A Michigan Democrat admitted Monday that she cast her vote in the state party's April 19 convention from her home in Antrim County, roughly 250 miles from the Detroit venue where about 6,600 voting members gathered to endorse candidates for attorney general, secretary of state, and university board seats. The admission, reported by The Detroit News, raises pointed questions about whether the party's own rules requiring in-person voting were followed, and whether anyone in leadership cared enough to enforce them.
The convention took place in Detroit on April 19, 2026. Democrats used the gathering to endorse their preferred candidates for several high-profile statewide races. Yet eight days after the event, it remained unclear whether losing candidates would publicly contest their defeats or raise formal objections, with potential policy missteps cited as a factor in the uncertainty.
What is clear: at least one delegate says she voted without ever setting foot in the convention hall. That alone should concern anyone who takes party governance, or election integrity of any kind, seriously.
The Michigan Democratic Party's convention rules required in-person voting. The rule exists for an obvious reason: it is the simplest safeguard against fraud, proxy manipulation, and the kind of backroom maneuvering that party conventions have attracted for generations. Show up, identify yourself, cast your ballot. It is not a high bar.
And yet a delegate apparently cleared that bar from her living room in Antrim County. The Detroit News report does not detail the mechanism she used to vote remotely, nor does it name the delegate. But the core fact is not in dispute, the delegate herself said she did it.
The party has not publicly explained how a remote vote was cast, accepted, or counted when its own rules demanded physical presence. That silence is telling. When Democrats elsewhere resist even basic voter ID requirements, the discovery that their own internal elections may lack elementary safeguards carries a particular sting.
The convention drew roughly 6,600 voting members to Detroit. At that scale, the endorsement votes carry real political weight. Winning the party's nod for attorney general or secretary of state shapes primary dynamics, fundraising, and media coverage for months. These are not ceremonial gatherings.
That makes the integrity of the vote count more than an inside-baseball concern. If one delegate voted from home, the obvious question is whether others did too. The Detroit News report does not answer that question. Neither has the party.
Michigan Democrats have positioned themselves as defenders of voting rights and fair elections. Governor Gretchen Whitmer has been a leading figure in the party's national profile, and her prominence in Democratic circles makes the state party's internal credibility a matter of broader interest.
Eight days after the convention, candidates who lost endorsement races had not publicly contested the results. The Detroit News noted the uncertainty, citing potential policy missteps as a factor in whether challenges would emerge. That vague framing raises its own set of questions.
Were the "policy missteps" related to how the vote was conducted? Did losing campaigns know about remote voting before the delegate's admission went public? And if a formal challenge is filed, does the party have any mechanism to audit which votes were cast in person and which were not?
None of those questions have been answered. The party's silence invites the worst interpretation, that leadership either knew about the breach and tolerated it, or that its systems are so loose that no one noticed until a delegate volunteered the information.
Michigan Democrats are hardly the only members of the party facing uncomfortable questions about the gap between their public positions and their private conduct. Senator Elissa Slotkin recently reversed course on DHS funding under political pressure, a reminder that stated principles and actual behavior do not always align.
The broader pattern here is familiar. Democrats lecture the country about election security, voting access, and the sanctity of democratic processes. They fight voter ID laws. They resist efforts to clean voter rolls. They frame any procedural safeguard as suppression.
Then, inside their own party, a delegate votes from her couch and the rules apparently do not matter. No one flagged it. No one stopped it. No one has explained it.
This is not a general-election ballot. It is an internal party convention. But the principle is the same. Rules exist to ensure that votes are legitimate. When the people who write the rules ignore them, the rules mean nothing.
And as Democrats running in 2026 scramble to distance themselves from political liabilities, the last thing the Michigan party needs is a self-inflicted wound over something as basic as enforcing its own convention procedures.
The Detroit News report, written by Craig Mauger and updated on April 27, leaves several critical questions unanswered. The delegate's name has not been publicly disclosed in the available reporting. The method she used to vote remotely has not been explained. The party has not said whether it will investigate, recount, or simply move on.
If losing candidates decide to challenge their defeats, the remote-voting admission could become the centerpiece of a formal dispute. If they stay quiet, the episode will fade, but the precedent will remain. A party that cannot enforce in-person voting at its own convention has no standing to lecture anyone else about election integrity.
The facts here are narrow but damning. A rule existed. A delegate broke it. She said so herself. And eight days later, the party had offered no public accounting.
If you cannot run a clean convention, spare the rest of us the sermons about democracy.
Four days before she walked away from her congressional seat, Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick quietly filed paperwork to run again. The Florida Democrat submitted a notice of candidacy to the Florida Department of State on April 17, then resigned from office on April 21, minutes before the House Ethics Committee could decide whether to recommend her expulsion. She remains registered as a candidate today, as Breitbart News reported Friday.
The sequence raises an obvious question: Why file for reelection if you plan to resign? And why resign if you believe, as Cherfilus-McCormick has insisted, that the case against you is a "witch hunt"?
The answer may lie in timing. By resigning moments before the Ethics Committee acted, Cherfilus-McCormick avoided what House leaders signaled would have been a harsh outcome, potentially expulsion, while preserving her ballot access for Florida's 20th Congressional District. The move let her frame the departure on her own terms, even as a federal indictment and more than two dozen ethics findings hung over her head.
The House Ethics Committee had been investigating Cherfilus-McCormick for more than two years. National Review reported that a special panel found her guilty of 25 of 27 ethics charges after a three-year investigation. The committee reviewed more than 33,000 documents and interviewed 28 witnesses.
Investigators concluded that money from her family's company, Trinity Health Care Services LLC, including part of a $5 million FEMA overpayment tied to a 2021 COVID-19 vaccination contract, was funneled into her congressional campaigns. Prosecutors alleged the funds were routed through multiple accounts and used to bankroll Cherfilus-McCormick's campaign, make straw-donor contributions, and benefit the defendants personally.
The Ethics Committee's guilty findings on 25 counts put expulsion squarely on the table. In January, officials said they had uncovered "substantial evidence" in the fraud investigation linked to Cherfilus-McCormick.
She was also accused of conspiring with former tax preparer David K. Spencer to file a false federal tax return.
AP News reported that Cherfilus-McCormick resigned moments before a House hearing that could have recommended her expulsion. The Washington Times placed the resignation as effective immediately on April 21, minutes before the Ethics Committee was set to decide on punishment.
House Ethics Committee Chairman Michael Guest pushed back on the idea that the process had been rushed. He stated plainly:
"This was not a rush to judgment, as some would claim."
House Speaker Mike Johnson was more direct. He told reporters:
"The facts are indisputable at this point."
And House Majority Leader Steve Scalise left no room for ambiguity. He said:
"Well, if you steal money, it's called theft. It's not called a witch hunt, and stealing taxpayer money is not going to be tolerated."
The bipartisan nature of the condemnation was notable. Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, a Democrat from Washington state, said publicly that Cherfilus-McCormick should resign or be removed. Her words were blunt:
"You can't crime your way into legitimate power. Since she was found guilty, she should resign or be removed."
