state investigators had looked into the claim and determined it was a property dispute rather than straightforward theft. That distinction matters. A property dispute resolved through the courts, complete with a signed judicial order, is not the same thing as a crime in progress. Ossé treated it as though it were.
After his release, Ossé called for accountability, against the police, not the protesters. He told reporters:
"I will absolutely be filing a misconduct report against the officers who slammed me on the ground. I urge the other folks who were taken into captivity to do the same. I know there are two individuals who were doing the same thing that I was doing, who have reported that they are dealing with a concussion right now."
He added that he hoped the police commissioner would take "a deep look" at the officers' histories and take the complaints seriously.
Mayor Mamdani wasted no time siding with the council member over his own police department. He wrote on social media that he had seen "the concerning footage" and had already contacted NYPD Commissioner Tisch about the arrest. He praised Ossé as "a leader in his community and a partner in building a safer and more affordable New York City" and said he was "grateful he is out of custody."
In separate remarks, Mamdani called the arrest video "incredibly concerning" and said he planned to follow up on both the arrest and the underlying deed-theft issue, as the Washington Examiner reported.
Notice the sequence. A judge signed an eviction order. Marshals and police arrived to carry it out. A council member physically obstructed them. And the mayor's first instinct was not to affirm the rule of law but to call the police commissioner and publicly question the arrest.
This is the same mayor who has already moved to create a $1.1 billion safety office designed to replace traditional policing with alternative approaches. The message to rank-and-file NYPD officers could not be clearer: enforce the law and your own mayor may second-guess you before the day is out.
Mamdani's relationship with the NYPD has been strained from the start. He drew sharp criticism earlier this year for breaking a Ramadan fast with Rikers Island inmates while ignoring injured NYPD officers. His public statements after violent crimes have repeatedly frustrated law enforcement supporters who believe he prioritizes ideological messaging over public safety.
When a baby was shot and killed in the city, Mamdani faced fierce backlash for framing the death as a "gun violence" problem rather than addressing the criminal conduct behind it. And his administration has pushed policies, from executive orders restricting ICE access to city properties to race-based budget proposals, that consistently tilt away from enforcement and toward accommodation of lawbreaking.
Ossé's arrest fits neatly into this governing philosophy. A court issues an order. Officers show up to execute it. An elected official physically blocks them. And the mayor treats the officer, not the obstruction, as the problem.
Strip away the rhetoric about deed theft and Black displacement, and the core facts are straightforward. A judge reviewed the case and signed an eviction order. NYC Marshals arrived with that order. Protesters blocked access to the property. Police arrested those who refused to move. Ossé, by the NYPD's account and body-camera footage, pushed past officers, positioned himself in front of the gate, and resisted when they tried to restrain him.
The NYPD spokesperson laid out the sequence plainly:
"The officers have no room behind them (gate to house up against them and Ossé) to maneuver him and end up taking him down for arrest, as is within guidelines for making an arrest for someone committing obstruction of governmental administration."
Ossé was not arrested for protesting. He was arrested for physically obstructing officers executing a lawful court order. Those are different things, no matter how many press releases his office sends out about displacement.
The open questions are worth noting. The woman's name has not been publicly released. The specific court and judge behind the eviction order remain unidentified. Whether body-worn camera footage will be made public is unclear. And the status of the individual described as a ward of the state of Georgia, and why that person was apparently not in Georgia, remains unexplained.
When elected officials treat court orders as suggestions and physically block law enforcement, they are not standing up for the little guy. They are undermining the legal system that protects everyone, including the property owners, taxpayers, and longtime residents they claim to champion.
Deed theft is a real problem in Brooklyn and across New York City. The Department of Finance defines it clearly. But the proper response to deed theft is legal action through the courts, not a council member shoving past police officers while cameras roll.
If Ossé believed the eviction was unjust, he had every legal tool available to challenge it. He could have sought an emergency stay. He could have filed on behalf of his constituent. Instead, he chose spectacle over process and obstruction over the law.
And the mayor backed him up.
In a city where officers already face a political leadership hostile to enforcement, this episode sends one more unmistakable signal: in Mamdani's New York, the law applies to everyone except the people who run the place.
A federal judge on Monday ordered ICE to release the six-member family of Mohamed Sabri Soliman, the Egyptian national facing 184 criminal charges for a firebomb attack in Boulder, Colorado, that killed an 82-year-old woman and injured eight others, from detention in Dilley, Texas, where they had been held since June 2025. The ruling, reported by Breitbart News, came from Obama-appointed Federal District Judge Fred Biery, who upheld an earlier decision by U.S. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Chestney siding with the family in a habeas corpus petition.
The family, Soliman's 41-year-old wife, Hayam Salah Alsaid Ahmed El Gamal, two minor sons, and three minor daughters, had been detained for removal after Soliman's arrest. The Department of Homeland Security said Soliman entered the country on a valid visa during the Biden administration but overstayed it, violating the conditions of his admission. DHS said the family was granted entry until February 26, 2023. They never left.
Now a federal court says the government must let them go.
The FBI stated that witnesses saw Soliman attack a group with a makeshift flamethrower and an incendiary device while shouting "Free Palestine." Eight victims, four women and four men, were taken to Denver hospitals. One victim later died from injuries sustained in the attack.
