Andrew Kolvet, a close friend of Charlie Kirk and a producer on "The Charlie Kirk Show," went on air Tuesday to torch the conspiracy theories swirling around Kirk's death, calling them "crackpot, conspiracy, garbage, brain rot stuff" and warning that loose talk from a former government official could blow up the criminal case against the man charged with killing him.

His target: Joe Kent, the former director of the National Counterterrorism Center, whose public comments about the case have now created a potential legal headache for prosecutors. Kolvet argued that Kent's statements could taint the jury pool, aid the defense, and ultimately let Tyler Robinson, the Utah man charged in the case, escape the full weight of justice.

"Because if this ends up screwing up the jury pool, if this ends up in some way getting a hung jury, getting this case thrown out, or even just getting the death penalty off the potential list of consequences, I'm not going to be happy with that."

That wasn't a hypothetical. It was a warning.

The Evidence Already Points One Direction

Kolvet and fellow producer Blake Neff laid out what the public record already shows. The Associated Press reported in September that DNA on a towel wrapped around a rifle found near the scene matched Robinson. Investigators also linked him through DNA recovered from a screwdriver found on the rooftop where the fatal shot was fired.

According to Newsmax, Neff put it plainly on the show:

"There is a murder weapon that was found near the site of the shooting. It was owned by Tyler Robinson's family. It is of the caliber used to shoot Charlie. It has his DNA all over it."

That is not ambiguous. That is not circumstantial in the colloquial sense people throw the word around. That is physical evidence tying a specific person to a specific weapon at a specific crime scene. The case has a trajectory, and it runs straight through Tyler Robinson.

Kolvet stressed the distinction between the verified evidentiary record and the noise polluting the conversation around it. As he put it: "The idiocy that is on full display, we have to call it out."

Kent's Role Keeps Getting More Complicated

Joe Kent is a former Army and CIA officer who later ran as an "America First" Republican candidate in Washington state. He served as director of the National Counterterrorism Center until last week, when he resigned over his opposition to the war against Iran, saying he believes the regime does not threaten U.S. security.

He is now reportedly under FBI investigation for allegedly leaking classified information.

And yet, amid all of that, Kent chose to wade into the Kirk case publicly, making comments that Kolvet says could hand Robinson's defense team a gift. Kent told the outlet Public that he would testify if called, even if doing so helped Robinson's defense, according to Breitbart.

"Then, honestly, so be it. If it gets us to the truth. ... That's obviously the risk I'm taking."

Kolvet drew a sharp line between internet speculation and what Kent's involvement actually means for the prosecution:

"This isn't podcaster junk. This isn't social media conspiracy nonsense. This is an actual government official who's now going to be called to testify on behalf of the defense."

Conspiracy Culture Has a Body Count

There is a recurring pattern on the right that deserves honest examination, not from a place of liberal scolding, but from conservatives who actually want to win. Every major crime, every tragedy, every high-profile death now generates an instant ecosystem of alternative theories. Some come from genuine skepticism of institutions. Fair enough. Institutions have earned skepticism.

But skepticism without discipline becomes its own form of credulity. You end up believing everything except the most obvious explanation. And when that reflex meets a live criminal prosecution with a man's life and a family's justice on the line, the stakes are no longer theoretical.

Kolvet's frustration wasn't performative. It was the frustration of someone who lost a friend and is watching the case against the man charged with killing him get complicated by people chasing clout or chasing ghosts. The evidence is public. The court dates are set. Utah County's public case update lists an April 17 hearing on cameras in the courtroom and a May 18 to 20 preliminary hearing.

The system is moving. The question is whether the noise around the case will let it move toward accountability, or whether it will hand a defense attorney the reasonable doubt that the facts alone would never support.

Justice Requires Discipline

Conservatives rightly demand that the justice system function. They rightly call out prosecutors who refuse to prosecute, cities that let criminals walk, and a legal culture that treats victims as afterthoughts. That moral authority evaporates the moment the right's own commentators, or worse, its own former officials, start undermining a prosecution from the outside.

You cannot demand law and order while simultaneously feeding a defense strategy for the accused. Pick one.

Kolvet picked. He chose the case. He chose the evidence. He chose the friend he lost and the prosecution that might deliver something resembling justice. That deserves more weight than whatever Kent thinks he's accomplishing.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan has issued a subpoena to the Commonwealth's Attorney for Arlington County after her office stonewalled a congressional investigation into the harassment and doxxing of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and his family.

Jordan wrote to Parisa Dehghani-Tafti on Friday, citing a lack of cooperation with the committee's inquiry. The investigation centers on a sustained campaign of intimidation against the Millers at their Arlington, Virginia home, where they lived with their three young children before the situation forced them to relocate.

The harassment was not subtle. "Wanted" posters bearing Miller's face appeared on utility poles near the family's home, complete with their address. Anti-Miller slogans were chalked on the sidewalk. One neighbor reportedly approached Katie Miller and said, "I'm watching you." The family ultimately put their six-bedroom, $3.75 million home on the market and moved to temporary housing on a military base in D.C. for safety.