That a fellow Democrat said it out loud tells you how thin the defenses had become. Yet the broader pattern of Democratic silence when party members face serious misconduct allegations makes Gluesenkamp Perez's candor the exception, not the rule.
At the center of everything sits a $5 million FEMA overpayment. A federal grand jury in Miami indicted Cherfilus-McCormick in November 2025, alleging she and her brother, Edwin Cherfilus, diverted those funds through Trinity Health Care Services. The money was tied to a 2021 COVID-19 vaccination contract.
Prosecutors alleged the pair routed the overpayment through various accounts. Some of it, they said, funded Cherfilus-McCormick's congressional campaign. Some went to straw-donor contributions. Some benefited the defendants personally. The Washington Times reported that investigators also found she filed bogus campaign finance reports.
Cherfilus-McCormick pleaded not guilty. One of her lawyers issued a statement disputing the findings:
"Representative Cherfilus-McCormick disputes and refutes the allegations and report of the Ethics Committee's Investigative Subcommittee."
In a post on X, the congresswoman framed her exit as a strategic choice rather than an admission of fault. She wrote that rather than "play these political games," she chose "to step away so that I can devote my time to fighting for my neighbors in Florida's 20th district." She added: "This fight is far from over."
She also said she had been "prevented" from defending herself and called the investigation a "witch hunt." But the Ethics Committee reviewed 33,000 documents and heard from 28 witnesses over three years. That is not a rush job. That is a methodical investigation that produced 25 guilty findings.
Which brings us back to the April 17 filing. Cherfilus-McCormick submitted her notice of candidacy to the Florida Department of State four days before she resigned. She remains registered to run for reelection in Florida's 20th District. Whether she intends to actively campaign while facing a federal indictment remains an open question.
The tactic is not subtle. Resign before the Ethics Committee can expel you, dodge the formal sanction, and keep your name on the ballot. It is the political equivalent of quitting before you get fired, except in this case, the job belongs to the voters, and the alleged misconduct involved $5 million in disaster relief funds meant for people affected by COVID-19.
The case is not an isolated episode. A convicted Massachusetts Democrat recently demanded taxpayers restore his $806,000 pension after his own criminal downfall. The pattern is familiar: public trust violated, consequences minimized, and the system asked to look the other way.
Cherfilus-McCormick says she looks forward to proving her innocence. That is her right, and the federal case will proceed on its own timeline. But the Ethics Committee already rendered its judgment: guilty on 25 of 27 charges. The House was prepared to act. She chose to leave before it could.
And then she filed to come back.
Speaker Johnson and Majority Leader Scalise both treated the evidence as settled. Chairman Guest defended the thoroughness of the investigation. Even a Democratic colleague said the congresswoman should be gone. The bipartisan consensus was rare and clear.
Cherfilus-McCormick's response was to call it all political games, resign on her own schedule, and keep her candidacy alive. That is not accountability. That is the kind of evasion that corrodes public trust in elected officials from either party.
The voters of Florida's 20th District deserve to know exactly what happened to $5 million in FEMA disaster relief money. They deserve to know why their representative filed for reelection and then resigned four days later. And they deserve a representative who answers to them, not one who treats a congressional seat as something to grab, lose, and grab again.
If the system works, the federal courts will handle the criminal charges and the voters will handle the rest. But the fact that a member of Congress can dodge expulsion by minutes, keep her name on the ballot by days, and still claim victimhood tells you everything about who the system is built to protect, and who it isn't.
A former Air Force intelligence officer who had agreed to testify before Congress about alleged secret government UFO programs died in May 2024 from an accidental drug overdose, not from a suspicious suicide, as a Republican congressman publicly claimed months later in a push for an FBI investigation.
Matthew James Sullivan was 39 years old. He lived in Falls Church, Virginia. And according to the Northern Virginia District Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, he died on May 12, 2024, from a lethal combination of alcohol, alprazolam, cyclobenzaprine, and imipramine. The ruling: accidental.
That finding directly contradicts the account offered by Rep. Eric Burlison, a Missouri Republican, who told Fox News in April that Sullivan had "suspiciously committed suicide" within two weeks of being scheduled for a congressional interview on UFOs. Burlison then sent a formal letter to FBI Director Kash Patel on April 16, asking the bureau to open an inquiry into Sullivan's death and citing what he called "implications for national security."
The gap between Burlison's public characterization and the medical examiner's conclusion is not small. Calling a death a "suspicious suicide" carries a very different weight than an accidental overdose involving a mix of prescription drugs and alcohol. One implies possible foul play. The other suggests a tragic accident.
In his April 16 letter to Patel, Burlison wrote that Sullivan "was preparing to provide testimony to Congress" and that "the sudden and suspicious circumstances surrounding his death raise significant concerns about potential foul play." He also referenced the safety of other individuals involved in the matter, as the New York Post reported.
Burlison has also stated publicly that the Intelligence Community Inspector General assessed a report tied to Sullivan's case as "credible and urgent," using statutory language under the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act, and referred it to the FBI. The ICIG, for its part, told the Post it "can neither confirm nor deny the existence of any ongoing or potential investigations."
That boilerplate response leaves plenty of room for speculation, and speculation is exactly what has filled the void.
Sullivan was no fringe figure. His funeral home obituary, posted on Dignity Memorial, states he earned a Bronze Star for valor in Operation Enduring Freedom. He served at the Air Force Intelligence Agency, the National Air and Space Intelligence Center, and the National Security Agency. This was a man with serious credentials in the intelligence community, the kind of witness congressional investigators would want in front of a microphone.
He had agreed to testify before Congress about alleged secret government UFO programs. Breitbart reported that Sullivan, described as having been part of a "legacy UFO program," was expected to appear before Congress in November 2024. He died six months before that date.
Sullivan's case fits into a broader pattern that has drawn congressional attention. Burlison and House Oversight Committee Chair Rep. James Comer, a Kentucky Republican, have sent letters to the FBI, NASA, the Department of War, and the Department of Energy seeking briefings by April 27 on more than a dozen deaths and disappearances tied to the broader inquiry.
The FBI said in a statement that it "is spearheading the effort to look for connections into the missing and deceased scientists," working alongside the Department of Energy, the Department of War, and state and local law enforcement. But the bureau did not confirm or deny a specific investigation into Sullivan's death.
Sullivan's planned testimony was not happening in isolation. David Grusch, a retired Air Force officer, testified before Congress in 2023 about alleged government UFO possession. Grusch later reported receiving death threats. Burlison confirmed that Grusch had been helping Sullivan prepare to come forward before Sullivan died.
The fact that a previous witness reported threats, and a second prospective witness then died before testifying, is the kind of sequence that fuels legitimate concern, and legitimate conspiracy theories in equal measure. The question is whether the facts support the darker reading, and right now, the medical examiner's ruling points in a different direction than the one Burlison has publicly promoted. As we have previously reported, the congressman's public framing of Sullivan's death as suspicious has itself become a significant political development.
