Hunter Biden has left the United States and now claims he cannot pay the lawyers who defended him through years of federal criminal cases, tax charges, and disbarment proceedings, a remarkable turn for the son of a former president who once commanded lucrative foreign consulting fees and sold dozens of paintings to anonymous buyers.
A legal filing submitted on April 6 by attorney Barry Coburn stated plainly that "Mr. Biden lives abroad" and that he "cannot afford" to cover his outstanding legal fees. The paperwork, first reported by The Express, described a man whose income streams have dried up and whose debts now run into the millions.
The filing comes after Biden told a federal judge last month that he could not afford to continue his lawsuit against former Trump aide Garrett Ziegler. His attorneys asked U.S. District Judge Hernan Vera in early March to end that case. They said Biden "has suffered a significant downturn in his income and has significant debt in the millions of dollars range."
Biden himself put a number on the financial damage during a November podcast interview with South African host Joshua Rubin:
"Look at the past six years of my life and the $17 million of debt that I'm in, as it relates to my legal fees."
That figure is striking on its own. It becomes more so when set against the timeline of what produced those fees.
In 2024, a Delaware federal court convicted Hunter Biden of three felonies for purchasing a gun in 2018. Prosecutors said he lied on a federal form by claiming he was not illegally using or addicted to drugs. He had also been set to stand trial in September 2024 in a California tax case, where prosecutors accused him of failing to pay at least $1.4 million in federal taxes. He agreed to plead guilty to misdemeanor and felony charges just hours after jury selection was set to begin.
His father, former President Joe Biden, pardoned him in 2024. The pardon wiped away criminal consequences but did nothing about the legal bills.
The financial spiral ran alongside a professional collapse. A Connecticut judge disbarred Hunter Biden in December for violating the state's attorney conduct rules. The judge found that Biden had engaged in conduct "involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation." In an agreement with the state office that disciplines lawyers, Biden consented to being disbarred and admitted to attorney misconduct, though he did not admit to criminal wrongdoing. In a court document, Biden admitted to some but not all of the misconduct allegations.
The Connecticut judge also cited a separate disbarment. The Associated Press reported that Biden was disbarred in Washington, D.C., in May. Two jurisdictions. Two licenses revoked. The man who once traded on his family name and legal credentials now holds neither a law license nor, by his own account, a stable income.
It is worth noting that the pattern of prominent figures quietly leaving the country when political or legal pressure mounts has become something of a recurring theme in recent years.
The court filing painted a picture of a man running out of options. Biden sold 27 art pieces in the years leading up to the Ziegler lawsuit, but had sold only one since. His attorneys said most of his major income sources had gone dry. He was now assessing which of his several other pending lawsuits would even be worth continuing.
The filing also cited the Los Angeles wildfires from last January, claiming Biden's home there was made "unlivable" for an extended period. Whether that damage was insured, and to what extent, remains unclear from the available filings.
Last year, Biden was pictured in South Africa with his wife. The filing's declaration that he now "lives abroad" raises obvious questions about where, exactly, a pardoned felon with $17 million in self-reported debt has chosen to settle, and how he is supporting himself there.
The broader question of high-profile political figures vanishing from public view when accountability looms is not lost on observers who have watched this saga unfold over the better part of a decade.
Several questions hang over the disclosure. The filing does not name the court that received the April 6 paperwork. It does not identify Biden's other pending lawsuits by name. It does not explain what happened to the proceeds from 27 art sales, transactions that drew scrutiny at the time because the buyers' identities were shielded from the public.
Nor does the filing account for the years of foreign consulting income that made Hunter Biden a household name in Washington long before any indictment. The laptop controversy, the Burisma board seat, the Chinese business ventures, all of that preceded the legal bills. The $17 million figure covers only the cost of defending against the consequences. It says nothing about where the earlier money went.
Meanwhile, questions about institutional accountability and political bias in federal investigations continue to surface in other contexts. A recent report revealed that an FBI agent with documented anti-Trump views led a major January 6 investigation, reinforcing concerns about selective enforcement that have dogged the Biden family saga from the start.
The presidential pardon shielded Hunter Biden from prison. It did not shield him from the financial wreckage of his own conduct. Three felony convictions. Two disbarments. A guilty plea in a tax case involving at least $1.4 million in unpaid federal taxes. A gun charge built on a lie he signed on a federal form. And now a legal filing that says, in effect: I have nothing left.
The legal system processed Hunter Biden's cases. His father intervened to erase the penalties. And now the son has left the country, claiming he cannot pay the people who kept him out of prison.
The broader political landscape continues to generate similar dramas. Institutions and media outlets that spent years minimizing the Biden family's legal exposure now face their own credibility reckonings, much as the BBC is doing in a Florida courtroom over a separate defamation dispute.
For ordinary Americans who pay their taxes, follow the law, and cannot call the White House when trouble arrives, the Hunter Biden story has always carried a simple lesson. The rules apply differently when your last name opens doors. The pardon proved it. The flight abroad confirmed it.
Accountability is not supposed to be optional, but for the right family, it apparently comes with an exit visa.
Pope Leo XIV met Thursday with David Axelrod, the longtime Democratic strategist who helped Barack Obama win the White House in 2008, in a quiet Vatican sit-down that neither side has been willing to explain. The meeting has fueled speculation that Obama himself may soon visit the first American pope, a fellow Chicagoan and, by Obama's own telling, a White Sox fan.
The Vatican offered no details about the Axelrod meeting, not the location, the duration, or the purpose. Axelrod has not shared any details either and did not respond to a request for comment, CBS News Chicago reported.
What we know is the context. Six weeks before the meeting, Obama made clear on a podcast hosted by Bryan Tyler Cohen that he wanted to meet the new pope.
Obama said in February:
"Being president, or even being an ex-president, I can kind of meet everybody. So, I've met a lot of folks. The person who I have not yet met, and that I'm looking forward to meeting, and I hope I get an opportunity sometime in the future, is the new pope, who's from Chicago, and a White Sox fan."
Now his closest political adviser turns up at the Vatican. And nobody wants to talk about why.
Christopher Hale, who is writing a book on the pope and American politics, called the Axelrod visit unexpected. He told CBS News Chicago:
"It's a surprise. Obviously, [Axelrod is] not someone you'd expect to meet with Pope Leo XIV."
Hale stopped short of confirming a direct link between the Axelrod meeting and Obama's stated desire to visit. But he noted the timing. "We're not 100% sure that this is connected to that, but the timing is auspicious," Hale said.
That careful phrasing tells its own story. Axelrod is not a theologian. He is not a diplomat. He is a political operative, one of the most effective of his generation, and his former boss publicly expressed interest in a papal audience just weeks ago. Obama is also no stranger to generating headlines with offhand public remarks that later take on a life of their own.