That victim was Karen Diamond, 82 years old. Just The News reported that Soliman was charged with first-degree murder after Diamond's death. Authorities said Soliman had planned the June 1 Boulder attack for a year and allegedly targeted a pro-Israel demonstration using Molotov cocktails and a homemade flamethrower.
Soliman pleaded not guilty to more than 180 state and federal crimes related to the attack. Breitbart News reported in June 2025 that a manifesto found after the attack included Soliman declaring: "Allah is greater than anything. Allah is greater than the Zionists, Allah is greater than America and its weapons, Allah is greater than the F-35 planes, Allah is greater than everything else." He also wrote: "So why do we fear those who are inferior to Allah rather than fear Allah Himself?"
An accused terrorist who targeted elderly marchers at a pro-Israel solidarity walk, who allegedly spent a year planning the assault, whose own words drip with ideological hatred, and the courts are now ordering the release of his family from immigration custody. That is the state of play.
The legal battle over the Soliman family's detention has taken sharp turns. Shortly after ICE detained the family, the White House signaled that removal would be swift, posting on X: "Six One-Way Tickets for Mohamed's Wife and Five Kids. Final Boarding Call Coming Soon."
But the family's attorney, Eric Lee, filed a habeas corpus petition on behalf of El Gamal. Last week, Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Chestney ruled against ICE. On Monday, Judge Biery upheld that decision, ordering the family released. Lee posted on X after the ruling: "A federal court ordered the El Gamal family released today, holding their detention violated the constitution. They're still detained. Release the El Gamal family immediately!"
The case, however, has produced contradictory rulings from different judges, a pattern that has become increasingly common in federal courtrooms handling politically charged cases. In a separate proceeding, U.S. District Judge Orlando Garcia dismissed the family's legal challenge and cleared the way for deportation proceedings to move forward. Garcia found that the government had used ordinary removal proceedings, not expedited removal, which rendered the family's specific lawsuit moot.
Garcia wrote that the federal court "lacks jurisdiction to grant Petitioners the relief they seek." His order also noted that confusion over whether the family was being subjected to expedited removal "was incited by social media posts issued by the White House on June 3, 2025." In other words, the White House's own triumphant post may have muddied the legal waters.
The New York Post reported that Garcia's ruling reversed an earlier decision that had paused the family's removal proceedings, and that both Soliman's work authorization and tourist visas had expired. The family moved to the United States from Egypt in 2022.
The Department of Homeland Security has not treated this as a routine immigration matter. DHS said Soliman "was admitted during the Biden administration on a valid visa but failed to exit the United States and overstayed the visa violating the conditions of his admission." The family was detained for removal after Soliman's arrest.
Tricia McLaughlin, DHS assistant secretary for public affairs, told the Washington Examiner: "We are investigating to what extent his family knew about this heinous attack, if they had knowledge of it, or if they provided support to it."
That statement carries weight. Soliman listed the six-member family as his dependents when he filed for asylum in Denver, Colorado. If DHS is actively investigating whether family members had foreknowledge of or provided support for a terror attack that killed an elderly woman, the decision to release them from custody raises obvious questions about public safety and flight risk.
The case echoes a broader frustration among Americans who watch federal courts intervene in immigration enforcement at precisely the moments when the stakes are highest. A man accused of a premeditated terror attack, who overstayed his visa, whose manifesto declared war on America and Zionists, and the judicial system's response is to order his wife and children freed from the facility where they were being held pending removal. In cases involving major federal court decisions, the outcomes often seem disconnected from the realities on the ground.
Several questions hang over this case. The docket number for the habeas corpus petition has not been publicly identified in available reporting. The specific court that issued Biery's order has not been named beyond his title as a federal district judge. The exact date in June 2025 when the family was first detained remains unclear.
More pressing: what happens next? Garcia's ruling appeared to clear the way for ordinary removal proceedings. Biery's ruling ordered release from detention. Whether the family will actually be deported, or whether they will disappear into the interior of the country, is the question no one in authority has answered plainly.
DHS's investigation into the family's possible knowledge of the attack also remains open. If that investigation produces evidence of complicity, the release order will look even worse in hindsight. If it produces nothing, the government will still face the reality that a family of visa overstays, tied directly to an accused terrorist, walked out of federal custody on a judge's order.
The victims of the Boulder attack, including the family of Karen Diamond, deserve better than a legal system that treats the relatives of an accused terrorist as sympathetic petitioners while an active investigation into their possible involvement continues. Across the country, courts continue to hand down rulings in violent crime cases that leave communities questioning whether justice is being served, from lengthy sentences for heinous offenders in Arkansas to the ongoing prosecution of suspects in shocking homicide cases in Atlanta. The common thread is a public hungry for accountability.
When the courts protect process over safety, and when judges treat immigration detention of a terror suspect's family as a constitutional emergency, ordinary Americans are left to wonder whose side the system is on. The answer, too often, is not theirs.
A conservative legal organization filed a formal misconduct complaint against Chief Judge James Boasberg of the U.S. District Court, accusing him of improperly coordinating with Biden-era Department of Justice officials on investigations that ultimately led to criminal charges against former President Donald Trump. The Center to Advance Security in America filed the complaint Tuesday with the D.C. appellate court, Fox News Digital reported, citing internal DOJ meeting notes from 2023 that were recently made public by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The complaint alleges "probable judicial misconduct", a charge that, if substantiated, would mean the judge who went on to sign numerous nondisclosure orders in the Trump probes had been quietly strategizing with the very prosecutors who appeared before him.