Conservatives rightly demand transparency from government agencies. The intelligence community's refusal to confirm or deny investigations, the decades of stonewalling on UAP-related programs, the pattern of witnesses encountering obstacles before they can speak, all of it deserves scrutiny. Congress has every right, and arguably a duty, to press for answers.
But accountability also means being precise about the facts you put into the public record. When a sitting congressman tells a national television audience that a prospective witness "suspiciously committed suicide," and the state medical examiner has already ruled the death an accidental overdose, that discrepancy matters. It matters for the credibility of the broader inquiry. It matters for Sullivan's family. And it matters for the public's ability to distinguish between warranted suspicion and unfounded alarm.
Burlison's letter to Patel used more careful language than his television appearance. He wrote that the "manner and circumstances" of Sullivan's death "raise substantial questions." That is a defensible position, accidental overdoses can raise questions, especially when the deceased was about to testify on sensitive national security matters. But "raise substantial questions" is a long way from "suspiciously committed suicide."
The broader political landscape is full of moments where elected officials stretch their public claims beyond what the evidence supports, a pattern that erodes trust regardless of party. Whether it involves Democrats trying to control what the public sees or Republicans overstating what they know, voters are left sorting fact from performance.
Several important questions hang over this case. Did the FBI open a specific investigation into Sullivan's death, or is the bureau's statement about "missing and deceased scientists" a broader effort that may or may not include Sullivan? What was the specific report that the ICIG reportedly assessed as "credible and urgent"? What agencies or individuals are connected to the "more than a dozen deaths and disappearances" that Burlison and Comer referenced?
The April 27 briefing deadline set by Comer and Burlison for the FBI, NASA, and other agencies will be a telling moment. If the agencies comply, Congress may finally get answers that move this conversation from cable-news speculation to documented fact. If they stonewall, the cycle of suspicion will only deepen.
Sullivan's service record, the Bronze Star, the postings at three intelligence agencies, his willingness to come forward, suggests a man who took his obligations seriously. Whatever happened on May 12, 2024, his death deserves the same seriousness from the people investigating it and the people talking about it on television. The fight over government transparency and institutional accountability is too important to be undermined by claims that outrun the evidence.
The truth matters more than the narrative, even when the narrative is the one you want to believe.
More than six weeks after President Donald Trump removed her as Homeland Security Secretary, Kristi Noem is still living in a waterfront military home on Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling in Washington, D.C., a residence typically reserved for the Coast Guard commandant.
The Wall Street Journal first reported that Noem has been spotted coming and going from the property in recent days. The Independent confirmed that she continued to use the accommodation well past her departure from DHS, raising pointed questions about who authorized the arrangement and why a fired cabinet official still enjoys a military housing perk.
The situation matters for a simple reason: that home belongs to the Coast Guard, not to Kristi Noem. And the Coast Guard's top officer reportedly wants it back.
Noem originally moved onto the military installation after protesters and paparazzi discovered the address of her private residence in Washington. The security rationale was straightforward at the time. As DHS secretary overseeing the administration's aggressive immigration enforcement, she drew intense public attention and personal threats.
DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin previously defended the move in blunt terms, as the Washington Examiner reported:
"Following the media's publishing of the location of Secretary Noem's Washington DC apartment, she has faced vicious doxing on the dark web and a surge in death threats... Due to threats and security concerns, she has been forced to temporarily stay in secure military housing."
That explanation carried weight when Noem held one of the most visible and sensitive posts in the federal government. It carries considerably less weight now that she no longer runs DHS.
Trump fired Noem on March 6, according to Just the News. After her removal, she was reassigned to a far lesser position: special envoy for the Shield of the Americas, Western Hemisphere. The role is little-known, and Noem now reports to the deputy secretary of state, not to Secretary Marco Rubio, a clear step down from running a department with over 240,000 employees.
Yet the housing arrangement appears unchanged.
Admiral Kevin Lunday, the Coast Guard commandant, currently lives in the home next door to Noem's. He reportedly told associates he plans to move into the house she occupies "imminently." The residence has traditionally been designated for the commandant, the service's highest-ranking officer.
Sen. Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat, called the arrangement an insult to the uniformed men and women of the Coast Guard:
"It's a real insult to the brave men and women who are protecting our shores that she thinks that house belongs to her instead of to the Coast Guard."
Critics and former officials have argued that a civilian political appointee, especially one who no longer holds the position that justified the arrangement, should not be displacing senior military leadership from quarters built for them.
Noem's top aide, Corey Lewandowski, has been seen at the home over the past year and as recently as this month. He pushed back on any suggestion of impropriety, telling the Journal that "scores of people have visited Ms. Noem at the house in a business capacity." Lewandowski departed DHS alongside Noem after what multiple reports described as a turbulent tenure at the department.
Noem herself dismissed scrutiny of the living arrangement as "tabloid garbage."
Noem's removal from DHS did not happen in a vacuum. Her tenure was marked by a series of high-profile missteps that drew bipartisan criticism. Republican Sen. Thom Tillis publicly called for her dismissal before Trump acted, a rare move from a member of the president's own party against a sitting cabinet secretary.
In March, Noem faced tough questioning during congressional hearings over a $220 million TV ad campaign about deportations. The campaign featured Noem on horseback before Mount Rushmore. She claimed Trump signed off on it. The president swiftly denied that.
That contradiction alone would have been damaging. But it landed on top of earlier problems.
In January, Noem and other administration officials described Alex Pretti and Renee Good, two U.S. citizens killed by federal agents during an immigration operation in Minnesota, as "domestic terrorists." That characterization was later shown to be false. Noem released a statement at the time expressing shock. Democrats eventually sent a criminal referral against Noem to the DOJ over her congressional testimony related to these and other matters.
When Trump tapped Sen. Markwayne Mullin to lead DHS and moved Noem into the envoy role, the writing was on the wall. The reassignment was a demotion dressed in diplomatic language.
The housing question arrives alongside a wave of unflattering personal reports. Noem and Lewandowski have been accused of engaging in an extramarital affair, an allegation Lewandowski has forcefully denied. Separately, a report last week alleged that Noem and her husband, Bryon Noem, racked up millions of dollars in debt before their rise to national prominence.
The couple has been married almost 34 years and has three adult children and several grandchildren. Reports also surfaced that Bryon Noem sent compromising photos to female models online. His behavior was described as "an open secret" in Washington.
None of these personal matters directly bear on the housing question. But they form the backdrop against which Noem's continued occupation of a military residence is being evaluated, by the public, by Congress, and presumably by the Coast Guard officers who built their careers expecting that home would be available to their commandant.
Several basic questions remain unanswered. Neither the Department of Homeland Security nor the State Department responded to requests for comment from The Independent. It is unclear who authorized Noem to remain in the residence after her firing, whether the special envoy role carries any entitlement to military housing, or what timeline, if any, has been set for her departure.