A prosecutor who won't cooperate

Rather than cooperate with Congress, Dehghani-Tafti hired Abbe Lowell, a high-profile defense attorney, to fight the subpoena, according to the Daily Beast. Her public statement framed the matter as a principled stand for prosecutorial independence.

"For seven years, I have served the people of Arlington County as their Commonwealth Attorney without regard to politics or party. Every decision made in my office rests on two things, and two things only—the facts and the law."

She called Jordan's subpoena "an overreach, a trespass on state and local sovereignty with no legitimate federal interest." She added that it "threatens the centuries-old principle of prosecutorial discretion, a principle that Chairman Jordan has shown no difficulty embracing when the prosecutors in question are Republican."

That last line is doing a lot of work, and it reveals the game. This isn't about prosecutorial independence. It's about a local prosecutor who doesn't want federal oversight into why her office apparently failed to pursue the people who targeted a senior White House official's family. The FBI was reportedly blocked from obtaining a warrant to probe a protester who doxxed the Millers. The question of who blocked it, and why, is precisely the kind of question Congress exists to ask.

Lowell's tell

Lowell's statement was even more revealing. Ostensibly representing the Commonwealth's Attorney and the neighbors involved, he used the opportunity to deliver a Democratic Party press release.

"Since President Trump took office, House Republicans have made clear that harassing political opponents takes priority over actually governing to bring down the cost of living, keep families safe from rogue federal agents, and ensure our children aren't sent off to fight illegal wars."

Read that again. A family was doxxed. Their address was plastered on telephone poles. A woman with young children was told by a neighbor, "I'm watching you." And the lawyer retained to handle the case describes the congressional inquiry into that harassment as itself a form of harassment.

Lowell called Jordan's subpoena "a demand for information about a local investigation that is clearly outside of his jurisdiction and plainly none of his business." He said he would explore accommodation "in good faith" but was "fully prepared to raise the substantial legal issues this attack on state and local authority raises."

The framing is breathtaking. The people who put "Wanted" posters on utility poles aren't the aggressors. The congressman is asking why nothing was done about it.

The pattern that matters

This case fits neatly into a pattern that conservatives have watched develop for years. The sequence works like this:

  • A conservative public figure is targeted with harassment, doxxing, or threats
  • Local law enforcement in a deep-blue jurisdiction moves slowly, or not at all
  • When federal officials inquire, the local prosecutor cries "overreach" and hires lawyers
  • Media coverage focuses on the congressional investigation rather than the underlying harassment

The underlying assumption is always the same: conservatives in public life should expect this. It's just the cost of holding unpopular views in polite neighborhoods. A senior White House official and his wife shouldn't have to flee their home because activists decided to turn their street into a protest zone. Their children shouldn't grow up next to sidewalk slogans about their father.

But instead of accountability for the people who made that family's life unlivable, we get Abbe Lowell talking about "rogue federal agents" and "illegal wars."

Prosecutorial discretion or prosecutorial convenience?

Dehghani-Tafti's invocation of prosecutorial discretion deserves scrutiny. Prosecutorial discretion is a real legal principle. It means prosecutors decide which cases to bring based on evidence, resources, and the public interest. It does not mean prosecutors are immune from answering questions about those decisions, particularly when the decisions appear to follow a political pattern.

When a family with three young children is subjected to a sustained intimidation campaign and the local prosecutor's response is to hire a defense attorney to fight the people asking why nothing happened, the discretion starts to look less like principle and more like preference.

Jordan chairs the House Judiciary Committee. Federal oversight of how local jurisdictions handle threats against federal officials is not some exotic theory of congressional authority. It is among the most straightforward applications of it.

What happens next

The Millers are now living on a military base alongside neighbors like Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. They left their home. They pulled their kids out of whatever rhythms a normal Arlington life afforded. They are safe, but that safety came at the cost of being driven from their own neighborhood.

Dehghani-Tafti says she will "defend the independence of this office." Lowell says he's prepared to litigate. Jordan has the subpoena power of the House Judiciary Committee behind him.

Somewhere in Arlington, the utility poles are clean now. The chalk has washed away. The family is gone. And the people who made it happen have a high-profile defense attorney arguing that asking questions about it is the real abuse of power.

Nassau County authorities arrested a second suspect Tuesday morning in connection with the 2021 acid attack that left Nafiah Ikram permanently disfigured, charging her ex-boyfriend with soliciting the assault that destroyed her face and vision in her own driveway.

Shaquille Coke, identified by sources as Ikram's former boyfriend, was remanded without bail. Prosecutors allege he drove the red Nissan on the night of the attack in March 2021, approximately one month after the couple had broken up. He is also alleged to have anonymously texted Ikram afterward, taunting her about her appearance and "her karma."

The arrest follows the February 10 identification of Brooklyn resident Terell Campbell, 29, as the suspect who carried out the attack itself. Campbell was charged with two counts of assault, possession of a weapon, and possession of noxious material. He pleaded not guilty.

A crime that speaks for itself

The facts of this case require no embellishment. According to CBS News, a hooded man walked up to Ikram's Elmont driveway and threw a cup of acid in her face. She has since endured dozens of surgeries, skin grafts, vision loss in one eye, and throat closure. Five years later, she still cannot open her mouth fully. She still cannot drive herself anywhere. She is, in her own words, still disabled.