The silence from both the Vatican and Axelrod's camp only deepens the impression that something is being arranged behind closed doors.
Pope Leo XIV was born in Chicago and raised in south suburban Dolton. Axelrod was born in New York but attended the University of Chicago and worked as a reporter at the Chicago Tribune in the 1980s before becoming the architect of Obama's political rise. Obama himself is about two months away from opening the Obama Presidential Center on the South Side of Chicago.
The shared geography matters. Leo is the first American pope, and his Chicago roots have already drawn a parade of Illinois political figures to the Vatican. Gov. JB Pritzker traveled there in November to meet with him. A number of Illinois mayors have also visited since Leo became pontiff.
But Axelrod is not an elected official. He holds no government office. His currency is political influence, specifically, influence within the orbit of Barack Obama. That makes his Vatican visit a different kind of signal, one that is harder to dismiss as routine courtesy. Obama's broader role in Democratic politics has remained active even out of office, as he has urged fellow Democrats to pass the torch to a new generation of leaders.
Hale offered a revealing detail about Leo's media habits that may explain why the pontiff would take a meeting with a political strategist in the first place.
"Pope Leo XIV is an American. He consumes American media vociferiously. He's an iPhone user. He's not disconnected from reality."
That portrait of a media-savvy pope cuts two ways. On one hand, it suggests Leo understands the political implications of every meeting he takes. On the other, it means he chose to meet Axelrod knowing full well the speculation it would generate, and did it anyway.
For a pontiff who on Easter Sunday spoke of "asking people of goodwill to search always for peace and not violence, to reject war, especially a war which many people have said is an unjust war, which is continuing to escalate and is not resolving anything," the decision to engage with a figure so closely identified with partisan American politics raises legitimate questions about what message the Vatican is sending.
It is worth noting that President Donald Trump still has not met with Leo. The sitting president of the United States has yet to sit down with the first American pope, but Obama's top political adviser apparently got through the door. The contrast is hard to miss. It was only recently that Trump made his own symbolic statement about the Obama era by replacing Obama's portrait in the White House entrance hall.
The Vatican has said in recent months that the pope is unlikely to visit the United States in 2026 because it is an election year. That means if Obama wants to meet Leo, the former president would likely need to travel to Rome.
Hale said "all signs point to" the meeting Obama wanted. But no meeting has been confirmed, no date has been announced, and the Vatican is not talking. Axelrod's silence only adds to the opacity.
The broader political dynamics around the Obama family have drawn sustained public interest. Even Michelle Obama's public absences have generated considerable speculation in recent months. An Obama visit to the Vatican would be a major media event, and both sides know it.
The open questions are straightforward. Did Obama ask Axelrod to go? Was the meeting a logistical advance visit? Or was it something else entirely, a conversation about policy, about peace, about the pope's public messaging on war? Nobody is saying.
What is clear is that a Democratic political operative with no obvious Vatican business secured a private audience with the pope, weeks after his former boss publicly asked for one. Meanwhile, the current occupant of the Oval Office has not.
The Vatican is free to meet with whomever it chooses. But the optics of this particular meeting, a partisan strategist, a silent pontiff, a former president waiting in the wings, and a sitting president left outside, are not neutral. They carry a political charge, whether the Vatican intends it or not.
The inner workings of Obama's political circle remain a subject of fascination. His longtime strategist David Plouffe recently offered candid reflections on the Democratic Party's failures to reckon with its recent losses. Axelrod's Vatican visit suggests the network is still very much active, and operating on a global stage.
When the first American pope meets privately with a Democratic power broker and refuses to explain why, the faithful, and the taxpayers who still fund former presidents' security details, deserve a straight answer.
They haven't gotten one yet.
A 37-year-old Columbus, Ohio, man pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court to cybercrimes that included creating and distributing AI-generated sexually explicit images, marking the first conviction under the Take It Down Act, the law First Lady Melania Trump championed and signed alongside President Donald Trump last May.
James Strahler entered his plea in a United States District Court in Ohio after prosecutors laid out a months-long campaign of harassment involving artificial intelligence tools, threats of violence, and the targeting of both adults and children in his community. The U.S. Attorney's Office for Southern Ohio announced the guilty plea, and U.S. Attorney Dominick S. Gerace confirmed Strahler was the first person in the country convicted under the new federal statute.
The case offers a concrete test of a law that critics on the left and in Silicon Valley questioned when it passed. The facts prosecutors described are not abstract or hypothetical. They are specific, documented, and deeply disturbing.
Prosecutors said Strahler had installed more than 24 AI platforms and more than 100 AI web-based models on his phone. His criminal activity, they said, ran from December 2024 until June 2025, when he was arrested on federal charges.
The Department of Justice described his conduct in blunt terms:
"The defendant used telephone calls, voicemails, text messages and web postings to engage in a campaign of harassment against his victims."
That language only scratches the surface. The U.S. Attorney's Office provided a more detailed account of the allegations. Strahler used AI to create pornographic videos depicting at least one adult victim in fabricated sex acts with her own father, prosecutors said. He then distributed those videos to the victim's co-workers. He messaged the mothers of adult female victims and demanded nude photos, threatening to circulate the explicit AI-generated images of their daughters if they refused.
He called victims and left voicemails of himself engaged in sexual acts or threatening rape, prosecutors said. He referenced victims' specific home addresses in his threats.
The conduct extended to children. Prosecutors said Strahler posted AI-generated obscene material depicting minors online. He used the faces of minor boys from his own community, morphing them onto the bodies of other adults or children to create videos showing the boys in fabricated sex acts, including, prosecutors said, with their own mothers and grandmothers.
Strahler created more than 700 images of both real victims and animated persons and posted them on a website dedicated to child sexual abuse, prosecutors said. Investigators flagged an additional 2,400 images and videos on his phone as depicting nudity, morphed child sexual abuse material, and violence.
The sheer volume of material, and the deliberate cruelty of targeting people known to the defendant, including children in his neighborhood, sets this case apart from more generic online offenses. This was not some distant, anonymous internet crime. It was aimed at real people whose faces Strahler knew.
The Take It Down Act makes it a felony to post AI-generated sexually explicit images of a person without their consent. Melania Trump lobbied for the bill's passage last year and put her signature next to the president's when he signed it in a Rose Garden ceremony surrounded by advocates and survivors.
The first lady has made a visible public role for herself on issues she considers urgent, and the Take It Down Act became one of her signature causes. On Monday, Breitbart News reported that she wrote in an op-ed that AI had great potential for use in education while also advocating for "digital literacy", a framing that treats the technology as a tool requiring guardrails, not a menace to be banned outright.