Admiral Lunday's reported plan to move in "imminently" suggests the matter may resolve itself soon. But the fact that it has dragged on for more than six weeks speaks to a broader pattern: officials who accumulate perks on the way up rarely surrender them voluntarily on the way down.
Taxpayers fund military housing for military leaders. When a fired political appointee treats a Coast Guard commandant's residence like a personal apartment, the arrangement stops being about security and starts being about entitlement. The Coast Guard deserves better, and so do the people who pay the bills.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf has reportedly walked away from his country's negotiating team in Islamabad, Pakistan, where Tehran and Washington have been locked in high-stakes talks aimed at ending the Iran war. The departure, attributed to interference by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, signals a widening rift inside the Iranian regime at the worst possible moment for its diplomatic prospects.
The report, relayed by Israel's Channel 12 and carried by the Times of Israel, did not specify exactly when Ghalibaf left the team. But the timing lands squarely in a week when President Donald Trump extended the ceasefire with Iran and reaffirmed the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, twin pressure points that have defined the American negotiating posture since the conflict began.
Ghalibaf had been a leading member of the Iranian delegation alongside Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. His exit raises an immediate question: who, if anyone, now speaks for Tehran with enough authority to close a deal?
President Trump wasted no time framing the turmoil. In a Truth Social post, he described a regime that cannot even identify its own decision-maker:
"Iran is having a very hard time figuring out who their leader is! They just don't know! The infighting is between the 'Hardliners,' who have been losing BADLY on the battlefield, and the 'Moderates,' who are not very moderate at all (but gaining respect!), is CRAZY!"
That characterization, hardliners losing ground militarily, moderates gaining influence but still far from Western norms, maps neatly onto Ghalibaf's reported departure. If the IRGC is muscling aside the parliament speaker, the hardliners are not merely losing on the battlefield. They are sabotaging their own diplomacy.
Trump followed with a blunter message about leverage. He declared that the U.S. Navy maintains total control over the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil supply typically flows:
"We have total control over the Strait of Hormuz. No ship can enter or leave without the approval of the United States Navy. It is 'Sealed up Tight,' until such time as Iran is able to make a DEAL!!! Thank you for your attention to this matter."
The administration has consistently tied the blockade to Iran's willingness to negotiate in good faith, a strategy that dates back to Trump's decision to suspend the bombing campaign and offer a ceasefire linked to reopening the strait.
Ghalibaf's exit did not happen in a vacuum. The Islamabad negotiations have followed a grinding pattern: marathon sessions that produce no breakthrough, followed by mutual accusations and fresh deadlines.
In mid-April, Vice President JD Vance announced that the U.S. and Iran failed to reach a peace agreement after 21 hours of talks in Pakistan. The core obstacle, Vance said, was Iran's refusal to commit to abandoning any path to a nuclear weapon. "The bad news is that we have not reached an agreement," Vance told reporters in Islamabad. "They have chosen not to accept our terms."
Yet even after that round collapsed, both sides left the door open. Sources familiar with the talks said the two sides were at one point "80% there" before negotiations stalled over the remaining disputes, Iran's nuclear enrichment program, sanctions relief, and the Hormuz blockade. Pakistan continued passing messages between Tehran and Washington. White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales stated that "Iran can never have a nuclear weapon, and President Trump's negotiating team stuck to this red line and many others. Engagement continues toward an agreement."
That engagement, however, has been anything but smooth. The administration earlier rebuffed Middle Eastern ceasefire proposals and signaled continued military pressure on Iran, making clear that diplomatic openings would come only on American terms.
Before his reported departure, Ghalibaf had publicly bristled at the conditions surrounding the talks. As the ceasefire neared expiration, Iranian officials refused to commit to a new round of negotiations. Iran accused the U.S. of violating the truce through the Hormuz blockade and the seizure of an Iranian-flagged cargo ship.
Ghalibaf himself posted on X: "We do not accept negotiations under the shadow of threats." That statement, reported by the Washington Times, now reads less like a negotiating posture and more like a preview of his walkout.
Trump's response to that defiance was characteristically direct. "They're going to negotiate, and if they don't, they're going to see problems like they've never seen before," the president said in a radio interview. He also warned that if Iran did not accept the U.S.-proposed deal, the United States would "knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran," as Breitbart reported.
The White House had dispatched a heavyweight delegation, Vance, special envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner, to Islamabad for the latest round. The administration's willingness to send its most senior figures underscored how seriously it took the diplomatic track, even while maintaining maximum military and economic pressure.
The Channel 12 report pointed to IRGC interference as the reason Ghalibaf left the team. The specific actions that constituted that interference remain unclear. But the dynamic is familiar to anyone who has watched Iran's internal power struggles over the past four decades.
The IRGC operates as a state within a state, controlling vast economic interests, running proxy forces across the region, and answering ultimately to the supreme leader rather than to elected officials or the foreign ministry. When the Guard Corps decides a diplomatic track threatens its institutional interests, it has the tools and the willingness to undermine it.
Trump's framing of the regime's dysfunction, hardliners versus moderates, with neither faction fully in charge, captures the practical problem for American negotiators. Even if Araghchi or another civilian official agrees to terms, there is no guarantee the IRGC will honor them. The administration has previously described Iran's military leadership as effectively destroyed, but the IRGC's political influence inside Tehran is a separate matter entirely.
Ghalibaf himself had signaled, before his departure, that there would be "no retreat in the field of diplomacy." That pledge now looks hollow, not because of any lack of will on his part, but because the IRGC apparently decided retreat was exactly what was needed.
Several questions remain unanswered. What specific terms were on the table when Ghalibaf walked away? Will Foreign Minister Araghchi continue the talks alone, and does he carry enough authority to bind the regime? And will the IRGC's interference harden the administration's posture further, or will Trump see the internal fracture as an opportunity to press for a deal with whichever faction is willing to sign?
The ceasefire extension buys time, but not much. Trump has made clear that the blockade stays until Iran agrees to a deal. The U.S. Navy remains positioned to enforce that commitment. And the Senate has already blocked Democratic efforts to force a withdrawal from the conflict, giving the administration a freer hand to maintain pressure.
For Iran, the math is simple and unforgiving. Every day the Strait of Hormuz stays sealed, the regime's economic lifeline shrinks. Every day the IRGC undermines its own negotiators, the odds of a deal that preserves any Iranian leverage get worse. Trump has said the conflict is "very close to being over" and that Tehran is eager to negotiate. Ghalibaf's departure suggests at least part of the regime disagrees.
When your own parliament speaker walks out because the military won't let him negotiate, the problem isn't the other side's terms. It's that you can't govern your own house.
President Donald Trump took aim at Republican-appointed Supreme Court justices Wednesday morning, accusing them of handing Democrats repeated victories and predicting the court will rule against his administration in the birthright citizenship case, a decision he warned would "cost America its DIGNITY."