At stake is a basic principle of American justice: judges are supposed to be neutral arbiters, not co-planners with one side of a case. The allegations against Boasberg, drawn from the government's own internal records, raise pointed questions about whether that line was crossed in the most politically charged prosecution in modern American history.
The complaint centers on an FBI investigation known as Arctic Frost, which Fox News Digital described as the probe that led to former special counsel Jack Smith charging Trump over the 2020 election. Internal DOJ meeting notes from 2023, released by the Senate Judiciary Committee, form the backbone of CASA's allegations. Those notes referenced briefings that Smith's team conducted with both Boasberg and outgoing chief judge Beryl Howell, an Obama appointee.
One entry from the notes described Smith's team briefing Attorney General Merrick Garland on January 13, 2023, shortly after Garland appointed Smith as special counsel. The notes also referenced a forthcoming meeting with Boasberg scheduled for March 18, 2023, the day after he was set to succeed Howell as chief judge.
The notes captured a telling detail about Howell's posture toward the prosecution. Smith's team noted that Howell "liked our approach of pursuing the executive privilege litigation in an omnibus fashion." That language suggests the outgoing chief judge was not merely presiding over legal disputes but actively weighing in on prosecutorial strategy, a role that belongs to the lawyers, not the bench.
CASA's complaint argued that both Boasberg and Howell were improperly looped into discussions about investigative "strategizing" before charges against Trump were ever brought. The organization filed a similar complaint about Howell the previous week.
The complaint's significance extends beyond the meetings themselves. After those briefings, Boasberg went on to sign numerous nondisclosure orders that blocked telephone and technology companies from notifying Republican targets when Smith's team subpoenaed their phone records or other data. In plain terms, the judge who allegedly coordinated with prosecutors then helped ensure those prosecutors could operate in secret against their political opponents.
The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts offered a defense in December, stating that Boasberg would not have known who the gag orders applied to because prosecutors would not have informed him whose numbers were listed on the subpoenas, based on standard court practice. Smith, for his part, testified to Congress that he followed DOJ policy regarding subpoenas.
Curtis Schube, CASA's director of research and policy, was unconvinced. He wrote in the complaint:
"There is no world in which the statutes were designed to protect a judge meeting with prospective litigants to strategize with them on how to win a case in front of them in the future."
Schube pressed the point further, connecting the meetings directly to the political stakes involved:
"This is especially true when the meetings are designed for the government to determine ways to put its political opposition in jail, which is exactly what Arctic Frost was designed to do."
That framing, prosecutors and judges working together to target a political opponent, is exactly the kind of institutional abuse that Trump long described as a "witch hunt." The DOJ's own notes, now public, give that accusation a documentary foundation it previously lacked.
This is not the first time Boasberg has faced formal accusations of misconduct. The Trump administration itself filed a judicial misconduct complaint against Boasberg over his handling of an Alien Enemies Act deportation case, alleging he tried to improperly influence other judges by claiming the administration would disregard court rulings and cause a constitutional crisis. Just The News reported that Sixth Circuit Chief Judge Jeffrey Sutton dismissed that complaint, finding the DOJ had failed to provide "sufficient evidence" and had even omitted a referenced attachment from its filing.
But the pattern of higher courts intervening in Boasberg's rulings tells its own story. The Supreme Court vacated Boasberg's restraining orders in the deportation case. The D.C. Circuit later vacated or stayed his contempt-related actions against the administration. When appellate courts repeatedly reverse a trial judge, it raises fair questions about whether that judge's conduct reflects legal rigor or something else.
Congressional Republicans have taken notice. House Republicans have renewed efforts to impeach federal judges over rulings they view as politically motivated obstruction of lawful executive action. Boasberg has been a central figure in that debate.
His chambers declined to comment on the CASA complaint.
The broader context matters. Smith's investigations led to criminal charges against Trump alleging he illegally attempted to overturn the 2020 election and retained classified documents. Trump contested both cases. Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, tossed out the classified documents case, finding that Smith was improperly appointed as special counsel.
Smith was appealing Cannon's decision when Trump won the 2024 presidential election. After Trump's victory, Smith terminated both cases, citing a longstanding DOJ policy that advises against prosecuting sitting presidents. The cases ended not with a verdict but with an election, a fact that itself speaks to the political nature of the entire enterprise.
The CASA complaint now asks whether the judicial machinery that enabled those prosecutions was compromised from the start. If Boasberg was briefed on prosecutorial strategy before becoming the judge who signed off on secret subpoenas, the integrity of the entire process is in question. It is one thing for a judge to rule on motions brought by prosecutors. It is another for that judge to have sat in on the planning sessions.
Schube urged prompt action in the complaint:
"While the facts strongly suggest that Boasberg violated the canons of judicial ethics, investigation should be promptly opened to confirm."
CASA also argued that Boasberg's judicial immunity has limitations, that whatever protections shield judges in their official duties, those protections were not designed to cover pre-case coordination with one party in a future proceeding.
The internal DOJ notes released by the Senate Judiciary Committee are now public record. They show meetings. They show briefings. They show a judge described as approving of prosecutorial strategy. What they do not yet show, and what an investigation would need to determine, is whether those interactions crossed the line from routine judicial administration into active collaboration.