"I'm still suffering to this day. Look, I had that surgery to release the scarring, and I still can't open my mouth. I have scars all over my face, and they are still not even halfway done."

In 2023, two years after the attack, Ikram said she was living in constant fear because the suspect was still free. That fear was not irrational. It was the natural consequence of a justice system that took half a decade to put handcuffs on the people responsible for one of the most grotesque acts of violence imaginable.

The aspiring rapper and his search history

The case against Terell Campbell paints a portrait that is difficult to process. Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly laid it out plainly:

"This heartless defendant intended to cause her irreparable harm. Later, he cared so little about the traumatic life-altering injuries he caused that he used the attack to further his rap career."

Campbell published a song called "Obsidian," which references burning someone's face with acid, according to officials. He allegedly turned a young woman's disfigurement into content.

Prosecutors revealed that Campbell conducted numerous web searches immediately after the attack:

  • "sulfic acid remover"
  • "Sulphuric acid on a car seat"
  • "Can you recover from a sulfuric acid attack?"

When law enforcement went to his home, they found a red Nissan Altima. Officials said they were looking into whether Campbell was paid for the attack.

Five years is not justice delayed. It's justice almost denied.

New evidence came to light in late 2025 through a tip that helped lead police to Campbell, according to DA Donnelly. That tip broke the case open. Without it, the five-year statute of limitations officials referenced could have swallowed this case whole. Two suspects who allegedly conspired to melt a woman's face with acid could have walked free on a technicality of the calendar.

Officials said more arrests were possible, but that same statute of limitations now hangs over the entire investigation like a countdown clock. Every day that passes is a day closer to the window slamming shut.

This raises a straightforward question that legislators should be forced to answer: Why does a five-year statute of limitations apply to an acid attack that left someone permanently blind in one eye and unable to open her own mouth? Attempted murder has no expiration date. The damage inflicted here is indistinguishable from attempted murder in everything but the legal charge filed.

What Ikram carries

Ikram sat in the courtroom on Tuesday as her ex-boyfriend was arraigned for allegedly orchestrating the attack that redefined her life.

"I was sitting in that courtroom disassociating, in a dream, how much shock I was in."

She cannot see out of her right side. She requires someone to drive her everywhere. She has undergone dozens of surgeries with no end in sight. The scars on her face, she says, are "still not even halfway done." And yet she also said something that reveals a resilience the people who did this to her will never understand.

"Learning that every day is a new blessing and an opportunity to be great."

Two men allegedly conspired to destroy this woman's life over a breakup. One of them bragged about it in a rap song. The other allegedly mocked her disfigurement in anonymous text messages. It took five years, a tip, and a ticking statute of limitations to bring them before a judge.

Nafiah Ikram will carry what they did to her for the rest of her life. The justice system should make certain they do the same.

A 38-year-old Azerbaijani national suspected of entering the United States illegally has been indicted by a federal grand jury on healthcare fraud charges for allegedly attempting to steal more than $90 million from the Medicare Advantage program. Anar Rustamov remains at large.

The indictment, handed down last week in the Northern District of California, alleges that Rustamov used a company he created, Dublin Helping Hand, to submit thousands of fraudulent claims to Medicare Advantage Organizations for medical equipment between October 2024 and June 2025. The claims were filed on behalf of unsuspecting beneficiaries, using a referring medical provider, and sought reimbursement of more than $90 million in taxpayer funds.

If convicted, Rustamov faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a fine of $250,000 for each violation.

The War on Fraud Finds Its Target

U.S. Attorney Craig H. Missakian for the Northern District of California made no effort to soften the significance of the case, Just the News reported:

"When the Administration declared a War on Fraud, it meant to target exactly this kind of conduct. Rustamov participated in a scheme to steal nearly $100 million in taxpayer funds from a program intended to help those who truly need medical care."

Missakian followed with a warning aimed well beyond this single defendant:

"Anyone who believes they can make easy money by defrauding such programs should know that we will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to identify, investigate, and prosecute such fraud and abuse."

That language carries weight. This is an administration that has made fraud enforcement a centerpiece of its fiscal agenda, and a case like this one illustrates exactly why.

The Scheme

The mechanics here are brazen. According to the indictment, Rustamov submitted thousands of false claims for medical equipment through Dublin Helping Hand to Medicare Advantage Organizations. The claims were tied to real beneficiaries who apparently had no idea their information was being used. A referring medical provider was involved, though that individual has not been publicly identified.

The alleged fraud ran for roughly eight months. In that span, Rustamov sought more than $90 million in reimbursements from a program designed to provide healthcare coverage for seniors and disabled Americans.

Consider the scale. This was not someone skimming from the edges of a government program. This was an industrial-grade looting operation, thousands of claims, tens of millions of dollars, executed through a shell company by someone who, according to federal authorities, may not have even been in the country legally.

A Familiar Pattern

Medicare fraud is not new. It has been a persistent drain on federal resources for decades, costing taxpayers billions every year. But the details of this case sharpen a point that the political class too often avoids: the intersection of illegal immigration and large-scale fraud against American social programs.