The broadside, posted on Truth Social, came weeks after Breitbart reported that Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch voted in February to strike down Trump's tariffs imposed under the International Economic Emergency Powers Act. That decision, in the case of Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, required the refund of more than $150 billion.
Trump framed the tariff ruling and the pending birthright citizenship case as proof that the court's conservative wing has gone soft, and that Democratic-appointed justices operate as a unified voting bloc while Republican appointees splinter.
The president's post laid out a blunt indictment. Trump wrote that Democratic justices "stick together like glue, NEVER failing to wander from the warped and perverse policies, ideas, and cases put before them." He contrasted that with what he described as a pattern of Republican justices breaking ranks on consequential rulings.
Trump wrote on Truth Social:
"The Republican Justices don't stick together, they give the Democrats win after win, like a 159 Billion Dollar pile of cash on a completely ridiculous Tariff decision, and nasty, one sided questions on the country destroying subject of Birthright Citizenship, something which virtually NO OTHER COUNTRY IN THE WORLD IS STUPID ENOUGH TO ALLOW."
He went further, writing that the Fourteenth Amendment's citizenship provision "was meant for the babies of slaves, not for the babies of Chinese Billionaires." And he said certain Republican justices "have just gone weak" and were "completely violating what they 'supposedly' stood for."
The frustration is not abstract. The tariff decision alone carries a price tag Trump pegged at $159 billion. He called it "an unnecessary and expensive slap in the face to the U.S.A., and a giant victory for its opponents," adding that "one little sentence would have stoped [sic] this record setting payment from having to be made."
The president has previously signaled a willingness to reshape the court's composition. He has indicated he is prepared to fill multiple Supreme Court vacancies if the opportunity arises.
Trump's sharpest language was reserved for the birthright citizenship fight. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. Barbara on April 1, and the president's post suggested he already knows how the decision will land.
He wrote:
"If they rule against our Country on Birthright Citizenship, which they probably will, it will be even worse, if that's possible. It will cost America massive amounts of money but, more importantly, it will cost America its DIGNITY!"
That prediction, the president of the United States publicly forecasting defeat at the hands of a court he helped build, is striking. Three of the nine sitting justices owe their seats to Trump's nominations. Yet Trump's post treats the court not as an institution where he holds influence, but as one that has already been "packed" against him by the opposition.
Reporting from earlier this month indicated that the court appeared poised to reject the executive order on birthright citizenship after oral arguments.
The February tariff ruling was the immediate catalyst for Trump's frustration. Roberts, Barrett, and Gorsuch, all Republican appointees, joined the court's liberal wing to strike down the IEEPA tariffs. The refund obligation exceeds $150 billion, a figure that makes it one of the most financially consequential Supreme Court decisions in recent memory.
Trump has already begun adjusting his approach on trade policy. After the ruling, the president signaled a new tariff strategy and said he would not seek a congressional vote to restore the authority the court stripped away.
The birthright citizenship case represents a different kind of stakes. If the court rules against the administration, it would foreclose one of Trump's signature immigration policy goals, the effort to end automatic citizenship for children born on U.S. soil to parents who are in the country illegally. Trump argued in his post that the practice is nearly unique to the United States and was never intended to apply broadly.
Meanwhile, the administration continues to press other high-profile cases before the justices, including a request for the Supreme Court to restore authority to end Temporary Protected Status for 350,000 Haitian migrants.
Trump's core complaint is structural, not personal, even if his language was pointed. He argues that Democratic-appointed justices vote as a reliable unit while Republican appointees fracture on the cases that matter most. Whether one agrees with that framing or not, the tariff case bears it out in at least one instance: three Republican-appointed justices crossed over to form the majority.
The dynamic is not new. Justice Sonia Sotomayor has complained publicly about the administration's emergency appeals to the court, even as the court has frequently sided with Trump on procedural matters. But on the marquee constitutional questions, tariff authority, birthright citizenship, Trump sees a different picture emerging.
The president's prediction of defeat in the birthright citizenship case is also a political signal. It lowers the bar for what constitutes a win. If the court rules against him, Trump can point to the post and say he told the country the court was stacked. If the court surprises him, he claims a victory against the odds.
Several open questions remain. The Supreme Court has not yet issued its opinion in Trump v. Barbara, and the timing of that decision is unknown. The full scope of the $150 billion-plus refund obligation from the tariff ruling, and how the administration plans to manage it, has not been detailed. Whether Trump will pursue any structural response to the court, beyond public criticism, is unclear.
What is clear is the president's assessment of where things stand. He believes the court's conservative majority is unreliable on the issues he cares about most, trade enforcement and immigration enforcement, and he is willing to say so publicly, loudly, and before the ruling even drops.
When a president builds a court and then expects to lose there, the problem is either with the builders, the building, or the blueprint. Trump has made his diagnosis. The rest of the country will find out soon enough whether he's right.
An 11-year-old boy is dead after what police describe as a suspected murder-suicide at Elko Regional Airport, carried out by the one person entrusted above all others to keep him safe, his own father. Callan Perez did not survive his injuries. Giovanni Perez, his father, was found dead at the scene.
The shooting happened Monday, April 14, around 12:38 p.m. near the airline ticket counter, KUTV reported. When officers arrived, they found Giovanni Perez dead. Bystanders directed them to a restroom, where Callan lay with gunshot wounds. He was rushed to a hospital but did not survive.
Now a family is left to bury a fourth-grader and to ask how the systems meant to protect children allowed this to happen. Their grief, raw and public, points to a custody dispute that authorities say had been simmering, and to a father whose background investigators are still piecing together.
Investigators said Giovanni Perez and Callan had been traveling toward the Reno area when their rental vehicle broke down. They were towed to the airport so they could pick up another rental car. What should have been a routine stop became the site of a killing that shattered a small community's sense of safety.
The Elko Police Department said the investigation remains active but cautioned that it may not yield clear answers. That admission, unusual for a law-enforcement agency still in the early stages of a case, suggests the department is already bracing for the possibility that Giovanni Perez's motives may never be fully understood.
The department released a statement that made its sympathy plain:
"Our hearts are still with Callan's family, and we will continue to find as many answers as we can for this horrible tragedy."
Authorities confirmed there had been an ongoing custody dispute involving Callan's maternal grandparents. Callan's mother, whose name has not been released, did not have custody, though her parents were fighting for it. She told KUTV she had been separated from her son for several years, though they remained in contact by phone.
That detail alone raises hard questions. A mother separated from her child. Grandparents battling for custody. A father who, despite whatever red flags may have existed, retained enough access to take the boy on a road trip across state lines. Whether courts, social workers, or other institutions missed warning signs is a question the family clearly intends to press.
Callan's relatives described him in terms that make the loss all the more wrenching. On a fundraiser page set up to cover funeral expenses and anticipated legal costs, they wrote that they are facing "the most unimaginable loss." The family said Callan "was taken from us at the hands of someone who was supposed to protect him."