The distinction matters enormously. Federal judges regularly interact with prosecutors on administrative matters. But the complaint alleges these were not routine scheduling calls. They were discussions about how to pursue executive privilege claims and how to structure an investigation targeting the sitting president's chief political rival. The notes themselves use the language of strategy, not administration.
The same judge who allegedly participated in those strategy sessions later presided over high-profile federal cases with enormous political consequences. That sequence alone, even before any finding of misconduct, should trouble anyone who believes judges must be, and must appear to be, impartial.
Several open questions remain. What specific DOJ officials beyond Smith's team and Garland participated in the meetings? Which Republican targets were affected by the nondisclosure orders Boasberg signed? And will the D.C. appellate court act on CASA's complaint, or will it follow the path of the earlier dismissed filing?
The record of declassified documents raising new questions about prior anti-Trump episodes suggests a pattern: institutions that acted aggressively against Trump during the Biden years now face uncomfortable scrutiny when the underlying records come to light.
Americans were told the Trump prosecutions were handled by the book. The government's own notes suggest the book may have been rewritten behind closed doors, with the judge holding the pen alongside the prosecutors.
Virginia Democratic Senator Mark Warner announced Monday that his 36-year-old daughter Madison has died after what the family described as a decades-long fight against juvenile diabetes and other health complications. The loss drew immediate condolences from lawmakers in both parties, a rare moment of genuine bipartisan sympathy on Capitol Hill.
Warner and his wife, Lisa Collis, released a joint statement that was direct and brief. As the Daily Mail reported, the couple said:
"We are heartbroken beyond words by the passing of our beloved daughter, Madison, 36, after a decades-long battle with juvenile diabetes and other health issues. She filled our lives with love and laughter, and her absence leaves an immeasurable void."
They asked for privacy as they grieve. No further details about the circumstances or location of Madison's death have been disclosed.
Madison Warner was the eldest of Warner's three daughters with Collis. She graduated from Brown University in 2012 and, by all accounts, kept a low profile despite her father's long career in Virginia and Washington politics. Warner has served in the Senate since winning his seat in 2008 and previously served as Virginia's governor from 2002 to 2006.
Despite Warner's prominence, he is now in his third Senate term and faces reelection later this year, Madison largely stayed out of public view. Her appearances in her father's political life were limited to family moments: standing beside him at his 2008 election night party in McLean, Virginia, and again in 2009 as he shook hands with Joe Biden ahead of being sworn into office.
A 2013 family photo posted to Warner's Facebook account showed Madison in the center, flanked by her parents and sisters, Gillian and Eliza. Beyond that, she kept her distance from the spotlight, a choice that, given the nature of her health struggles, deserves respect.
The family statement referenced "other health issues" alongside juvenile diabetes but did not elaborate. Type 1 diabetes, often diagnosed in childhood, is a serious autoimmune condition. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that roughly 2.1 million people in the United States have been diagnosed with it, including 1.8 million adults aged 20 or older and 314,000 children and adolescents under 20.
Madison's battle with the disease apparently began early and lasted most of her life. Losing a child at 36 to a condition she fought since youth is a grief no political title cushions.
The reaction from Congress was swift and, notably, free of partisan posturing. Texas Republican Congressman August Pfluger wrote on X: "I am incredibly sorry for your loss. Keeping you and your family in my prayers." South Carolina Republican Congresswoman Nancy Mace offered similar words: "Our deepest condolences. We're keeping your family in our prayers."
From the Democratic side, Vermont's Becca Balint said, "may Madison's memory always be a blessing." Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger issued a longer statement, as the Washington Examiner reported, extending her condolences to the entire Warner family, naming not only Mark and Lisa but also Madison's sisters Gillian and Eliza.
"Adam and I are holding them all in our hearts and prayers during this time of great loss."
Breitbart reported that condolences also came from Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Vice President JD Vance, who said, "What a terrible loss at such a young age." That a sitting Republican vice president would publicly grieve alongside a Democratic senator speaks to the nature of the moment.
Warner is a political figure with whom conservatives have had plenty of disagreements over the years. He has been a reliable Democratic vote on most major issues. But the death of a child belongs to a category that precedes and transcends politics. The bipartisan response reflected that.
Warner, first elected to the Senate in 2008 and reelected in 2014 and 2020, is up for reelection later this year. The New York Post noted that it remains unclear whether the senator will step back from Senate duties during an election year as he mourns. That is a decision only the Warner family can make, and it would be wrong to speculate about it now.
Virginia itself has been a competitive battleground in recent cycles. A Republican special election victory earlier this year underscored that the state is far from a safe Democratic hold, whatever national prognosticators may assume.
Warner's long tenure, including his time as governor from 2002 to 2006, has made him one of the most established Democratic figures in the commonwealth. Whether his personal loss affects the trajectory of his campaign is a question for another day.
The broader Democratic Party has faced its own internal pressures in recent months, with figures like Senator John Fetterman breaking publicly with party leadership on key votes, and strategists openly debating what went wrong in 2024.
None of that belongs in the same conversation as a father burying his daughter. But it is the backdrop against which Warner will eventually return to public life.