Rustamov is described as a foreign national from Azerbaijan who previously lived in Sunnyvale, California, and who may have entered the United States illegally. The federal government has not yet provided additional details on how or when he entered the country, but the implication is stark. A person suspected of being in the country unlawfully allegedly built an enterprise designed to siphon nearly $100 million from a healthcare program funded by American workers and retirees.

This is what happens when a country fails to secure its borders and verify who is living within them. The costs are not abstract. They land on the balance sheets of programs that American citizens depend on, programs like Medicare that are already under enormous fiscal pressure.

At Large

Perhaps the most unsettling detail in the entire indictment: Rustamov remains at large. Federal officials have confirmed he has not been apprehended. A man charged with stealing $90 million from American taxpayers, a man the government suspects entered the country illegally, is simply gone.

That fact alone should concentrate the mind. Border security is not just about drugs or violent crime, though those are urgent enough. It is about the fundamental ability of the federal government to know who is in the country, where they are, and what they are doing. When that system breaks down, the consequences ripple outward in ways that touch every American who pays taxes or depends on a federal program.

What Comes Next

The indictment is a start. The administration's War on Fraud has produced a case that puts the right questions in front of the public. But an indictment without an arrest is an incomplete sentence. Finding Rustamov and bringing him to trial will be the measure of whether enforcement has real teeth.

Twenty years in prison and $250,000 per violation is a serious penalty structure. It sends a message. But messages only land when the messenger can actually reach the recipient.

Somewhere, a man who allegedly tried to steal $90 million from American seniors is free. The border he may have crossed illegally didn't stop him from coming in. The system he allegedly exploited didn't stop him from filing thousands of fraudulent claims. Now the question is whether the justice system can stop him from disappearing entirely.

FBI agents swarmed a Hollywood mansion early Thursday morning and dragged a suspect out in pajamas. The arrest was part of "Operation Hard Money," a coordinated takedown tied to an alleged $17.4 million mortgage fraud scheme that targeted elderly homeowners across Los Angeles.

After a four-year probe, the FBI's Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force arrested 11 suspects accused of running a sophisticated fraud ring that operated between 2021 and 2023. Prosecutors say the scheme produced about $6 million in actual losses.

Among the accused: an Iranian national with an outstanding warrant for removal from the United States.

The Defendants

The 11 suspects span a wide range of ages and backgrounds. They include:

  • Nazaret Chakrian, 65
  • Arnold Moradians, 57, an Iranian national with an outstanding warrant for removal from the United States
  • Avetis Hekimyan, 38
  • Ross Tarkhan, 32
  • Tigran Hovanesian, 56
  • Armen Vardevaryan, 55
  • Craig Higdon, 66
  • Helen Spangler, 62
  • Victor Lossi, 43
  • Marine Sarkisian, 49, an Azerbaijani national and green card holder
  • Cynthia Borjas, 51

All defendants except one are charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and multiple counts of wire fraud. Several also face aggravated identity theft and money laundering charges. If convicted, each fraud and money laundering count carries up to 20 years in federal prison. Aggravated identity theft adds a mandatory two-year consecutive sentence.

The presence of Moradians on this list deserves particular attention. Here is a foreign national who already had an outstanding removal warrant, meaning the federal government had already determined he had no legal right to remain in the country. And yet he remained. Long enough, allegedly, to help orchestrate a multimillion-dollar fraud operation against American seniors. Every day an illegal immigrant with a removal order walks free is a day the system advertises its own impotence, as Fox News reports.

Targeting the Vulnerable

The victims were elderly homeowners in some of Los Angeles's most recognizable neighborhoods: Hollywood, Hollywood Hills, Westwood, and Chinatown. These are people who spent decades building equity in their homes, only to allegedly have it siphoned away by a criminal ring that treated their life savings as an open vault.

Mortgage fraud targeting seniors is a particularly vicious crime. Older homeowners are often equity-rich and cash-poor, which makes them ideal marks for schemes that exploit confusion around refinancing, liens, and title transfers. The complexity of real estate transactions provides cover. By the time victims realize something is wrong, the money has moved through layers designed to obscure its path.

That's what makes the "money laundering" charges in this case significant. This wasn't alleged to be a one-step theft. Prosecutors are describing what they consider a sophisticated, multi-year operation with infrastructure built to sustain it.

DOJ Sends a Signal

First assistant United States attorney Bill Essayli framed the operation as part of a broader enforcement posture:

"There is no shortage of massive fraud occurring within California."

He continued with a statement that made clear the Justice Department sees this case as representative of a larger pattern:

"Today's operation represents one of many sophisticated schemes used by criminals — including foreign nationals — to defraud U.S. citizens and taxpayers of their hard-earned property. Those days are over under this U.S. Department of Justice. These defendants will be facing significant prison time for their charged conduct."

The explicit mention of foreign nationals was not incidental. It was a signal. This Justice Department is willing to name a problem that previous administrations treated as unspeakable: that foreign nationals, including those in the country illegally, are exploiting American citizens on American soil.

FBI Director Kash Patel praised the operation on X, writing:

"Massive alleged fraud takedown in California from @FBILosAngeles — well done."

California's Enforcement Vacuum

The case was investigated by the FBI-led Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force alongside IRS Criminal Investigation, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and local law enforcement agencies. That's a significant coalition of federal resources directed at a single fraud ring in one metro area.