That distinction matters. The law does not criminalize AI itself. It criminalizes using AI to victimize real people, a line that even some skeptics of government regulation should be able to recognize.
After the plea was announced Tuesday, Melania Trump wrote on X, thanking the prosecutor by name:
"Thank you U.S. Attorney Dominick S. Gerace for protecting Americans from cybercrimes in this new digital age."
Gerace, for his part, made clear that his office intended to use the new statute aggressively. He stated:
"We will not tolerate the abhorrent practice of posting and publicizing AI-generated intimate images of real individuals without consent. And we are committed to using every tool at our disposal to hold accountable offenders like Strahler, who seek to intimidate and harass others by creating and circulating this disturbing content."
The investigation began at the local level. Strahler's conduct was first reported to the police department in Hilliard, Ohio, a Columbus suburb, and to the Delaware County Sheriff's Department. The matter was then referred to the FBI, which built the federal case that led to his arrest in June 2025 and, ultimately, his guilty plea.
That chain, local police to sheriff's department to FBI to U.S. Attorney, is a textbook example of how federal law enforcement is supposed to work when local agencies encounter crimes that exceed their jurisdiction or involve federal statutes. The federal courts have been a contested arena in recent years, but in this instance, the system moved from report to arrest to conviction with the kind of efficiency that restores a measure of public confidence.
Strahler's sentence will be determined by the court at a future hearing, prosecutors said. The specific charges and sentencing range were not detailed in the announcement.
AI-generated abuse material is not a fringe problem. The tools Strahler used, more than two dozen platforms and over a hundred web-based models, all on a single phone, are widely available. The barrier to creating this kind of material has collapsed. Anyone with a smartphone and an internet connection can now fabricate images that would have required a professional studio and criminal intent to produce even five years ago.
That is precisely the gap the Take It Down Act was designed to fill. Before the law, prosecutors faced the awkward reality that AI-generated images of a person might not fit neatly into existing statutes written for an era of cameras and film. The new law closes that gap by treating the nonconsensual creation and distribution of AI-generated intimate images as a federal felony.
The Strahler case is the proof of concept. It demonstrates that the statute can be charged, pleaded to, and enforced. Future defendants will not be able to argue the law is untested or its reach uncertain. And future victims, including children whose faces can be scraped from a social media post and morphed into something unspeakable, now have a federal tool that did not exist two years ago.
Melania Trump's involvement in the legislation is worth noting for another reason. The first lady has not shied from public engagement on causes she considers important, and the Take It Down Act represents one of the clearest legislative wins directly tied to her advocacy. Whether or not the mainstream press gives her credit, the conviction speaks for itself.
Several details remain unresolved. The exact federal charges Strahler pleaded guilty to were not specified in the announcement. The sentencing range he faces is unknown. The specific provisions of the Take It Down Act invoked in this case have not been publicly detailed.
Those gaps matter. The first conviction under any new statute sets a benchmark. Defense attorneys in future cases will scrutinize the Strahler plea for precedent. Prosecutors will use it as a template. How the court handles sentencing will signal whether the Take It Down Act carries real teeth or merely symbolic weight.
For now, the facts are stark enough. A man in Columbus installed dozens of AI tools on his phone, fabricated hundreds of sexually explicit images of real adults and real children from his own neighborhood, distributed the material to victims' families and co-workers, and threatened rape while citing his victims' home addresses. He did this for roughly six months before he was arrested.
The legal system does not always move quickly or in the right direction. In this case, it did. Local police flagged the conduct. The FBI took the referral. Federal prosecutors brought charges under a new law. The defendant pleaded guilty.
That is accountability. And in a legal landscape where too many offenders exploit gaps between old laws and new technology, it is exactly the kind of result taxpayers and parents deserve.
Laws mean nothing if nobody enforces them. This week in Ohio, somebody did.
The Minneapolis City Council is preparing to consider a package of ordinances that would legalize and regulate venues where consenting adults engage in sexual activity, a move that would reverse the city's 38-year-old ban on such establishments and create a new licensing framework for adult sex clubs and bathhouses.
Mayor Jacob Frey is already on board. A spokesperson for the mayor told Fox News Digital he is "in favor of continuing to explore the issue." City Council President Elliott Payne said the plan would be modeled after San Francisco's regulatory approach, with rules focused on safety and public health.
If this sounds like a fringe proposal from a fringe city, consider the scope. The council is not debating a single zoning tweak. It is weighing four separate ordinances that would rewrite sections of the city code, the zoning code, the health and sanitation code, and the miscellaneous offenses code, all to carve out legal space for businesses that facilitate sexual activity between adults.
The first ordinance would add an entirely new chapter to the Minneapolis city code devoted specifically to adult sex venues. It would establish licensing requirements and business regulations for any establishment that facilitates sexual activity between consenting adults.
A second ordinance would update definitions and standards in the city's zoning code for sexually oriented uses. A third would amend health and sanitation provisions related to contagious diseases. The fourth would rewrite the city's miscellaneous offenses code to create exceptions for licensed venues permitted to host consensual sexual activity.
Taken together, the ordinances would strip what advocates call "stigmatizing language" from existing law and replace it with "new definitions to be inclusive of establishments where sexual activity between consenting adults may be facilitated." That language comes directly from the proposed ordinance text.
In other words, Minneapolis would not merely tolerate these venues. It would build an entire regulatory apparatus around them, licensing, zoning, health rules, and criminal-code carve-outs, to make them a permanent part of the city's commercial landscape.
The original ban dates to 1988, when Minneapolis passed an ordinance prohibiting businesses that facilitate "high-risk sexual conduct." The law defined that term to include fellatio, anal intercourse, and vaginal intercourse for pay. It arrived during the height of the AIDS crisis, when cities across the country were grappling with how to slow the epidemic's spread.
The last adult bathhouse in Minneapolis, the 315 Health Club, actually closed its doors in 1988 before the ban even took effect. The club had shuttered its "orgy rooms" two years earlier. The ban, in effect, codified a reality the market had already imposed.
Brian Coyle, the first openly gay member of the Minneapolis City Council, helped pass the 1988 law. He said at the time that many members of the LGBTQ+ community supported the ban. Coyle had been diagnosed with HIV in 1986 but did not publicly acknowledge it until 1991. He died that same year of AIDS-related complications at age 47.
That a gay council member who was himself living with HIV championed the original ban is a fact worth pausing on. It suggests the 1988 ordinance was not born from bigotry but from a public health emergency that the community closest to the crisis took seriously. The people now seeking to undo Coyle's work frame it differently.
The driving force is the Safer Sex Spaces Coalition, an advocacy group that in 2023 successfully lobbied to change the language of the 1988 ordinance. Now the coalition wants the law gone entirely.