Madison Warner was 36. She fought juvenile diabetes for most of those years. She graduated from a prestigious university, lived quietly, and was loved by her family. The ongoing political battles in Virginia and Washington will resume soon enough. For now, the Warner family has asked for space, and they deserve it.
Several basic questions remain open. No specific location for Madison's death has been disclosed. The family's reference to "other health issues" beyond juvenile diabetes has not been explained further. The exact date of her passing, beyond the Monday announcement, has not been made public.
These gaps are the family's to fill if and when they choose. There is no public interest that overrides a grieving family's right to privacy on the details of their daughter's medical history.
Washington will return to its usual fights soon enough. Congressional clashes over policy and power will pick back up. Warner will be part of those fights again, or he won't. That is his call.
But today, the only thing that matters is that a 36-year-old woman lost a long fight, and a family is broken by it. Some things are bigger than politics, and this is one of them.
Former Georgia wide receiver Zachariah Branch, a projected second-round pick in this week's NFL Draft, was arrested early Sunday morning on two misdemeanor obstruction charges after he allegedly refused repeated police commands to stop blocking a public sidewalk in Athens, Georgia. He spent roughly two hours in jail and walked out on a $39 bond.
The arrest landed less than a week before the biggest moment of the 22-year-old's professional life. The first round of the 2026 NFL Draft kicks off Thursday, with the second and third rounds set for Friday. Branch now heads into that gauntlet with a police report attached to his name.
Hours earlier, Branch had been signing autographs alongside teammates from the 2025 Georgia squad at the program's annual G-Day spring scrimmage at Sanford Stadium. By 1:26 a.m. Sunday, jail records cited by the New York Post show he was booked into the Clarke County Jail on charges of obstructing public sidewalks/streets, prowling and obstruction of a law enforcement officer. He was released at 3:44 a.m.
The police report, obtained by NFL Network, paints a straightforward picture. An officer encountered Branch standing on a public sidewalk adjacent to local businesses, blocking passage. Fox News reported that officers said Branch failed to comply with multiple verbal commands to stop blocking the sidewalk.
The arresting officer's account, as quoted in the report, described what happened next:
"I continued to give Zacharia Branch verbal commands to move from blocking the sidewalk and advised that if he did not, he would receive a citation for blocking the sidewalk."
Branch did not leave. The report states he "smirked, then stepped backwards and to the right, then remained standing upon the public sidewalk, so as to obstruct, hinder, and impede free passage upon the sidewalk as well as impede free ingress/egress to or from the adjacent places of business."
That was enough for the officer. The report concluded:
"Due to those actions and Zacharia Branch's failure to comply with multiple verbal lawful commands, he was placed under arrest for misdemeanor Obstruction of LEO and received a citation for Obstructing Public Sidewalks."
Two charges. Two misdemeanors. A $39 bond. And a very different kind of headline than the one Branch had been building toward all spring.
Branch's on-field résumé is impressive. He spent two seasons at USC, where he earned All-American honors with the Trojans, before transferring to Georgia for the 2025 season. In his single year with the Bulldogs, he led the team in receptions and receiving yards, 81 catches for 811 yards and six touchdowns. Those 81 receptions also led the entire SEC.
At this year's NFL Scouting Combine, he ran a 4.35-second 40-yard dash, reinforcing his status as one of the draft's top receiver prospects. Multiple outlets have projected him as a second-round selection.
That projection now carries an asterisk. NFL teams conduct exhaustive background checks on draft prospects. A misdemeanor arrest four days before the first round will not go unnoticed in team war rooms, even if the charges are minor. Breitbart reported that the arrest followed Branch's refusal to obey a police order, citing NFL Network's Tom Pelissero.
The New York Post reached out to Branch for comment and did not immediately hear back. No statement from his representatives or from the University of Georgia has surfaced in available reporting.
The silence leaves the police report as the only public account of what happened on that Athens sidewalk early Sunday morning. And that account is not complicated: an officer told a man to move, the man did not move, and the man was arrested.
Whether the charges stick, get reduced, or disappear entirely remains to be seen. Misdemeanor obstruction cases often resolve quietly. But the timing could not be worse for a young man whose draft stock was built on speed, production, and the assumption that he would be a low-risk pick.
Branch's situation raises a familiar question for NFL general managers: how much weight does off-field conduct carry when the talent is real? A 4.35-second 40 and 81 catches in the SEC speak for themselves on tape. A booking photo from Clarke County Jail speaks to something else entirely.
The charges are not felonies. The bond was $39. He was out before sunrise. None of that changes the fact that a projected second-round pick chose to stand on a sidewalk and smirk at a police officer giving him lawful commands, days before the most important job interview of his life.
Teams drafting in the second and third rounds on Friday will have to decide whether that moment of defiance was a one-off lapse in judgment or a window into something more. Branch's talent has never been in question. His decision-making just became one.
In the NFL, as in life, you don't get to choose when your character is tested. You only get to choose how you respond. Branch chose poorly, and the timing made sure everyone noticed.
A federal appeals court handed President Donald Trump a significant legal win Friday, allowing all construction on his planned White House ballroom to continue through early June, overriding a lower-court judge who had tried to block the aboveground portion of the $400 million project just one day earlier.
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit issued an order pausing U.S. District Judge Richard Leon's Thursday ruling and scheduling oral arguments on the project's legality for June 5. Until then, work on both the 90,000-square-foot ballroom and the underground military bunker proceeds, NBC News reported.