They called him "wise beyond his years", a boy with "a smile that lit up every room." He was smart and kind, they said, and his absence will leave a hole that no amount of time can fill. Cases like this, where grieving families speak out after a child's violent death, put a human face on statistics that are otherwise easy to scroll past.
Just last year, Callan won third place in an essay contest at Luther Burbank Elementary School in Merced, California. The topic: "Father of the Year." The irony is almost too bitter to process. A boy who publicly celebrated his father was, police say, killed by him.
The Merced City School District confirmed that Callan was not enrolled for the current school year. A district spokesperson called the situation "an unimaginable tragedy."
Investigators said they are continuing to look into Giovanni Perez's background. Callan's mother told KUTV that Perez served about four years in the U.S. Army as a cook, including a deployment to Iraq. Investigators said Perez had reported PTSD due to his time in the military.
PTSD is a serious condition, and no one should minimize the toll that combat service takes on veterans. But a mental health diagnosis does not excuse violence against a child. It does, however, raise the question of what treatment or monitoring, if any, Giovanni Perez was receiving, and whether any agency flagged his condition as a risk factor during the custody proceedings.
Across the country, courts and family-services agencies routinely weigh mental health histories in custody disputes. Whether that happened here, and whether it mattered, remains unknown. The family's fundraiser references "anticipated legal costs," a phrase that signals they are preparing to pursue accountability through the courts. In cases involving parental abuse and questions about whether the system failed, that kind of legal fight can take years and cost a family everything it has left.
The family's public statements make clear they believe institutional failure played a role. They said they plan to pursue justice and hold accountable what they believe was a system that failed Callan. That language, "a system that failed him", is not vague. It points directly at courts, agencies, or individuals who had the authority to intervene and, in the family's view, did not.
We do not yet know the specifics of the custody case. We do not know which court handled it, what evidence was presented, or what safeguards, if any, were put in place. Those details will matter enormously as this story develops.
What we do know is that an 11-year-old boy ended up alone in an airport restroom with gunshot wounds, and the man police say inflicted them was his own father. That outcome is its own indictment. Somewhere, somehow, the guardrails failed. When children are killed by the very people entrusted with their care, the question is never just "who did this?" It is always, also, "who let this happen?"
The Elko Police Department urged anyone in crisis to contact the national suicide and crisis line by dialing 988. That is a necessary public-health message. But it is cold comfort to a family burying a child.
The open questions in this case are significant. What was the legal status of the custody dispute at the time of the shooting? Did any court order restrict Giovanni Perez's access to Callan? Was Perez receiving mental health treatment, and if so, did any provider communicate concerns to family-court officials? What brought father and son to the Reno area in the first place?
Police have signaled that some of these questions may never be answered. That is an honest assessment, but it should not become an excuse for institutions to avoid scrutiny. When a child dies, every link in the chain that was supposed to protect him deserves examination, from the family court to the caseworker's desk to the therapist's notes.
Violent crimes against children, whether at care facilities or inside families, share a common thread: someone who was supposed to be watching wasn't, or someone who saw warning signs looked the other way. The pattern repeats because the consequences for institutional failure are almost always too small and too late.
Callan Perez was a fourth-grader who wrote an essay celebrating his dad. He had a bright smile and, his family says, wisdom that outpaced his years. He deserved better than a restroom floor at an airport in the middle of nowhere.
Cold-case files and long-delayed murder charges remind us that accountability sometimes arrives late. For Callan's family, the fight is just beginning. The rest of us owe them at least enough attention to demand that the right questions get asked, and that the answers, wherever they lead, are not buried along with that boy.
Systems that cannot protect an 11-year-old from the person closest to him are systems that have already failed at their most basic job. Callan Perez's family knows it. The institutions responsible should be made to answer for it.
U.S. Capitol Police arrested approximately 66 people Monday after a group of veterans and military family members occupied the Cannon House Office Building in Washington, D.C., staging an illegal demonstration against the ongoing conflict with Iran. Officers zip-tied protesters and led them out of the building after they refused repeated orders to stop, The Hill reported.
The demonstrators had entered the building legally after passing through security screening. Once inside, they gathered in the middle of the Cannon rotunda, held red tulips, and unfurled banners. Capitol Police said the group was charged under D.C. Code § 22, 1307, Crowding, Obstructing, or Incommoding, for illegally protesting inside the congressional building.
The protest drew participants from at least seven veterans organizations, including About Face, the Center on Conscience and War, Veterans For Peace, Common Defense, the Fayetteville Resistance Coalition, Military Families Speak Out, and 50501 Veterans. Their stated demand: that House Speaker Mike Johnson meet with them, accept a folded American flag, and pledge not to continue funding the war.
The Center on Conscience and War said the folded flag was meant to honor the 13 U.S. troops who have died so far in the conflict, which CCW said began on Feb. 28. The group framed the occupation as a direct appeal to congressional leadership to cut off war funding.
Capitol Police left little room for ambiguity about the legal line the protesters crossed. The department's statement was blunt:
"Demonstrations are not allowed inside Congressional Buildings, so when they started to protest and refused to stop, we began arresting them."
Videos posted to social media showed officers restraining demonstrators with zip ties and escorting them from the building. There were no reports of injuries in the available accounts. Whether Speaker Johnson responded to the group's demand remains unclear.
Capitol security incidents have become a recurring concern in recent years. In one case, an armed 18-year-old was arrested running toward the Capitol with a loaded shotgun, underscoring the range of threats law enforcement faces at the complex.
Among those arrested was Mike Prysner, executive director of the Center on Conscience and War and a veteran of the Iraq War. Prysner issued a statement ahead of his arrest that drew a direct line between the current conflict and the war he fought two decades ago.
"The war I was sent to senselessly claimed the lives of thousands of Americans and a million Iraqis. Like the other veterans here with me today, I have spent the last two decades wishing I could turn back the hands of time and refuse to go. Service members have that chance right now."
Prysner called the Iran conflict "already deeply unpopular" and described it as "a crisis for the Trump administration." His framing placed the protest squarely in the tradition of anti-war activism by veterans, a tradition that carries moral weight in American politics but does not exempt participants from the law.
And that distinction matters. Whatever one thinks of the Iran conflict, the rules governing conduct inside congressional buildings exist for a reason. Entering legally and then staging an occupation is not the same as petitioning your government. It is a deliberate act of civil disobedience, and the 66 people arrested knew the consequences before they unfurled a single banner.
The episode is not the first time veterans have disrupted proceedings on Capitol Hill. A Marine veteran was forcibly removed from a Senate Armed Services hearing after staging an anti-Israel protest, a reminder that military service does not grant a license to override institutional order.
The protest came at a volatile moment in the U.S.-Iran conflict. A two-week ceasefire between the United States, Israel, and Iran is set to expire Wednesday. President Trump rejected an extension of that ceasefire and called for Iran to sign a deal with Washington that would block Tehran's ability to obtain a nuclear weapon.