The coalition argues that the original ban targeted same-sex partnerships and individuals with HIV and AIDS, discouraged public health outreach, and drove gatherings into what it calls "unsafe and inaccessible spaces." It claims the Minneapolis Health Department agrees the old ordinance is outdated.
The coalition laid out its case in a statement:
"The Minneapolis Health Department and other public health organizations acknowledge this ordinance is no longer the tool needed to promote public health. Social science research tells us that commercial sex spaces, like gay saunas, are important for promoting safer sex practices, enhancing HIV prevention, and increasing access to testing and treatment."
The group went further, casting these venues as community institutions. It is a familiar pattern in progressive governance: reframe a policy debate as a matter of identity, belonging, and emotional well-being, and the practical questions, about public health enforcement, neighborhood impact, and the basic wisdom of city-licensed sex clubs, get pushed to the margins.
The coalition also stated that these spaces "enhance feelings of identity, camaraderie, authenticity, and belonging" and are places "where people overcome isolation and develop a sense of community and pride." Those are real human needs. Whether city-licensed bathhouses are the appropriate vehicle for meeting them is another question entirely, one the council seems uninterested in asking.
Council President Elliott Payne said Minneapolis would model its approach on San Francisco's regulatory framework for bathhouses. That city has long permitted such establishments under its own licensing and health codes. For many Americans, the choice of San Francisco as a governance model is not exactly reassuring. The city's well-documented struggles with public disorder, open drug use, and quality-of-life decline have made it a cautionary tale, not a template.
Minneapolis, for its part, has faced its own governance challenges in recent years. The city became the epicenter of the 2020 "defund the police" movement, and its political leadership has leaned steadily leftward. This latest proposal fits a pattern: Minnesota Democrats have not been shy about pushing the boundaries of what government should normalize and institutionalize.
The mayor's willingness to "continue to explore" the idea, rather than simply say no, tells you where the political center of gravity sits in Minneapolis today. There is no visible opposition from city leadership. No council member is quoted raising concerns about enforcement, neighborhood effects, or whether taxpayers should be in the business of licensing sex venues.
Several questions remain unanswered. No specific date has been set for the council to vote on or formally consider the ordinances. The exact ordinance numbers and full text have not been made publicly available in the materials reviewed. And the mayor's spokesperson offered only a vague expression of support without detailing what guardrails, if any, the administration would insist upon.
There is also no public accounting of what enforcement would look like. If the city licenses adult sex venues, who inspects them? How often? What happens when violations occur? The four proposed ordinances touch the health and sanitation code, but the specifics of contagious disease provisions, the very concern that motivated the 1988 ban, remain unclear.
Meanwhile, Minnesota's Democratic establishment has shown a pattern of dodging accountability on issues that matter to ordinary residents. Whether it is questionable campaign donations or sweeping social experiments, the instinct is to push forward first and answer hard questions later, if at all.
The coalition's claim that the Minneapolis Health Department backs repealing the ban is presented as settled fact, but it comes from the coalition itself. No direct statement from the Health Department has been made public in the reporting reviewed. That is a significant gap. If the city's own health officials truly believe the ban is obsolete, they should say so on the record, with data, not through the filter of an advocacy group.
Minneapolis has a knack for making national headlines with proposals that most American cities would never entertain. This is the same political ecosystem that produced calls to dismantle its police department, and the same state where Governor Tim Walz has presided over a series of progressive experiments that have drawn sharp national scrutiny.
The bathhouse proposal is not about tolerance. Nobody is proposing to criminalize private conduct between consenting adults. The question is whether a city government should actively license, zone, and regulate commercial establishments whose primary purpose is facilitating sexual activity, and whether that represents a sound use of municipal authority and taxpayer-funded oversight.
Advocates frame this as a civil rights issue. But Brian Coyle, a gay man, an HIV-positive man, and a champion of his community, looked at the same question in 1988 and reached the opposite conclusion. He did so with the support of the community he served. The coalition now dismisses his judgment as a relic of stigma.
Progressive cities have a habit of treating the hard-won decisions of previous generations as obstacles rather than lessons. Other Democratic-led cities have shown similar instincts, prioritizing ideological signaling over the practical concerns of residents who have to live with the results.
The Minneapolis City Council has not yet voted. But with the mayor supportive, the council president citing San Francisco as a model, and no visible opposition from any elected official, the direction is clear. The only question is how fast the city moves, and whether anyone in a position of authority bothers to ask whether this is what Minneapolis residents actually want.
When your model city is San Francisco and your idea of progress is city-licensed sex clubs, you have stopped governing and started performing.
A classified CIA technology called "Ghost Murmur", never before used in the field, located a wounded American weapons systems officer hiding in a mountain crevice in southern Iran after his F-15 jet was shot down late last week, the New York Post reported in an exclusive.
The airman, known publicly only by his call sign "Dude 44 Bravo," survived two days in desolate terrain while enemy forces searched the area. The CIA pinpointed his position from roughly 40 miles away, President Trump told reporters at a White House briefing Monday afternoon.
Ghost Murmur uses long-range quantum magnetometry to detect the electromagnetic fingerprint of a human heartbeat, then pairs that data with artificial intelligence software to isolate the signal from background noise. Two sources briefed on the program told the Post that Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works, the defense giant's advanced development division, built the system. Lockheed Martin declined to comment.
The concept sounds like science fiction, but the underlying physics is straightforward. Every beating heart generates a faint electromagnetic pulse. Normally that signal is so weak it can only be measured in a hospital with sensors pressed against the chest.
Advances in quantum magnetometry, specifically sensors built around microscopic defects in synthetic diamonds, have apparently made it possible to detect those signals at far greater distances, a second source with knowledge of Lockheed Martin intelligence collection tools told the Post.
A source briefed on the program described the challenge in vivid terms:
"It's like hearing a voice in a stadium, except the stadium is a thousand square miles of desert."
The same source added a line that doubles as the technology's unofficial motto:
"In the right conditions, if your heart is beating, we will find you."
The name itself carries clinical precision. A source briefed on the program explained that "'Murmur' is a clinical term for a heart rhythm. 'Ghost' refers to finding someone who, for all practical purposes, has disappeared."
The southern Iranian desert offered near-ideal conditions. The source described the environment as "about as clean an environment as you could ask for", "almost no competing human signatures, and at night the thermal contrast between a living body and the desert floor" provided operators "a secondary confirmation layer."
CIA Director John Ratcliffe hinted at the breakthrough during the Monday briefing but took no reporter questions. He said the agency had accomplished its mission by Saturday morning, days before the public knew details of the rescue.
Ratcliffe stated that the CIA had "achieved our primary objective by finding and providing confirmation that one of America's best and bravest was alive and concealed in a mountain crevice, still invisible to the enemy, but not to the CIA."
