A Los Angeles Unified School District IT employee allegedly told the CEO she was funneling millions to him, claiming she had "broken all the law" for him, according to incriminating text messages now at the center of a $39 million fraud case that has rocked the nation's second-largest school district.
Hong "Grace" Peng is charged with two felonies: money laundering and having a financial interest in a contract made in an official capacity. Gautham Sampath, CEO of Texas technology company Innive, faces four felony counts, including money laundering and aiding and abetting a government official to have a financial interest in a contract. Both face seven years in state prison if convicted.
LA County District Attorney Nathan Hochman says Peng conspired with Sampath in a pay-to-play scheme where Peng fed more than $22 million in contracts to Sampath's company from 2018 to 2022. Sampath then routed and laundered more than $3 million in kickbacks back to Peng through various intermediaries, Hochman alleges. In total, Innive received over $39 million in payments from LAUSD between 2017 and 2023.
A text chain between Peng and Sampath, reported by the New York Post, reads less like a conversation between a public employee and a vendor and more like a heist script written by people who forgot to whisper.
Sampath opened the bidding, so to speak, with a question that prosecutors say reveals the scheme's scope:
"What r the other opportunities in LAUSD. That we can exploit."
Peng was happy to oblige. In a text later in 2018, she laid out the strategy with remarkable candor:
"Let's grab these money first.. Its already in the pocket. Low hanging fruits… let's get these money… It'll be good for us."
By June 2018, the scheme was apparently humming along. Peng described her method for inflating the take:
"I have a way to get those money. Can load them up more work, then charge more hours."
She also reminded Sampath exactly who was making all of this possible. When Sampath asked why Innive was "lucky," Peng did not mince words:
"Because you have me… I broke all law for you already lol."
The "lol" is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
What makes these messages particularly damaging is not just the admissions. It is the awareness of wrongdoing paired with the refusal to stop. As early as February 18, 2018, Sampath texted Peng with instructions to destroy evidence:
"Delete all watsup chats… if anyone sees the text about these internal things it will be a prb."
Evidently, they did not delete all the chats.
Sampath also discussed setting up shell companies to launder the kickbacks. He told Peng they would need "at least 3-4 companies "to take out the money, adding that "close to a million will be transferred to you," but that it would be "easy to track unless we are very careful." Peng, for her part, floated the idea of creating companies in Hong Kong, China, or Singapore to further distance the funds from scrutiny.
Meanwhile, Peng signed a contract integrity certification, a document meant to confirm that no conflicts of interest existed. Her response on the form: "No."
The charges land at a moment when LAUSD can least afford another scandal. Superintendent Alberto M. Carvalho was relieved of his post following an FBI raid last month. The details surrounding that raid remain sparse, but the timing paints a picture of an institution where oversight was either absent or actively circumvented at multiple levels.
This is a school district. The $39 million that flowed to Innive was public money, taxpayer dollars earmarked for educating children in Los Angeles. Every inflated invoice, every fabricated work hour, every laundered kickback was money that did not go toward classrooms, teachers, or students. The people who suffer most when a public institution is looted from the inside are always the people it was supposed to serve.
The broader question conservatives have raised about massive public school bureaucracies finds fresh evidence here. LAUSD is not a small operation. It is a sprawling, multi-billion-dollar enterprise. And yet a single IT employee allegedly steered $22 million in contracts to one company over four years without triggering a single alarm. Sampath's firm collected $39 million over six years. The scheme, according to prosecutors, involved:
None of this was subtle. These were people texting each other about "exploiting" opportunities and "grabbing" money that was "already in the pocket." If the system cannot catch theft this brazen, it raises serious questions about what else is slipping through.
This is what happens when institutions grow so large and so insulated from accountability that the people inside them stop believing anyone is watching. Peng and Sampath allegedly operated for years, cycling tens of millions through a scheme they discussed openly on their phones. The district's internal controls either failed or did not exist in any meaningful form.
Conservatives have long argued that simply pouring more money into public education without structural accountability produces waste, not results. LAUSD just handed them $39 million worth of proof.