And that's worth sitting with for a moment. It took four years and a multi-agency task force to bring this case to the arrest stage. Fraud schemes like this thrive in environments where enforcement is slow, where sanctuary policies limit cooperation between local and federal authorities, and where political leadership treats property crime as a low priority. California has spent years cultivating exactly that environment.

When a state raises the threshold for felony theft, decriminalizes minor fraud, hamstrings cooperation with federal immigration enforcement, and signals at every level that property crime is not a serious concern, sophisticated criminals take notice. They don't just steal from stores. They build operations. They target the people least equipped to fight back.

Elderly homeowners in Westwood didn't ask for a state government that treats enforcement as optional. They just wanted to keep the homes they paid for.

What Comes Next

The defendants now face the federal system, not California's revolving door. Up to 20 years per count for fraud and money laundering. A mandatory two-year add-on for identity theft. These are the kinds of sentences that actually deter, because they carry real weight.

For Moradians, conviction would presumably end the absurdity of an Iranian national living freely in the United States despite a removal warrant. For the other defendants, the prospect of decades in federal prison should clarify that the current DOJ is not interested in plea deals that amount to parking tickets.

Eleven people were arrested. Elderly Americans in Los Angeles were allegedly robbed of millions. One of the accused should never have been in the country to begin with.

The agents came early Thursday. At least one suspect answered in pajamas. He wasn't expecting them.

Chuck Norris, the martial arts icon and star of "Walker, Texas Ranger," died Thursday at the age of 86. His family described it as a "sudden passing." He leaves behind a legacy that stretched far beyond Hollywood, one rooted in service, faith, and a willingness to stand up for conservative principles when it cost something to do so.

The New York Post reported that President Trump mourned the loss on Friday while leaving the White House, offering reporters a characteristically direct tribute:

"He was a great guy. He was a really good tough cookie. You didn't want to fight him, I can tell you. He was a tough, great guy."

Trump called Norris a "great supporter" and added simply: "Wow, that's too bad."

A conservative who never flinched

In an industry that punishes dissent from liberal orthodoxy, Norris wore his Republican credentials openly for decades. He was an Air Force veteran. He was a longtime Republican. And he was involved in presidential politics long before it became fashionable for celebrities to pretend they understood policy.

In the 2008 Republican primary, Norris endorsed then-Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee for president. Huckabee ultimately failed to garner the nomination, but Norris stayed in the fight. By 2016, he endorsed Trump in his first campaign for president.

That trajectory tells you something. Norris didn't chase relevance by picking the safe candidate. He backed the people he believed in.

The relationship between Norris and the broader conservative movement ran deeper than campaign endorsements. He founded a nonprofit with President George H.W. Bush that promoted martial arts instruction for kids. The two even went skydiving together for Bush's 80th birthday in 2018.

Think about that pairing for a moment. A Hollywood action star and a former president, bound not by photo ops but by shared commitment to discipline, service, and youth development.

That's a brand of celebrity engagement that the modern left, with its parade of lecture-circuit activists and Instagram humanitarians, has never come close to replicating.

Norris and Trump are believed to have first met in 1991 at WrestleMania VII in Los Angeles, California. It was the kind of larger-than-life crossover that both men embodied: brash, unapologetically American, and utterly unconcerned with the approval of coastal tastemakers.

What Hollywood lost and won't acknowledge

Chuck Norris became a cultural phenomenon twice. First through his film career, then through the internet memes that turned him into a symbol of invincibility.

But beneath the jokes was a man who actually lived the values he projected on screen. He served his country. He built something for kids who needed structure. He picked sides politically and never apologized for it.

That combination is vanishingly rare in entertainment today. The modern celebrity class talks endlessly about "using their platform" while saying nothing that risks a single follower.

Norris used his platform to endorse Republican presidential candidates, promote martial arts discipline for at-risk youth, and jump out of airplanes with former presidents. The difference between performance and conviction has never been clearer.

No cause of death has been disclosed. His family asked only that the public respect the sudden nature of their loss.

Trump's words on Friday were brief and unpolished, which made them land harder. No speechwriter crafted them. No comms team approved them. Just a president who lost someone he respected, saying so plainly on his way out the door.

Hollywood will move on quickly. It always does when the person it lost didn't share its politics. But the people Norris actually fought for, veterans, kids, conservatives who felt seen by a man who refused to bend, will remember longer.

A federal judge dismissed the Trump administration's lawsuit against California over the state's egg regulations on Wednesday, ruling that the federal government failed to establish it had standing to bring the case in the first place.

U.S. District Judge Mark C. Scarsi, a President Trump appointee, found that because the federal government is not a participant in the egg marketplace, its ability to challenge California's laws was "substantially more difficult to establish." The dismissal came without a ruling on the merits, and the DOJ has two weeks to file an amended complaint.

It's a procedural setback, not a death blow. But it highlights the tricky legal terrain of using federal power to challenge state-level regulatory overreach, even when the overreach is obvious.