He added that the confirmation "was relayed by Secretary [of War Pete] Hegseth to the president, and the operation quickly moved to the execution phase." The rescue mission involved hundreds of U.S. troops. Two rescue planes got stuck in a field during the operation, forcing commanders to call in additional aircraft and destroy the stranded jets. Despite those complications, there were no American casualties.
The intelligence community has faced intense scrutiny in recent years, from federal prosecutors targeting former CIA Director Brennan over Russia-probe evidence to broader questions about whether the nation's spy agencies serve the country or their own institutional interests. Ghost Murmur's operational debut represents the opposite end of that ledger: a concrete, life-saving result delivered under extreme pressure.
President Trump was characteristically direct in praising the operation. He told reporters the CIA spotted the missing American from "40 miles away" and called the effort remarkable.
"It's like finding a needle in a haystack, finding this pilot, and the CIA was unbelievable. The CIA was very responsible for finding this little speck."
Trump also acknowledged Ratcliffe's personal role, saying the CIA director "did a phenomenal job that night, he did something that I don't know if you want to talk about it. If you want, you can. I'm not sure he's supposed to."
Then came the lighter moment. Trump suggested the details "might be classified, in which case I'd have to put him in jail if he talks about it and I don't want to put him in jail. He doesn't deserve that." The exchange drew attention to just how closely held the Ghost Murmur program had been, and how reluctant officials remain to discuss its full capabilities.
That caution extends well beyond the White House. National security leadership across multiple agencies has faced turbulence in recent months, including the FBI probe into former counterterrorism director Joe Kent, which predated his resignation and raised questions about oversight of senior officials during wartime operations.
The Post reported that Dude 44 Bravo had activated a Boeing-made Combat Survivor Evader Locator beacon, the standard-issue distress device carried by American aircrews. But the beacon had a critical limitation in this scenario.
A source briefed on the program explained that the airman "had to come out [of the crevice] to send the beacon." The source added: "It was less important the signal they sent and more important that he had to come out to send [it]." In other words, every time the wounded officer exposed himself to transmit his location the conventional way, he also exposed himself to the enemy.
Ghost Murmur solved that problem. It found him while he stayed hidden.
The source said this is "basically why everyone's been so cagey about how [the airman] was actually found," adding: "I don't think people even know this technology is possible from this distance."
The technology had previously been tested on Black Hawk helicopters for future potential use on F-35 fighter jets, the second source with knowledge of Lockheed Martin tools said. But it had never been deployed operationally by the CIA until this rescue.
Ghost Murmur is not a magic wand. The second source cautioned that "the capability is not omniscient. It works best in remote, low-clutter environments and requires significant processing time." How long that processing took during the Iran rescue remains unclear even to the Post's sources.
Whether the system has additional wartime applications, offensive or otherwise, is also unknown. What is clear is that in the specific conditions of a vast, sparsely populated desert at night, the technology performed exactly as designed.
The broader intelligence apparatus continues to navigate questions about accountability and leadership. Reports that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was kept in the dark about the FBI's probe into Joe Kent before his resignation have fueled concerns about internal transparency. Yet the Ghost Murmur deployment suggests that when the mission is clear, find an American and bring him home, the machinery can still deliver.
The Post noted that Ghost Murmur's debut follows another recent disclosure of classified technology. Trump told the Post in January that he deployed a weapon called "The Discombobulator" during the Jan. 3 raid that captured Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro to face U.S. drug and weapons charges. The pattern suggests an administration willing to reveal, at least partially, the tools it uses when the results speak for themselves.
Several questions remain open. The full identity of Dude 44 Bravo has not been released. The exact date of the shootdown and the precise location in southern Iran are still classified or unreported. The enemy force or Iranian unit searching for the airman has not been publicly identified.
Trump's claim that the CIA detected the airman from "40 miles away" has not been independently verified, and it remains unclear whether that figure refers to initial detection distance, a subsequent observation, or something else entirely.
Meanwhile, Washington's political class continues its familiar pattern of infighting over intelligence oversight and executive power. Some Democrats have already signaled interest in new confrontations, Rep. Robert Garcia has floated impeaching Attorney General Pam Bondi if Democrats retake the House, even as operations like this one demonstrate the real-world stakes of a functional national security apparatus.
The technology worked. The airman came home. No Americans died in the rescue. Those are facts, not talking points. And they are worth more than a hundred congressional press conferences.
A 60-foot Ferris wheel crammed with at least 80 riders collapsed at a night fair in Uttar Pradesh, India, on Wednesday, trapping dozens beneath the wreckage and critically injuring at least 10 people.
The ride completed just two rotations before it came down at the Bhainsaha Mela fair in Khadda, Kushinagar district. At least 30 people were injured. Many women and children were among those on board, with at least two children among the critically hurt.
Terrified onlookers watched as rescuers and emergency crews worked for almost an hour to free victims pinned under the twisted structure.
Eighty people on a single Ferris wheel. According to the New York Post, the ride was overcrowded at the time of the collapse. The base of the ride appeared weak and poorly anchored, according to preliminary findings referenced in the reports.
That combination tells you everything. An attraction built to spin paying customers dozens of feet in the air was neither sturdy enough to hold its own weight nor restricted to a safe number of riders. The operator packed it full anyway.
Authorities are now probing possible negligence and safety lapses by the fair's operators. "Possible" is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence. When a ride collapses after two rotations with 80 people aboard, negligence isn't a hypothesis. It's a starting point.
This was not an isolated failure. Just weeks earlier, at least 14 children were injured when a fairground ride collapsed in Madhya Pradesh, India. Two major structural collapses at fairs in the same country within weeks suggest something far beyond bad luck.
Fairground safety in parts of India has long operated in a regulatory gray zone where inspections are inconsistent, enforcement is lax, and operators face minimal accountability until something catastrophic happens. By then, the damage is measured in broken bones and hospital beds.
The calculus is grimly familiar to anyone who watches developing-world infrastructure stories. Cheap construction. Minimal oversight. Maximum capacity. The economics work until physics intervenes.
The investigation into the Kushinagar collapse will determine whether the operator ignored warnings, whether local authorities failed to inspect the ride, or whether some combination of both turned a night at the fair into a mass casualty event.
But investigations in the aftermath of these incidents tend to follow a predictable arc: outrage, a probe, promises of reform, and then a slow fade back to the status quo until the next ride buckles under the weight of corners cut.
Thirty people are recovering from injuries tonight. Ten of them are fighting critical ones. At least two of those are children who climbed onto a Ferris wheel expecting to see the fair from above. They saw it from underneath instead.
Rep. Eric Swalwell is threatening to sue FBI Director Kash Patel if Patel complies with a request to send the so-called Fang files to the Trump White House. The files are part of a long-secret trove of documents showing Chinese infiltrations into American politics and elections dating back more than a decade.