The children of Los Angeles deserved better. They got "lol."
Henry Davis told his wife he didn't want the house, the apartment, or custody of his children. Then he turned his spare bedroom into a home office.
Belle Burden, a New York heiress and daughter of Vanderbilt descendant Carter Burden and prominent urban planner Amanda Burden, recounted the dissolution of her 20-year marriage in her memoir, "Strangers: A Memoir of Marriage," released in January 2026. The portrait she paints of Davis is not one of a man who fought bitterly over custody or assets. It's one of the men who simply walked offstage.
According to Burden, Davis wanted a divorce after she discovered he'd been having an affair. His terms were blunt:
"You can have the house and the apartment. You can have custody of the kids. I don't want it. I don't want any of it."
He eventually moved into a two-bedroom apartment block away. The spare bedroom, the one that might have belonged to his daughter, became a home office. His 12-year-old had no room in her father's new life, literally or otherwise.
Burden had her lawyer send Davis a custody agreement proposing a 50/50 split. What came back was a document stripped of all his time. He included only dinner on Thursday nights. He told Burden flatly that he was "done with that stage of his life where he would parent a child."
Six words from Davis summarized the new arrangement:
"I don't do bath, bed or homework."
Burden was careful, during a podcast conversation with hosts Sims and Emese Gormley, to note that Davis wasn't absent. He lives blocks away. He keeps in touch. When their son had surgery, he showed up. But the daily work of raising children, the college applications, the homework battles, the bedtime routines, all of it landed squarely on her, as Fox News reports.
"He was very clear that he was not going to do the day-to-day, apply to college, all that kind of thing. And that really was like a switch going off."
For bigger moments, Davis appeared. For everyday issues, Burden said, he responded with irritation.
About a year after the split, Burden texted Davis late one night, looking for some explanation, anything that might make sense of a man who had been "all in" and then simply wasn't. His answer was spare:
"I wish I had an answer for you. It's not your fault. Something broke in me."
That's the most she's ever gotten. Burden described it on the podcast as the place where her "head has to rest," whether she likes it or not.
She offered her own interpretation of the switch. Davis had played the role of husband and father willingly, even enthusiastically. And then, like an actor on a stage, he decided he was done with the role, took off the costume, and left. Not gracefully. Just completely.
What stands out in Burden's account is not bitterness toward Davis but a kind of clear-eyed grief about what her children have had to learn far too young. She described them as "amazing" in how they manage the relationship with their father, reaching out to him for things within his comfort zone, like going to a hockey game.
"For me as a mother, I think the biggest challenge for me is to acknowledge their reality, to say 'this is what's happening, this is unusual, that you do not live with your dad.'"
She told her 12-year-old daughter directly that her father couldn't create a home for her right now, and that it had everything to do with him and nothing to do with her. That's a conversation no parent should have to initiate. But someone had to say it, and Davis wasn't going to.
There's a reason this story resonates beyond the Upper East Side. The specifics are unusual: the Vanderbilt lineage, the memoir, the podcast circuit. But the dynamic is not. Fathers who reduce their presence to Thursday dinners and occasional hockey games are not rare. What's rare is someone naming it publicly.
Burden observed that Davis didn't seem to think there was anything wrong with the narrative. As she put it, he seemed to believe that being a man entitled him to leave in this way. That framing deserves scrutiny, not because it's wrong, but because it points to something broader. A society that has spent decades dismantling expectations of male duty and fatherly obligation shouldn't be surprised when some men take the invitation.
Conservatives have long argued that family structure matters, that fatherhood is not optional, and that children pay the highest price when adults treat commitment as a role to be shed rather than a vow to be honored. The Burden-Davis story is that argument in miniature. Wealth doesn't insulate children from the consequences of abandonment. A two-bedroom apartment blocks away is no substitute for a father who shows up for homework.
Podcast host Sims told Burden that, as she put it, "the whole world, every woman in America hates you," referring to Davis. Perhaps. But hatred doesn't fix what's broken, and Davis himself reportedly admitted the book doesn't cast him in a favorable light.