What the DOJ Argued

According to The Hill, the Department of Justice sued California last July, targeting what it called "unnecessary red tape" around egg production. DOJ attorneys pointed to three state laws they argued were driving up egg prices nationwide and should be invalidated because they were preempted by the federal Egg Products Inspection Act, a 1970 law requiring continuous inspection of liquid, frozen, and dried egg products to ensure proper packaging and labeling for human consumption.

The DOJ's core argument was straightforward:

"Through a combination of voter initiatives, legislative enactments, and regulations, California has effectively prevented farmers across the country from using a number of agricultural production methods which were in widespread use—and which helped keep eggs affordable."

The three California laws in question span a decade of escalating regulation:

  • Proposition 2, a 2008 statewide ballot measure that created welfare mandates for farm animals but did not specify size requirements
  • A 2010 law that regulated the quality of eggs sold for human consumption
  • A 2018 statewide ballot measure that established new minimum-space requirements for housing egg-laying hens and other farm animals, including veal calves and breeding pigs, and prohibited farmers from selling products from animals housed in a "cruel manner"

Taken together, these laws don't just regulate California farmers. They regulate every farmer in the country who wants to sell eggs in the nation's most populous state. That's the whole game. California sets the standard, and the rest of the country absorbs the cost.

The Standing Problem

Judge Scarsi didn't reach the question of whether California's laws actually conflict with federal law. He stopped at the threshold: Does the federal government have the right to bring this suit at all?

His answer, in an 11-page ruling, was no. At least not as currently argued. Scarsi wrote that because the United States "is not the target of the challenged government action" and does not allege it is a participant in the egg marketplace, its standing was fatally weak. He opened the ruling with a bit of judicial humor:

"Unlike with the chickens and eggs at issue here, there is no question that an analysis of standing must come first."

The ruling leaves the door open. Scarsi gave the DOJ two weeks to file an amended complaint, meaning the administration can take another crack at establishing why the federal government has a sufficient stake in this fight to bring it to court.

The Bigger Picture

The legal question here is narrow, but the policy question is not. California has spent nearly two decades layering regulations onto agricultural production in ways that ripple far beyond its borders. When one state controls roughly 12 percent of the national population and demands that out-of-state producers meet its regulatory preferences as a condition of market access, the effect is a de facto national mandate passed by no Congress and signed by no president.

This is a familiar pattern. California has used the same playbook on auto emissions, energy standards, and privacy regulations. The sheer size of its consumer market means that producers often find it cheaper to adopt California's rules nationwide than to maintain separate supply chains. The result is that Sacramento sets policy for states that never voted for it.

The DOJ's instinct to challenge this dynamic was sound. The execution, at least in round one, fell short on a technicality that matters enormously in federal litigation. Standing isn't a formality. It's the first wall any plaintiff has to clear, and the federal government's position as a non-participant in the egg market made that wall higher than usual.

What Comes Next

The DOJ did not immediately respond to questions about whether and how it planned to move forward with the case. That two-week window to amend the complaint is the key number to watch. If the administration can reframe its standing argument, perhaps by emphasizing the preemption angle more aggressively or identifying a more concrete federal interest, the merits of the case could still get their day in court.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom's office has not commented on the ruling.

The underlying tension isn't going away. American consumers are paying more for eggs, and California's regulatory apparatus is one reason why. Whether the federal government is the right plaintiff to make that case is a legal question. Whether it's a problem worth solving is not. That answer is sitting in every grocery receipt in the country.

A Welsh court has confiscated more than £20,000 from the frozen bank accounts of Daniel Andreas San Diego, one of America's most wanted fugitives, who spent over two decades hiding in rural North Wales before the FBI finally caught up with him.

San Diego, 47, was discovered living in a cottage near a woodland in the Conwy area and arrested in November 2024 after 21 years on the run. He is currently held in the top-security Belmarsh jail in London.

A police lawyer told district judge Anita Price at Llandudno court that San Diego's legal team had initially contested a forfeiture application by North Wales police to seize his assets across three accounts, but that was no longer the case. The money is gone.

The bombings that started it all

San Diego was wanted by the FBI for allegedly bombing two office buildings in San Francisco in 2003, according to the Daily Mail. He was the first American-born alleged terrorist placed on the Bureau's most wanted list, and a $250,000 reward was offered for information leading to his capture.

The first bombing, in August 2003, targeted biotechnology firm Chiron Inc. near Oakland, California. Authorities responding to that blast found a second bomb. A month later, a nail bomb detonated outside the nutritional products company Shaklee. Both targeted businesses had links to Huntingdon Life Sciences, a company long in the crosshairs of animal rights extremists.

The Animal Liberation Brigade claimed responsibility with language that left nothing to the imagination:

"This is the endgame for the animal killers and if you choose to stand with them you will be dealt with accordingly."

San Diego was indicted in 2004 by the United States for "maliciously damaging and destroying by means of an explosive." But he allegedly vanished before he could be taken into custody. The FBI also claims they found a "bomb-making factory" in San Diego's abandoned car after he led police on a 65-mile chase in California.

Then he disappeared. For 21 years.

A quiet cottage, a long memory

How a man accused of domestic terrorism manages to slip across borders and settle into a rural property in North Wales without detection for more than two decades is a question worth asking. San Diego wasn't hiding in a failed state or a country without extradition agreements. He was living in the United Kingdom, an allied nation with some of the most extensive surveillance infrastructure in the Western world.