Over the weekend, Trump renewed his warnings. He said if Iranian officials did not agree to a deal, "the whole country is going to get blown up." High-stakes talks between the U.S. and Iran are tentatively scheduled for Wednesday in Islamabad.
The diplomatic pressure and the street-level protest reflect the same underlying tension: whether the conflict will escalate or find a negotiated off-ramp. But those two responses operate in different arenas. One plays out at the negotiating table. The other played out on the marble floor of a congressional office building, ending in zip ties.
It is worth asking how this episode will be treated in the broader media and political conversation. When protesters on the right have entered Capitol buildings, legally or otherwise, the institutional response has been severe and the media coverage relentless. The Justice Department seized roughly $90,000 from activist John Sullivan, who was charged in connection with the Jan. 6 Capitol riot after allegedly encouraging rioters and profiting from footage he sold to media outlets. Sullivan faces charges including obstructing an official proceeding, civil disorder, unlawful entry, and false statements to the FBI.
The legal framework is clear: you cannot illegally occupy a congressional building regardless of your cause, your service record, or which side of the political aisle you sit on. Capitol Police applied that standard Monday. The question is whether the rest of Washington's institutions, courts, media, political leaders, will apply it with the same consistency they demanded after Jan. 6.
Investigations and prosecutions tied to Capitol security have drawn intense scrutiny in recent years. In one related case, a D.C. pipe bomb suspect argued that Trump's Jan. 6 pardon should cover his case, illustrating the tangled legal and political aftermath that follows every high-profile incident at the Capitol.
The 66 people arrested Monday were charged with a misdemeanor, crowding, obstructing, or incommoding. That is a far cry from the felony charges leveled at Jan. 6 defendants. Whether that proportionality holds or shifts will say something about how evenly the law is applied when the politics change.
Meanwhile, the broader security environment around the Capitol remains a persistent challenge for law enforcement. Even personnel entrusted with protecting the building have faced their own legal troubles; a former D.C. police officer who patrolled on January 6 was later indicted on serious criminal charges, a stark reminder that accountability must run in every direction.
Several details remain unresolved. It is not clear whether all 66 arrestees were veterans or military family members, or whether the total included other participants. No names beyond Prysner's have been made public. And Speaker Johnson has not publicly responded to the group's demand that he accept the folded flag and pledge to defund the war effort.
The protest also raises a practical question for the anti-war movement: does occupying a building and getting arrested actually move the needle on policy, or does it simply generate a news cycle and a booking photo? The veterans who stood in the Cannon rotunda Monday clearly believe their sacrifice gives their protest moral authority. It may. But moral authority and legal authority are not the same thing, and on Monday, the law won.
Equal treatment under the law is not a partisan principle. It is the only principle that keeps order in a republic. Washington would do well to remember that the next time it decides which protesters deserve sympathy and which deserve prosecution.
The New Hampshire House passed a bill that would bar the state's public colleges and universities from restricting firearms on campus, sending the measure to the Senate and setting up a fight over whether constitutional carry rights end at the university gate.
House Bill 1793 drew crowds to the Statehouse in Concord this week, with dozens of opponents rallying against the legislation even as its supporters framed it as a straightforward extension of rights the state already guarantees everywhere else. The bill now awaits Senate action in a state that has long embraced gun rights, and where the debate exposes a familiar pattern: progressive institutions carving out exceptions to constitutional protections, then acting surprised when lawmakers push back.
The measure is simple in concept. As WCAX reported, HB 1793 would prohibit New Hampshire's public colleges and universities from restricting firearms on campus. The bill's lead sponsor is Rep. Sam Farrington, a Republican from Rochester who is serving his first two-year term in the Statehouse, and who also happens to be a senior at the University of New Hampshire.
Farrington made the case in plain terms:
"New Hampshire is a constitutional carry state, meaning that you do not need a permission slip in order to exercise your right to bear arms."
He added that college-age adults already shoulder serious responsibilities, military service, voting, and deserve the same Second Amendment protections as any other citizen. Farrington pointed to roughly a dozen other states that already allow campus carry, arguing the results speak for themselves.
"We've seen no increase in accidental shootings, suicides, drunken fights. It just hasn't happened in those other states."
That track record matters. When opponents predict campus mayhem, they are arguing against a body of evidence from states that have tried it. Breitbart noted that about ten states currently permit campus carry, and the dire predictions gun-control advocates have made in each of those states have not materialized.
Opponents organized a rally outside the Statehouse, and the arguments followed a well-worn script. Eli Orne, a psychology major at UNH, told reporters he would feel less safe if the bill became law. He cited concerns about suicide risk and what he described as the irresponsibility of college-age students.
"Having guns stored unsafely in an environment where people are partying and being irresponsible, because people our age are irresponsible, our brains aren't fully developed yet, I just think it is a really bad idea."
Orne also offered a curious comparison, noting that students at UNH are not allowed to have lava lamps in their dorms. He suggested that constitutional rights can be waived "in order to be in a community environment that is safe for everybody." That framing, treating a constitutional right as something a university bureaucracy may suspend at will, on the same level as a dorm-room appliance rule, reveals more about the opposition's assumptions than it does about public safety.
Zandra Rice Hawkins, director of the advocacy group GunSense NH, helped organize the rally. She sought to broaden the scope of alarm, claiming the bill covers "dorms, classrooms, child care centers" and arguing that private colleges receiving state dollars could also be affected. Whether the bill's text actually reaches private institutions is not clear from the legislative summary alone, Hawkins's claim stands as an assertion from an advocacy group, not a confirmed reading of the statute.
The pattern is familiar across progressive opposition to gun-rights legislation: invoke children and dorms, predict catastrophe, and treat the constitutional default as the dangerous outlier. Meanwhile, the states that have already adopted campus carry keep not producing the disasters these groups promise.
New Hampshire is a constitutional carry state. Adults can carry firearms without a permit in most settings. The question HB 1793 raises is narrow: Should public universities, funded by taxpayers and governed by state law, be allowed to override that right within their boundaries?
Currently, UNH students who own firearms can register and store them with local police. That arrangement treats gun ownership as something to be managed and supervised rather than exercised freely, an accommodation that may satisfy administrators but effectively strips students of a right the state otherwise protects.
The broader political context makes the bill's timing notable. Across the country, Democrats are struggling to find a coherent message heading into 2026, and gun control remains one of the few issues where the left's institutional base, universities, advocacy nonprofits, media, still speaks with a unified voice. But that unity often papers over weak arguments.
Consider the contrast with Colorado. Breitbart's coverage noted that Colorado Democrats moved in 2024 to ban campus carry, going in the opposite direction from New Hampshire. The two states now represent competing visions: one expanding liberty, the other restricting it. Voters in each state will judge the results.
The tension between gun-rights advocates and university administrators in New Hampshire predates HB 1793. Fox News previously reported that Plymouth State University told students they would not be penalized for missing class on a Friday when activists planned to appear on campus with loaded firearms. President Sara Jayne Steen said the university had obtained a court order but warned it might not prevent the activists or their sympathizers from showing up armed. The activists argued the university's weapons ban was unconstitutional, the same core claim that HB 1793 now seeks to resolve through legislation.