The same congressman who spent years demanding the release of every document even tangentially related to Donald Trump now wants these particular files locked away. The reason isn't hard to guess. They include him.
Swalwell, a top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee and now a candidate for California governor, learned last week that the Trump White House might release the files. His attorneys, Norm Eisen and Sean Hecker, fired off a letter to Patel that read less like a legal argument and more like a warning shot:
"The Congressman has never been accused of wrongdoing in that matter and your attempt to release the file is a transparent attempt to smear him and undermine his campaign for Governor of California."
The letter went further, promising consequences:
"Your actions threaten to expose you, others at the FBI, and the FBI itself to significant legal liability."
Swalwell's office and Eisen did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Just the News on Sunday.
At the center of this is Christine Fang, also known as "Fang Fang," a suspected Chinese intelligence asset who, according to a 2020 report by Axios citing U.S. intelligence officials, conducted an extensive political influence operation between 2011 and 2015 on behalf of the Chinese Communist Party in the Bay Area and elsewhere.
According to Just the News, Fang reportedly helped Swalwell with fundraising and placing an intern in his office during the 2014 campaign cycle. Federal agents carrying out a counterintelligence investigation into Fang alerted Swalwell to their concerns and provided him with a defensive briefing in 2015, according to Axios. Fang soon left the United States in the summer of 2015.
The House Ethics Committee opened an investigation into Swalwell in April 2021. By May 2023, the committee sent a letter closing the matter:
"The Committee on Ethics informed you that it had determined to investigate allegations raised in the complaint that you may have violated House Rules, laws, or other standards of conduct in connection with your interactions with Ms. Christine Fang."
The committee said it would "take no further action in this matter." Swalwell has consistently denied any wrongdoing in his dealings with Fang.
That's the end of the formal inquiry. But it's not the end of the story, because the files themselves remain unseen by the public. And Swalwell clearly wants to keep it that way.
The hypocrisy here isn't subtle. It's structural. Swalwell built a significant chunk of his political career on the principle that the American public deserves full transparency into government investigations, particularly when those investigations touch powerful people. He just never imagined that principle would come for him.
Start with the Mueller report. In March 2019, Swalwell declared:
"Congress and the American public must see every single word of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report. And we should see it at the same time as President Trump, a subject of the investigation, sees it. Nothing less than the rule of law in our country is on the line. Congress must also hear from Mueller himself to make sure that we have received the whole, unvarnished truth. No President is above the law."
Every single word. The whole, unvarnished truth. No exceptions.
Then there was September 2019, when Swalwell appeared on Fox News and accused the Trump White House and the Department of Justice of "an ongoing cover-up." He complained that transcripts with the Ukrainian president "were moved into a top secret covert action system" and called it "consciousness of guilt."
Swalwell also talked openly with liberal talk show host Rachel Maddow about investigating former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page, who was targeted by a secret FISA warrant. Page was never charged with wrongdoing. Special Counsel John Durham ultimately concluded there was no basis for the FBI to even open a probe into Russia collusion and target Page with a FISA warrant. Multiple probes found significant evidence of wrongdoing in that FBI investigation, including the false submission of a court filing.
Swalwell's own congressional website still carries a post about Page's 2016 trip to Moscow to deliver a speech, noting that "the Trump campaign approved this trip" and that Page "criticized American foreign policy as being hypocritical." The post treats a speech in Moscow as inherently suspicious. Bill Clinton did the same thing.
Then came the Epstein files. Swalwell relentlessly pressed to release all the Jeffrey Epstein files, even if innocent people were implicated. He dismissed concerns by the DOJ that the names of innocent Americans should be redacted. When the files weren't moving fast enough, he suggested penalties, including contempt charges and reduced DOJ funding for violating the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
In a tense exchange at a congressional hearing late last year, Swalwell confronted Patel directly:
"Every member of the Judiciary Committee, every Republican, every Democrat voted to release these documents and to have them in our hands."
"Where the hell are these files? And why are you keeping Donald Trump's name, to the degree that you are, out of them?"
No redactions for the innocent. No patience for process. Full transparency, immediately, regardless of who gets caught in the blast radius.
Unless, of course, the blast radius includes Eric Swalwell.
The New York Post editorial board called him out last week with characteristic directness:
"Eric Swalwell wants the Jeffrey Epstein files released — just not the Fang Fang files."
"Now, all of a sudden, Swalwell doesn't like the idea of the FBI releasing files."
The Post noted the obvious: "this time, the files involve documents about Christine Fang, or Fang Fang, an alleged Chinese spy who reportedly had a relationship with Swalwell."
Swalwell's response to all of this has been to frame himself as a political target. He posted on X:
"The reason Trump is so desperately trying to stop me is not because I'm running for Governor of California, but because now I'm the favorite."
That's the move. When transparency threatens someone else, it's a sacred democratic principle. When it threatens you, it's a political attack.
Here is the standard Eric Swalwell established with his own words and actions over the past six years:
Every single one of those principles now applies to him. And he wants none of them enforced.
Swalwell himself, in an exchange with Patel about the Epstein files, asked the question that now echoes back at him with uncomfortable precision:
"If the president is not implicated, then why not release everything?"
If the congressman is not implicated, then why threaten to sue?
Syed Hammad Hussain, a 40-year-old Pakistani finance and IT professional, was beaten, strangled, and left dead inside his first-floor apartment at The Zenith, an upscale condominium in Washington, D.C.'s Logan Circle neighborhood. Police say he made the fatal mistake of holding the door open for his killers, believing they were fellow residents.
Two men have been charged with first-degree murder. The building's surveillance cameras captured nearly everything. And one of the suspects was already in police custody on unrelated charges when authorities came to arrest him.
That last detail tells you most of what you need to know.
The timeline, reconstructed from surveillance footage and court documents, is straightforward and brutal. In the early hours of February 11, Hussain left his building to get food. Rico Rashaad Barnes, 36, and another man allegedly followed him for several blocks on his way back. Surveillance footage shows Hussain entering The Zenith around 1:35 a.m.
Moments later, one of the suspects banged on the building's glass door. Hussain let him inside. A second suspect and a third man then entered as well. An argument broke out in the hallway and spilled outside, where Hussain was punched and collapsed. The third man left at that point.
The two remaining suspects allegedly carried Hussain back into the building and into his apartment. By about 2:40 a.m., surveillance video captured both men leaving. Less than an hour later, emergency crews responding to reports of smoke found Hussain's body face down in his living room, his hands and feet loosely tied with neckties. Court records describe multiple skull fractures and signs that he had been strangled and burned. Two 25-pound metal dumbbells were found near his body. The apartment had been ransacked, with items missing, as The Independent reports.