The decision effectively erases, at least for now, a legal setback that had threatened to stall a project the Trump administration says is essential to the safety and security of the White House.
The timeline tells the story. On Thursday, Judge Leon issued an order blocking any aboveground construction on the ballroom, arguing that the Trump administration was attempting to work around his earlier ruling. Leon had previously halted the project's construction until the White House received approval from Congress, carving out a narrow exception for what he called "actions strictly necessary to ensure the safety and security of the White House and its grounds."
The administration read that exception broadly. It argued the safety-and-security carve-out covered the entire project, including the aboveground ballroom itself. Leon disagreed sharply, writing that this interpretation was "neither a reasonable nor a correct reading of my Order!"
He added that national security "is not a blank check to proceed with otherwise unlawful activity."
Less than 24 hours later, the appeals court stepped in and paused Leon's order entirely. Breitbart reported that the Associated Press characterized the ruling as "a substantial victory for the president in his effort to redesign the storied American structure."
The underlying dispute goes deeper than one judge's order. The ballroom project replaces the White House East Wing and carries a $400 million price tag. It includes not only the massive aboveground ballroom but also an underground military bunker and what Leon's ruling described as "national security facilities."
The National Trust for Historic Preservation filed suit after Trump demolished the East Wing, AP News reported, arguing the administration moved ahead without approval from key federal agencies and Congress. Leon sided with that argument when he issued a preliminary injunction, finding the administration likely lacked the legal authority to proceed without congressional sign-off.
The administration pushed back hard. Justice Department lawyers argued in court that "no taxpayer dollars are being used for the funding of this beautiful, desperately needed, and completely secure... ballroom," Fox News reported.
That framing matters. If private funds are covering the cost, the administration's position is that congressional appropriations authority is not the controlling issue, and that the project's national security components make delay itself a risk. The recent pattern of federal appeals courts siding with the administration on contested policies likely gave the White House confidence to press the appeal quickly.
President Trump did not wait for the appeals court to weigh in before making his views known. On Thursday, he took to Truth Social to criticize Leon's ruling in blunt terms, calling him a "Trump Hating Judge" who "should be ashamed of himself!"
In a separate post, Trump framed the stakes in national security terms, writing that the ballroom is "deeply important to our National Security" and that Leon's ruling "means that no future President, living in the White House without this Ballroom, can ever be Safe and Secure at Events, Future Inaugurations, or Global Summits."
Whatever one thinks of the tone, the substance of the argument is worth taking seriously. The White House is the most prominent target in America. Its event spaces serve heads of state, diplomatic summits, and inaugural functions. The administration's position, that modernizing those facilities is a security imperative, not a vanity project, is the core legal claim that the appeals court will evaluate on June 5.
The broader question of judicial authority over presidential construction at the White House is one that could reshape executive power for future administrations. It echoes ongoing tensions between the judiciary and the executive branch that have defined much of Trump's second term.
The appeals court's Friday order buys the administration roughly six weeks of uninterrupted construction. The Washington Examiner noted that the D.C. Circuit's order allows the entire 90,000-square-foot project to continue until at least early June, with oral arguments set for June 5. That hearing will determine whether Leon's injunction should be reinstated or permanently lifted.
The White House did not immediately respond to NBC News' request for comment on the appeals court ruling.
Meanwhile, the president's broader construction ambitions in Washington continue to advance on a separate track. A federal arts panel gave initial approval Thursday to Trump's proposed 250-foot triumphal arch, planned in connection with the 250th anniversary of the country's founding. That project, too, will likely face scrutiny, but for now, the administration is building.
The legal questions are real. Congress has a role in federal construction, and preservation laws exist for a reason. But a single district judge halting a sitting president's security upgrades to the White House, only to be overridden by an appeals panel within a day, raises its own questions about proportionality and judicial restraint. The composition and direction of the federal judiciary remain among the most consequential issues in American governance.
Leon wrote that national security is "not a blank check." Fair enough. But neither is a district court injunction a permanent veto over a president's authority to secure the building where he lives and works. The appeals court, at least for now, seems to agree.
The names of the three judges on the panel were not disclosed in available reporting. The full case docket and appeals-court order text remain unpublished. Those details will matter when June 5 arrives and the legal arguments move from procedural maneuvering to the merits. The administration will need to show that its reading of the safety exception, broad enough to cover a 90,000-square-foot ballroom, holds up under scrutiny. Leon will need to explain why his narrower reading should override the executive's judgment on its own security needs.
Six weeks is not long. But in construction terms, it is long enough to lay a great deal of foundation, both literally and legally. The willingness of appellate courts to check lower-court overreach has been a recurring feature of recent legal disputes, and this case fits the pattern.
When a judge tries to stop a president from securing his own house and gets overruled in less than a day, the system is working exactly as it should.
French police arrested a 19-year-old Afghan migrant after shepherds near Marseille set up motion-activated cameras that captured images of a suspect they say had been sexually assaulting their sheep and goats for months.
The anti-crime brigade of France's national police, known by the acronym BAC, took the man into custody last week in the Bouches-du-Rhône region, Breitbart reported. He appeared in court this week and faces up to three years in prison if convicted of animal cruelty under French law.