His lawyers fought extradition in a British court. They lost.

The financial seizure at Llandudno court is a relatively small coda to the larger story, but it underscores a basic truth: running from American justice doesn't just mean looking over your shoulder. It means eventually losing everything you accumulated while doing it.

The long arm, however slow

At the time of San Diego's arrest, then-FBI Director Christopher Wray put it plainly:

"There's a right way and a wrong way to express your views in our country, and turning to violence and destruction of property is not the right way."

Wray also made the broader point about the Bureau's persistence:

"Daniel San Diego's arrest after more than 20 years... shows that no matter how long it takes, the FBI will find you and hold you accountable."

Twenty-one years is a long time to prove that point. But the point was proven.

The domestic terrorism we don't talk about

San Diego's case is a useful reminder that domestic terrorism in America has never been the exclusive province of any single ideology. The same political class that spent years warning about one flavor of extremism was remarkably quiet about the kind that firebombs office buildings in the name of animal rights.

Eco-terrorism and animal rights extremism caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage across the United States in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The perpetrators were rarely treated with the same urgency in media coverage as other domestic threats. San Diego sat on the FBI's most wanted list for two decades. How many Americans even knew his name?

There is a pattern in how these stories get covered. When the ideology behind the violence aligns with causes that enjoy cultural sympathy in newsrooms, the coverage softens. "Animal rights activist" sounds almost noble. "Alleged domestic terrorist who built nail bombs" does not. They describe the same man.

What comes next

San Diego sits in Belmarsh, one of Britain's most secure facilities, awaiting the consequences of choices he made more than two decades ago. His bank accounts are empty. His extradition fight is over. The cottage in Conwy is behind him.

The wheels of justice turned slowly here. Agonizingly so. But they turned. And for a man who thought a quiet life in Wales could outrun a nail bomb in California, the bill has finally come due.

House Speaker Mike Johnson shut down a Democratic proposal to partially fund the Department of Homeland Security, calling it what it is: an attempt to starve immigration enforcement while keeping the rest of the agency running. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries launched a discharge petition to force a vote on a bill that would fund TSA, FEMA, the Coast Guard, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, while deliberately excluding Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection.

Johnson didn't mince words.

"The discharge petition is really a petition to defund the police."

He's right. ICE and CBP are federal law enforcement agencies. Carving them out of a funding bill isn't fiscal responsibility. It's targeted defunding dressed up as a compromise.

The anatomy of a political stunt

Jeffries' discharge petition requires 218 signatures, meaning he would need Republican defectors to get it to the floor. That's not a serious legislative strategy. It's a press release with procedural window dressing.

The structure of the proposal tells you everything about Democratic priorities. Fund the agencies that don't enforce immigration law. Defund the ones that do. Then frame the whole thing as a reasonable middle ground.

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise offered a blunter assessment, Newsmax reported:

"One of the dumbest political ideas maybe in the history of American politics — but the Democrats aren't done with it."

He followed up by connecting the maneuver to the party's broader pattern:

"Now that you're in another moment of Democrat-created chaos, what is their answer? To defund law enforcement again."

The "defund the police" movement cost Democrats dearly in 2020 and beyond. Apparently, the lesson didn't stick. The same instinct just migrated from local police departments to federal border agencies.

Who actually blocked DHS funding?

Johnson argued that Republicans have voted numerous times to fund the Department of Homeland Security, only to watch those bills die in the Senate because Democrats refused to provide the votes needed to overcome the 60-vote legislative filibuster. The Speaker framed Jeffries' petition as a diversion from that reality:

"Now, instead of doing what's right and putting an end to this charade, Democrats insist on tearing the bill apart piece by piece."

This is the part Democrats hope voters miss. The funding impasse isn't because Republicans won't appropriate money for DHS. It's because Democrats in the Senate have blocked full funding bills, and now House Democrats want to fund the department selectively, agency by agency, excluding the two components most directly responsible for border security.

The message is clear: Democrats will fund DHS, but only the parts that don't interfere with illegal immigration.

The TSA pressure play

TSA employees have begun to miss paychecks, leading to reports of employees quitting and longer lines at airport security checkpoints. This is the leverage Democrats are banking on. Create visible public pain at airports, then offer a "solution" that conveniently excludes ICE and CBP from the fix.

It's a hostage strategy. Fund everything Americans interact with daily. Let the border enforcement agencies wither. Then dare Republicans to vote against airport security and disaster relief.

The problem is that the gambit only works if no one reads past the headline. The moment voters understand that Democrats are proposing to fund FEMA but not the agencies that stop illegal border crossings, the political math changes. Johnson and Scalise clearly intend to make sure voters understand exactly that.

Selective funding is selective enforcement

There's a principle underneath the procedural maneuvering that deserves attention. When a party proposes funding a department but surgically removes the law enforcement components, it is making a policy statement about which laws it wants enforced. Funding TSA but not CBP says: we care about security theater at airports but not about who crosses the border.

Funding FEMA but not ICE says: we'll respond to disasters but won't remove illegal immigrants who've been ordered deported by a judge.