Interim Metropolitan Police Department Chief Jeffrey W. Carroll described Hussain plainly:
"He was going out to get food and going back home."
That's it. That was the entirety of what Hussain did to cross paths with his killers. Carroll added that there is no known relationship between Hussain and the men who took his life.
"They just took advantage of him."
Barnes has been charged with first-degree murder. Authorities later also charged Alphonso Walker, 39, of Northwest Washington, with first-degree murder. A third man who was present during part of the encounter later cooperated with investigators.
Walker was already in police custody on unrelated charges at the time of his arrest for Hussain's murder. The source material does not elaborate on what those charges were, but the fact sits there, heavy and familiar. A man already in the system's grip, already known to law enforcement, allegedly participated in the savage killing of a stranger whose only crime was holding a door open.
This is the pattern that drives ordinary Americans to fury, not because they lack compassion, but because they can see what's happening. Repeat offenders cycle through a justice system that treats public safety as a secondary concern. Prosecutors defer. Judges release. And someone like Syed Hammad Hussain pays the price.
The Zenith sits in Logan Circle, described as a typically low-crime neighborhood. Hussain lived in an upscale building with surveillance cameras and secured entry points. He did everything a person is supposed to do: live in a safe area, choose a secure building, and go about their business.
None of it mattered.
The locked glass door, the cameras, the neighborhood reputation: all of it dissolved the moment a predator banged on the glass, and a decent man assumed the best about a stranger. Americans are told constantly that the answer to crime is better infrastructure, more cameras, and smarter design. But no amount of architecture compensates for a justice system that fails to keep dangerous people off the streets.
Carroll called Hussain "an innocent person." That phrase should be unremarkable. It isn't. In a city where political leaders routinely redirect sympathy away from victims and toward systemic explanations for criminal behavior, the simple act of naming innocence matters.
A family member, Syed K. Hussain, spoke about the man they lost:
"He lived his life. He was happy."
The family has vowed to follow the trial. They shouldn't have to. A man should be able to walk home from getting food at 1:30 in the morning in the nation's capital without being stalked, beaten, strangled, and set on fire in his own apartment.
Washington, D.C., has spent years debating policing, incarceration, and criminal justice reform in the abstract. Syed Hammad Hussain is what the concrete looks like. A 40-year-old professional, dead on his living room floor, hands tied with his own neckties, was killed by men who followed him home because he looked like an easy target.
The cameras caught everything. The question is whether the system will do anything with it.
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg on Friday shut the door on the Justice Department's bid to revive two grand jury subpoenas aimed at the Federal Reserve and its chairman, Jerome Powell, writing in a six-page ruling that prosecutors "did not come close" to persuading him he got it wrong the first time. The decision keeps the subpoenas dead, for now, and sets up what promises to be a bitter appellate fight over the reach of federal prosecutorial power and the independence of the central bank.
Boasberg, the chief judge of Washington's federal trial court, had quashed the subpoenas last month after finding "abundant evidence" they were part of a pressure campaign against Powell rather than a legitimate criminal inquiry. The Justice Department asked him to reconsider. He declined.
The ruling lands at the intersection of two questions that matter to every American with a paycheck, a mortgage, or a retirement account: Can the executive branch use a grand jury to lean on the Fed chairman over interest-rate policy? And does the judiciary have any business stepping in to stop it? Boasberg answered both, and the answers will not satisfy the prosecutors who brought the case.
The subpoenas grew out of a Justice Department investigation, launched earlier this year, into the Federal Reserve's renovation of its headquarters, specifically the Marriner S. Eccles and Federal Reserve Board East buildings in Washington. Powell had testified before the Senate Banking Committee in June about a critical need for updates to both structures. The project was initially estimated at $1.9 billion but swelled to $2.5 billion after design changes, rising costs, and what the Fed described as "unforeseen conditions."
Cost overruns on a government building project are hardly novel. But the timing of the investigation raised eyebrows. As The Hill reported, President Trump had attacked Powell and other members of the Fed's board for months, specifically for refusing to lower interest rates, before the Justice Department opened its probe. Two subpoenas were then served on the Fed's board of governors seeking records tied to the renovation.
Boasberg framed the legal question plainly: Was the "dominant purpose" of those subpoenas to pursue a legitimate investigation because the facts suggested wrongdoing, or to pressure Powell into cutting rates or stepping aside?
He chose the latter. And on Friday, he said nothing the government offered in its motion for reconsideration changed his mind.
The judge's language was pointed. In his original ruling, Boasberg wrote that the government had "produced essentially zero evidence to suspect Chair Powell of a crime," as Breitbart reported. On reconsideration, Boasberg said the DOJ offered "no new evidence" and identified "no material error" that would justify reversing course.
In his six-page opinion, Boasberg drew a sharp line between two distinct issues, one the government kept raising, and one it kept ignoring:
"The Government has missed this distinction. It makes arguments and cites cases about its broad subpoena power and insists that it does not need evidence, but it ignores the fact that its total lack of a good-faith basis to suspect a crime is relevant to the second, separate question of the subpoenas' true purpose."
Put differently: prosecutors kept insisting they had wide authority to issue subpoenas. Boasberg did not dispute that general principle. What he disputed was whether that authority can be wielded when the evidence points not toward a crime but toward political coercion. "The subpoena power 'is not unlimited' and may not be abused," he wrote.
The AP reported that Boasberg found "abundant evidence that the subpoenas' dominant (if not sole) purpose is to harass and pressure Powell either to yield to the President or to resign and make way for a Fed Chair who will." That finding, left undisturbed by Friday's ruling, is the core of the case going forward.
U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, who oversees the District of Columbia office that brought the investigation, did not take the ruling quietly the first time around. After Boasberg's initial decision last month, she held a press conference and called him an "activist judge" who had "neutered" her office's authority.
Friday brought a similar tone. Timothy Lauer, a spokesperson for Pirro, said the office "will absolutely appeal the judiciary's interference with our access to the grand jury." That appeal will move the fight to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, a venue where the legal arguments over prosecutorial power and judicial oversight will be tested at a higher level.
The question of whether a federal judge can quash a grand jury subpoena on the grounds that it serves an improper purpose is not a trivial one. Grand jury proceedings are ordinarily secret, and courts have historically given prosecutors wide latitude. Boasberg's willingness to look behind the subpoenas and evaluate their motive is itself a contested legal move, one the appellate court will have to weigh carefully.
Pirro's critics, including some Republican senators, see the investigation differently. The Washington Times reported that Sen. Thom Tillis wrote on X that the ruling "confirms just how weak and frivolous the criminal investigation of Chairman Powell is, and it is nothing more than a failed attack on Fed independence." Tillis had previously said he would block the confirmation of Kevin Warsh, Trump's nominee to succeed Powell as Fed chair, until the probe was resolved.