The case began in early 2026, when shepherds in the southern French countryside first reported the abuse to local police. Farmers had been finding their animals with legs bound and showing unmistakable signs of sexual assault. The attacks escalated sharply in February and March of this year.
Frustrated by the recurring attacks, local farmers installed motion-activated cameras on their properties. The images captured were clear enough for police to identify a suspect and make an arrest.
French newspaper Le Figaro reported that farmers found their sheep and goats with their legs tied up on several occasions, and that the female animals' genitals were left bloody by the abuse. Ouest-France reported that one attack in February against a lamb left the animal in critical condition.
The details are as grim as they are specific. These were not isolated incidents. The pattern of bound legs, injured animals, and repeated assaults stretched across weeks before farmers decided to invest in surveillance equipment themselves.
That the shepherds, not the police, were the ones who ultimately produced the evidence that led to an arrest tells its own story about the state of rural law enforcement in parts of France.
The suspect's nationality has drawn immediate attention in a country already roiled by debates over migration, crime, and assimilation. France has absorbed large numbers of Afghan migrants in recent years, and cases like this one, however unusual in their specifics, feed a growing public frustration with what many French citizens see as a failure of their government to screen, track, and hold accountable those it admits.
That frustration is hardly unique to France. Across the Atlantic, American communities have grappled with similar failures, where lax enforcement and sanctuary policies have allowed suspects in violent crimes to avoid accountability.
The unnamed Afghan male's immigration status, how he entered France, whether he held legal residency, and whether he had prior contact with law enforcement, remains unreported. Those are precisely the questions that citizens in every Western democracy have learned to ask first and expect answered last.
If convicted, the suspect faces a maximum of three years in prison under French animal cruelty statutes. For farmers who watched their animals suffer over a period of months, that ceiling may feel low. For a case involving repeated, deliberate acts of this nature, the penalty raises a question about whether French law treats such offenses with the seriousness they deserve.
The court appearance this week has not yet produced publicly reported details about the specific charges filed, whether the suspect entered a plea, or whether he remains in custody pending trial. No official police or court statements have been quoted directly.
Across Europe and in the United States, the intersection of immigration and public safety continues to dominate political debate. In the U.S., federal authorities have stepped up arrests of illegal immigrants convicted of violent crimes, including offenses against children.
The common thread in every one of these cases is not ethnicity or religion. It is a system that moves people across borders faster than it can vet them, monitor them, or hold them accountable when something goes wrong.
Key details in this case are still missing. The suspect has not been publicly named. The total number of animals allegedly abused has not been disclosed. The precise farms or municipalities within the Bouches-du-Rhône region have not been identified in public reporting.
Nor is it clear whether French authorities had any prior interaction with the suspect, whether through immigration processing, welfare services, or earlier criminal complaints. Those gaps matter, because they determine whether this was a failure of screening, a failure of enforcement, or both.
In the United States, the consequences of similar policy gaps have played out repeatedly. Sanctuary jurisdictions have faced sharp criticism after illegal immigrants were charged with violent crimes that might have been prevented by cooperation with federal immigration authorities.
Even prominent voices on the left have begun to acknowledge the costs. Hillary Clinton herself conceded that recent migration policy was "disruptive and destabilizing", a rare admission from a figure not known for granting ground on immigration.
What stands out most in this case is the role of the victims, not the animals alone, but the farmers and shepherds who depend on them for their livelihood. These are people who reported the crimes, waited for a response, and then took the initiative to gather evidence on their own.
They bought cameras. They set them up. They handed the images to police. And only then did the system act.
That sequence, citizens doing the work that institutions won't, has become a recurring theme wherever migration policy outpaces enforcement capacity. The pattern holds whether the setting is a French sheep pasture or an American border town.
When governments import people faster than they can ensure public safety, ordinary citizens end up bearing the cost, and doing the policing.
A federal grand jury has added armed terrorism and weapons of mass destruction charges against Brian Cole Jr., the Virginia man accused of planting pipe bombs near the Democratic and Republican national committee headquarters in Washington on the night before the Capitol riot. The superseding indictment, filed Tuesday, dramatically raises the legal stakes in a case that already ended a nearly five-year manhunt, and now exposes Cole to a potential life sentence.
The new counts land on top of Cole's original charges of transporting explosives and malicious attempt to use them. The indictment accuses Cole of using weapons of mass destruction against interstate and foreign commerce and of committing terrorism "with the intent to intimidate and coerce" civilian populations, the Daily Caller News Foundation reported.
For anyone who wondered whether the Trump Justice Department would treat the Jan. 5, 2021, pipe bomb case as a serious act of domestic terrorism, rather than letting it gather dust, the answer arrived in the form of a superseding indictment that treats two unexploded devices near party headquarters as what they were: an attempted act of political violence aimed at both sides of the aisle.
The FBI arrested Cole in December at his parents' home, closing one of the most high-profile unsolved cases in recent Washington history. Federal law enforcement used phone records, bank data, and vehicle information to conclude that Cole obtained bomb-making parts and planted two devices in D.C. on the eve of Jan. 6, 2021. The devices did not detonate.
Cole has pleaded not guilty to the original charges and remains in custody pending trial, Newsmax reported. Prosecutors said Cole told federal agents in a subsequent interview that "something just snapped" in his mind and made him want to attack both political parties.