Johnson noted that Democrats want key agencies to go without funding unless they can reopen the border to illegal aliens. Whether you view that as rhetorical sharpening or plain description depends on how seriously you take the deliberate exclusion of the only two DHS agencies focused on immigration enforcement.

Democrats could end this today by supporting a full DHS funding bill. They won't, because full funding means ICE and CBP keep operating. That's the part they can't stomach.

Every day they hold out, the quiet part gets louder.

President Donald Trump will sign an executive order Monday placing Vice President JD Vance at the helm of a sweeping new initiative to investigate fraud across the United States. The signing is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET at the White House, with both Trump and Vance present, according to a report from the New York Post.

The move formalizes what has already been building for weeks: a systematic, top-down effort to root out the billions of taxpayer dollars disappearing into fraudulent claims across federal programs.

A 'Whole-of-Government War on Fraud'

According to Newsmax, a spokesperson for Vance framed the initiative in stark terms, describing a crisis that goes far beyond bookkeeping errors.

"In states across the country, fraudsters are depriving vulnerable citizens of basic social services, stealing billions of your tax dollars, and eroding America's social fabric."

That word, "eroding," is doing real work. This isn't simply about waste. It's about the structural integrity of programs that tens of millions of Americans depend on. When fraud bleeds a system dry, it's the legitimate recipients who suffer first. The people gaming the system don't lose their benefits. The grandmother on Medicaid does.

The spokesperson continued, warning that the scale of the problem now threatens the long-term survival of the safety net itself:

"This fraud has happened on such a massive scale that it's endangering the future viability of America's entire social safety net."

The administration's response, according to the spokesperson, will be a "whole-of-government war on fraud that includes multiple stakeholders who will follow the fraud wherever it leads."

Minnesota Was the Opening Salvo

If anyone doubted the administration's willingness to act, last month provided the proof. Vance publicly criticized Minnesota Governor Tim Walz over fraud failures in his state and then froze more than $250 million in Medicaid funding for Minnesota.

A quarter of a billion dollars. That's not a warning shot. That's a cannonball through the front door.

Walz's response was predictable. He called the administration's actions "a campaign of retribution." It's the same playbook Democratic governors have run since January 2025: any enforcement action is retaliation, any accountability is persecution, any oversight is authoritarianism. The framing collapses the moment you ask one simple question: Was there fraud, or wasn't there?

If Minnesota's Medicaid system were clean, the freeze would be indefensible. But Walz hasn't made that case. He's made the process case, the feelings case, and the motive case. Everything except the substance case. When a governor's best defense against a fraud investigation is "you're being mean," the investigation is probably onto something.

California May Be Next

Earlier this week, Vance hinted that California could be the next state to face major scrutiny for fraud. On Friday, following a speech in North Carolina, he made it more explicit:

"We know there's a lot of fraud in California, and we're trying to get to the bottom of exactly what it looks like and what we've done in the Trump administration."

California is the obvious next target. It runs the largest state-administered benefits apparatus in the country, and its political leadership has spent years treating oversight as an afterthought and enforcement as an inconvenience. The state has made itself a magnet for exactly the kind of fraud this task force is designed to uncover, not through bad luck, but through deliberate policy choices that prioritize enrollment volume over program integrity.

A document describing the executive order reportedly identifies California, Illinois, New York, Maine, and Colorado as states with "insufficient" fraud oversight. The geography tells its own story. These are not random selections. They are states governed by leaders who have built their political brands on expanding benefits access while systematically defunding the mechanisms that keep those systems honest.

Why Vance Is the Right Pick

Placing the Vice President in charge sends a signal that this isn't a mid-level task force destined to produce a report no one reads. This is a principal-level initiative with the full weight of the White House behind it. Vance has already demonstrated a willingness to move fast and absorb political heat. The Minnesota action proved that. The California hints confirm it.

There's also a strategic logic to the choice. Fraud investigations cut across agencies: Health and Human Services, the Department of Agriculture, the Social Security Administration, and state-level Medicaid offices. No single cabinet secretary has the jurisdictional reach to coordinate that kind of effort. The Vice President does.

The left will frame this as political targeting. They always do. But the framing requires you to believe that investigating whether taxpayer money is being stolen is somehow partisan. That belief tells you more about the people holding it than about the investigation itself.

The Bigger Picture

For years, conservatives have argued that the greatest threat to social programs isn't spending cuts. It's the fraud, waste, and mismanagement that hollow them out from the inside while politicians demand more funding to paper over the gaps. The cycle is vicious and self-reinforcing: fraud drains a program, the program underperforms, advocates demand more money, and the money attracts more fraud.

This executive order is an attempt to break that cycle. Not by slashing programs, but by enforcing the rules that are supposed to govern them. The administration is making a bet that Americans, including the working-class voters who actually rely on these programs, care more about whether the system works than whether a governor's feelings are hurt.

It's a good bet. The people most harmed by Medicaid fraud aren't wealthy taxpayers in the suburbs. They're the low-income families who show up at a clinic and find out their coverage has been compromised by a system too bloated and too unsupervised to protect them. Cleaning that up isn't retribution. It's the bare minimum.

Monday's signing makes it official. The fraud has a new enemy, and he has subpoena power.

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