That confirmation fight adds a practical dimension to the legal dispute. Powell's term as Fed chair is set to end, and Trump has nominated former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh to replace him. But as Fox News reported, the ongoing investigation has complicated the Senate math. Tillis indicated that continuing the appeal would only delay Warsh's path to the chairmanship, creating an odd dynamic in which the administration's own legal strategy may be undermining its preferred personnel outcome.
For conservatives who want a new direction at the Fed, this is worth pausing over. The investigation into a building renovation, one that has produced, in the judge's words, "essentially zero evidence" of a crime by Powell, has become a procedural roadblock to installing the very person the administration wants running monetary policy.
The broader legal landscape around the Fed is already volatile. The Supreme Court is currently weighing whether Trump had the authority to fire Fed board member Lisa Cook despite long-standing legal protections for governors, a decision expected by summer. That case could reshape the boundaries of presidential power over the central bank for a generation. Readers following that dispute will recall that the Supreme Court agreed to review Trump's authority over the Federal Reserve earlier this year.
The Cook case and the Powell subpoena fight are legally distinct, but they share a common thread: the tension between executive power and institutional independence at the Fed. How the courts resolve both will shape the relationship between the White House and the central bank for years to come.
Boasberg is no stranger to political crossfire. His name has appeared repeatedly in high-profile clashes between the judiciary and the executive branch. The "activist judge" label Pirro applied is one that has been leveled at other federal judges who have blocked administration policies, sometimes with more justification than others.
In this case, the charge carries a specific sting because Boasberg did not merely rule on a procedural technicality. He made a factual finding, that the subpoenas were pretextual, and then held firm when asked to revisit it. Whether that finding survives appeal will depend on the standard of review and the appellate panel's appetite for second-guessing a trial judge's assessment of prosecutorial motive.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court hearing on the Cook dispute continues to draw attention from Fed watchers and legal scholars alike, adding another layer of uncertainty to an already fraught institutional moment.
As Just The News reported, Boasberg wrote in his original ruling that "there is abundant evidence that the subpoenas' dominant (if not sole) purpose is to harass and pressure Powell either to yield to the President or to resign and make way for a Fed Chair who will." That sentence will be the battleground on appeal.
The appeal is coming. Pirro's office has made that clear. The D.C. Circuit will decide whether Boasberg overstepped by evaluating the government's motive behind otherwise facially valid subpoenas, or whether he correctly applied the principle that prosecutorial power has limits.
For the administration, the stakes extend beyond this one case. If the appellate court upholds Boasberg, it will establish a precedent that federal judges can look behind grand jury subpoenas and block them when the evidence suggests political rather than criminal intent. That would be a significant check on executive power, one that future administrations of either party would have to live with.
If the court reverses, prosecutors get their subpoenas back, and the investigation into the Fed's $2.5 billion renovation project moves forward. Powell would face the prospect of producing records in a probe that, at least so far, has not identified a specific crime he is suspected of committing.
The Supreme Court's posture on protecting Fed officials from executive removal adds yet another variable. A ruling in the Cook case that reinforces the independence of Fed board members could undercut the legal and political logic of an investigation that Boasberg has already called pretextual.
Either way, the central question remains: Was this investigation about a building, or about a chairman who wouldn't bend? Boasberg has answered twice now. The appeals court gets the next word.
Body camera footage from a Martin County, Fla., deputy captures Tiger Woods ending a phone call and telling the officer, "Yeah, I was just talking to the president," moments before his arrest on DUI charges following a March 27 rollover crash near his home on Jupiter Island.
The footage, obtained Thursday by multiple outlets, shows Woods wrapping up a call with the words, "Thank you so much. All right. You got it. Bye. Thank you," before the deputy asks him to stay put. It was unclear whether Woods was in fact speaking with President Trump, as audio from the other end of the call was unavailable. The White House did not return a request for comment.
What is clear: the 50-year-old golfer told authorities he was looking at his phone and changing the radio station when his Land Rover clipped the back end of a pickup truck and flipped. Deputies found two white pills at the scene, according to WFLA. After conducting a sobriety test, Martin County Deputy Sheriff Tatiana Levenar delivered the verdict:
"I do believe your normal faculties are impaired, and you're under an unknown substance, so at this time you're under arrest for DUI."
Woods has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
On Tuesday, Woods announced he was temporarily stepping away from golf. He had been expected to return to the Masters tournament in Augusta, Ga., this week. Instead, he issued a statement saying the break was necessary "to seek treatment and focus on my health," The Hill reported.
"This is necessary in order for me to prioritize my well-being and work toward lasting recovery."
For a man who has defined American athletic greatness across three decades, that sentence carries enormous weight. Woods isn't some flash-in-the-pan celebrity spiraling on a reality show. He is a generational talent, a Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient, and someone whose struggles with injury and personal turmoil have played out on one of the most public stages in the world.
That doesn't excuse driving impaired. It does contextualize the stakes.
President Trump, an avid golfer who awarded Woods the Presidential Medal of Freedom during his first term, spoke to Reuters on Wednesday about Woods's decision to seek treatment. His tone was one of loyalty and confidence.
"It's a good thing that he's doing, but he's going to end up being terrific. He's a great guy."
"He's one of the greatest people I've known. He's a great champion … he'll be fine."
Whatever the nature of the phone call captured on the body camera, Trump's public posture toward Woods has been consistent: support for the man, encouragement toward recovery. That kind of personal steadiness from a president matters more than the media's inevitable effort to turn a friendship into a scandal.
The body camera video is going to generate days of coverage, most of it fixated on the presidential name-drop. Cable news will loop the clip. Pundits will speculate about what was said on the other end of that call. Social media will do what social media does.
None of that changes the core facts:
The legal process will sort out the charges. The more interesting question is whether Woods can actually do what he says he's going to do. Recovery is not a press release. It's not a well-crafted statement from a PR team. It is daily, grinding, unglamorous work that most people never see.
There is a predictable pattern when famous people face moments like this. The left-leaning entertainment press will oscillate between performative sympathy and voyeuristic glee. The recovery industrial complex will offer Woods as a mascot. And somewhere in the noise, the actual human being at the center of it all will either do the work or he won't.
Conservatives have always understood that personal responsibility is not a slogan. It is the operating system. Woods broke the law. He is facing the legal consequences. He says he is seeking help. Those are the facts, and they deserve to be treated with the seriousness that any DUI warrants, regardless of the defendant's fame or friendships.
Trump called Woods "a great champion." Champions are defined not by the absence of failure but by what they do after it. The footage from Martin County is difficult to watch. What comes next will determine whether it's a chapter or a conclusion.