That admission, if a jury believes it, paints a picture not of a partisan actor but of someone who allegedly targeted the institutional infrastructure of both major parties. It is precisely the kind of conduct that falls outside any reasonable reading of President Trump's blanket pardon for most pro-Trump protesters arrested in connection with the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
Cole's defense team asked the court in March to dismiss his charges, arguing that Trump's pardon for election protesters also applies to his alleged conduct. It is a creative legal theory, and one the Justice Department has flatly rejected.
The DOJ wrote that "on January 20, 2025, the defendant belonged to neither category" covered by the pardon proclamation, "and so the proclamation has no bearing on this case." Prosecutors noted that at the time the pardons were issued, "law enforcement had not identified the defendant, much less charged or convicted him, and the pipe bombs investigation proceeded unabated." The Washington Examiner reported that prosecutors argued Cole is "categorically excluded" from the proclamation because it applied only to individuals charged with offenses tied to conduct at or near the Capitol on Jan. 6, not the placement of explosives the night before.
That distinction matters. The pardon was designed to address the sprawling Jan. 6 prosecutions, cases involving trespass, obstruction, and related conduct at the Capitol. Planting pipe bombs near party headquarters the night before is a different category of alleged criminal conduct entirely. The DOJ under Trump's own appointees is making that case aggressively, which undercuts any suggestion that the administration is soft on political violence when the facts warrant prosecution.
The current leadership at the Department of Justice has shown a willingness to pursue aggressive charging decisions across a range of cases. The department recently announced dozens of indictments in connection with a Minnesota church protest, signaling a broader posture of accountability for politically motivated disruption.
Mario Williams, an attorney for Cole, pushed back hard on the escalation. He told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the government changed how it describes the alleged device, and questioned the timing.
Williams said:
"For no logical reason at all, the government has gone from identifying the alleged device as an explosive to now referring to that same device as a 'weapon of mass destruction,' knowing experts have said this device would not have detonated. It raises serious concerns about how this case is being presented and why that shift is being made now."
Williams also injected race into the dispute. He told the Daily Caller News Foundation:
"The government now wants Brian Cole Jr. (a Black man) to go down in history as the only alleged, accused January 6-related individual to serve not only a jail sentence, but to serve the rest of his life in prison."
The defense attorney's framing raises a question worth examining on its own terms. If the devices truly could not have detonated, as Williams claims unnamed experts have said, does the "weapons of mass destruction" label fit? That is a factual question a jury will eventually weigh. But the legal standard does not require a successful detonation, it requires an attempt to use such a weapon. Prosecutors clearly believe the evidence meets that bar.
As for the racial argument, it is worth noting that Cole is not charged because of who he is but because of what he allegedly did. The case rests on phone records, bank data, vehicle information, and Cole's own reported statements to federal agents. If the evidence holds, the severity of the charges reflects the severity of the alleged conduct, planting explosive devices near the headquarters of both national parties in the nation's capital on the eve of a joint session of Congress.
The broader context of recent DOJ leadership changes has not slowed the department's momentum on this case. If anything, the superseding indictment suggests the career prosecutors and political appointees handling the matter are aligned on treating the pipe bomb plot as a top-tier national security prosecution.
The new indictment accuses Cole of using weapons of mass destruction against interstate and foreign commerce and of committing terrorism "with the intent to intimidate and coerce" civilian populations. The Washington Times reported that prosecutors allege Cole aimed to use the bombs to destroy property as a way to intimidate the population and "to influence the policy and conduct of a unit of government" with an act of terrorism.
If convicted on the weapons charge alone, Cole could face up to life in prison. That is a dramatic leap from the original charges, which carried serious but comparatively lesser penalties.
Prosecutors also allege that Cole continued buying bomb-making materials after laying the explosives, a detail that, if proven, would suggest sustained intent rather than a momentary lapse in judgment. The "something just snapped" line from Cole's interview with federal agents may have been intended to minimize his culpability. The government's evidence of continued purchases tells a different story.
The case also sits against a backdrop of ongoing political and legal disputes over how the Trump administration exercises prosecutorial discretion. Democrats have called for investigations into the attorney general's office on unrelated matters, but the Cole prosecution complicates any narrative that the DOJ is selectively lenient toward defendants linked to the Jan. 6 timeline.
Several details remain unresolved. The specific court handling the indictment and its case number have not been publicly identified in available reporting. The identity of the experts Williams referenced, those who allegedly concluded the devices would not have detonated, is unclear. And the exact date of Cole's December arrest has not been pinpointed beyond the month.
The defense's motion to dismiss, filed in March, is still pending. How the court rules on the pardon argument could set a meaningful precedent for the scope of Trump's Jan. 6 clemency. If the court agrees with prosecutors that the pardon does not cover pre-Jan. 6 bomb-planting, it draws a clear line between protest-related offenses and alleged acts of terrorism.
Meanwhile, Trump himself has weighed the question of preemptive legal protections for allies in other contexts. The Cole case stands as a clear marker: the pardon power has limits, and the DOJ under this administration is willing to enforce them.
Cole sits in jail awaiting trial. The government is not asking for a slap on the wrist. It is asking a jury to call what happened on the night of Jan. 5, 2021, exactly what it looks like, an act of terrorism, and to hold the man accused of it accountable for the rest of his life.
That is not selective prosecution. That is the law doing what it is supposed to do.