That episode illustrated how the status quo creates its own instability. When universities assert blanket weapons bans that sit uneasily with state constitutional carry law, they invite exactly the kind of confrontation Plymouth State experienced. A clear legislative answer, one way or the other, is better than a patchwork of campus policies enforced through court orders and email warnings.
Rep. Farrington, as both a lawmaker and a UNH student, occupies a unique position in this debate. He is not a distant legislator imposing policy on campuses he has never visited. He lives under the rules he wants to change. That practical credibility is hard for opponents to dismiss, however much they may try.
The bill now moves to the New Hampshire Senate. Its prospects there are not yet clear from available reporting, but the House passage signals real legislative momentum. If signed into law, New Hampshire would join the roughly dozen states that already allow campus carry, a group that, as Farrington noted, has not experienced the wave of violence opponents predict every time such a bill advances.
Several open questions remain. Will the Senate amend the bill? Does the measure's language actually reach private institutions that accept state funding, as GunSense NH claims? And will opponents produce any evidence from existing campus carry states to support their safety warnings, or will they continue relying on hypothetical fears?
The broader fractures within the Democratic coalition make it harder for the left to mount a disciplined campaign against measures like this one. When your party cannot agree on foreign policy or hold its own members accountable, rallying a unified front against a campus carry bill in a constitutional carry state is a tall order.
And the opposition's own rhetoric undercuts its case. When a student opponent compares a constitutional right to a lava lamp, and an advocacy group director speculates about provisions that may or may not be in the bill's text, the argument against HB 1793 starts to look less like a serious policy objection and more like institutional reflex.
New Hampshire has long trusted its citizens to carry firearms responsibly. The question before the Senate is whether a political class that routinely avoids accountability should be allowed to strip that trust from adults the moment they set foot on a college campus.
If the Second Amendment means anything, it means it doesn't expire at the campus gate.
A 25-year-old Russellville, Arkansas, man will spend the rest of his life behind bars after pleading guilty to child sexual abuse, bestiality involving a pit bull, and sexual extortion, crimes so disturbing that even the prosecuting attorney acknowledged his own team carries the weight of these cases home.
Brandon C. Kilpatrick reached a plea agreement on April 13 in Pope County Circuit Court. Judge James Dunham imposed a sentence totaling 96 years in prison, the New York Post reported. Of that total, 18 years were for sexual extortion and one year for bestiality, with multiple additional prison terms for child sexual abuse charges stacked on top.
Court records show Kilpatrick was originally charged on October 16 with sexual extortion, three counts of bestiality involving the performance of a sex act on a pit bull, and 96 counts of electronic facilitation of child sexual abuse. The crimes occurred between May and September 2024, prosecutors said.
The case began when the messaging platform Kik reported videos of child sexual abuse material linked to Kilpatrick. Kik uses unique usernames instead of phone numbers, which increases a user's ability to remain anonymous. Authorities ultimately found that Kilpatrick possessed and shared 187 clips.
Heather Patton, chief deputy prosecuting attorney for the 5th Judicial District, said the victim told investigators that Kilpatrick contacted her on Instagram, obtained her private photos, and then threatened to release them unless she sent more. That pattern, grooming, exploitation, escalation, is one that law enforcement sees far too often in an age when social media hands predators direct access to children.
Cases like this one are a grim reminder that new federal laws targeting online sexual exploitation exist precisely because the threat is real and growing.
During the sentencing hearing, the victim addressed Kilpatrick via Zoom. She did not mince words.
"I trusted you more than anyone else in my whole life."
Kilpatrick listened to the proceedings on a jail phone and appeared on a large television screen in the courtroom. He showed no visible reaction as the young woman spoke.
She told him plainly what his actions had cost her:
"Had they not caught you, you would have been my end."
And she left no ambiguity about who he is:
"You are disgusting. There is no saving you."
She closed by telling Kilpatrick he would never understand what freedom feels like, and said she hoped to emerge "unscathed by your filth."
That kind of courage from a victim deserves recognition. It also underscores what is at stake in every case where a predator targets a child. Across the country, prosecutors continue to pursue severe sentences in cases involving adults who prey on minors, and the public rightly demands nothing less.
Jeff Phillips, the prosecuting attorney for the 5th Judicial District, spoke about the burden these cases place on the people tasked with building them. For each case, his team must gather and review evidence, including viewing photos and videos of abuse, to determine what charges should be filed.
Phillips put it bluntly:
"We can't unsee these things. We take these cases home."
It is a point worth dwelling on. Prosecutors and investigators in child exploitation cases absorb material that most people could not stomach for a single frame. They do it methodically, case after case, so that offenders like Kilpatrick face the full weight of the law. That work rarely makes headlines, but it holds the line between order and the unthinkable.
Dorinda Edmisten, executive director of the Ozark Rape Crisis Center, attended the hearing to support the victim. She offered a sobering observation about the bestiality charges, telling the court that such conduct is more common than many people assume.
"No, it's not the most uncommon thing we've heard."
That remark should trouble anyone who believes these cases are isolated aberrations. They are not. And the communities forced to confront them, from high-profile indictments involving minors to quieter county courtrooms in rural Arkansas, deserve prosecutors willing to pursue the maximum penalty.
Under the terms of the plea agreement, Kilpatrick must register as a sex offender. He is barred from any contact with the victim, prohibited from contact with anyone under the age of 21, and forbidden from owning animals.
A representative from the Pope County Detention Center said Kilpatrick was being held there pending transfer to a yet-to-be-determined prison. The case number listed in court records is 58CR-25-621.
Ninety-six years. For a 25-year-old, that is a life sentence in all but name. And given what investigators found, 187 clips of child sexual abuse material, the exploitation of a young victim through social media, and repeated acts of bestiality, it is difficult to argue the punishment outpaces the crime.
The criminal justice system does not always get it right. Lenient sentences for serial sex offenders remain a source of justified public anger. But in Pope County, Judge Dunham and the 5th Judicial District's prosecutors delivered a sentence that matches the gravity of the offense. That matters, not just for this victim, but for every community that expects its courts to treat crimes against children with the seriousness they demand.
Online platforms gave Kilpatrick the tools to find, groom, and extort a child. Kik's anonymity features and Instagram's direct-message access made it easier for a predator to operate in the shadows. The technology is not going away. The question is whether law enforcement will continue to have the resources, and the political backing, to catch the next one before a victim has to say, "Had they not caught you, you would have been my end."
Protecting children from predators is not a partisan issue. But it does require a justice system that treats these offenses as what they are: among the most serious crimes a person can commit. Pope County got that right.
When the system works, when investigators endure the unimaginable, prosecutors build airtight cases, and judges hand down sentences that mean something, the least the rest of us can do is notice.