"He said, 'I don't think I come off well in this.'"
He doesn't. But that's not the memoir's doing. That's the facts.
Burden admitted she's heard Davis is "not happy." There's no satisfaction in her voice when she says it, at least not in how it reads. The story she tells isn't a revenge narrative. It's a record of what happens when one parent decides that parenthood is a chapter rather than a lifetime.
Her children are older now. Her daughter is 21. They've learned to meet their father where he is, which is to say, at arm's length. They are, in Burden's words, "wonderful in navigating that."
Children shouldn't have to be wonderful at navigating their father's absence. That's not resilience. It's an adaptation to a wound that didn't have to be inflicted.
Ashley Fisler, a 36-year-old former New Jersey middle school teacher, is behind bars after being arrested and charged in connection with allegations that she sexually assaulted a student in 2021, including alleged sex acts in her classroom and in her car.
The New York Post reported that according to court documents obtained Friday, the allegations include claims that Fisler had sex with the minor student twice and performed a sex act four times. The court paperwork also states that text exchanges included “multiple nude photographs” of Fisler.
Fisler appeared for a brief video court hearing on Friday, where a judge read her the charges she is facing and set a bail hearing for April 1. She will remain behind bars until then.
Prosecutors charged Fisler with six counts of first-degree sexual assault of a minor, one count of second-degree endangering the welfare of a child, and one count of second-degree official misconduct.
The top charges carry a maximum of 20 years in prison. Both second-degree charges carry a maximum of 10 years.
The allegations center on Orchard Valley Middle School in Washington Township, Gloucester County, where the now-adult victim was a student in Fisler’s social studies class. Court filings describe the victim as between 13 and 16 years old at the time.
There is no way to dress this up. If these allegations are true, a public trust was not merely violated; it was exploited.
Court materials state that Fisler denied the allegations during a March 19 interview with Washington Township police.
Her lawyer, Rocco Cipparone, told The Post on Friday that he plans to “aggressively present a defense to those charges.” He also argued against a request to hold Fisler without bail.
“She has no prior criminal record, she has been a lifelong resident of New Jersey, she is a property owner, her entire family is here, [and] she is not a risk of flight,”
Cipparone also pointed to the time elapsed between the alleged misconduct and the current case activity.
“These allegations go back five years. You have this five-year gap where now all of a sudden they are going to say she is a danger to the community,”
And he said he expects to win her release.
“I’m optimistic, and I think I have strong reasons to have her released.”
The bail hearing is scheduled for April 1. Until then, the court has made the basic judgment that caution comes first.
Washington Township School District Superintendent Eric Hibbs said Fisler’s employment ended in April 2023. In a statement, Hibbs said the district takes “matters involving the safety and well-being of our students extremely seriously,” and is “fully cooperating with law enforcement.”
Those lines are necessary, but they are not enough to settle the question parents inevitably ask in cases like this: what was seen, what was reported, and when?
The source material does not answer those questions. That silence is not proof of anything by itself, but it is the vacuum that forms when institutions speak in approved phrases rather than concrete timelines.
In 2019, district social studies supervisor Jeff Snyder told NJ.com that Fisler was a “great teacher.” He went further, praising her approach to students.
“Not only does she make her lessons interactive and engaging, but she also prides herself in making personal connections with all her students,”
That same year, an eighth-grade student wrote an essay praising Fisler as a “hero” who had a “lasting impact on kids.”
In normal times, educators want to be remembered like that. But “personal connections” can become a slogan that hides risk when the adults charged with oversight treat a classroom like a private kingdom.
Schools cannot run on vibes and accolades. They have to run on boundaries, reporting, and a culture that does not flinch from scrutiny.
The allegations have also dragged Fisler’s husband, Paul Fisler, into public view. He could not be reached for comment, according to the source material.
Relatives offered conflicting impressions of what happens next. Paul Fisler’s stepbrother suggested he would not remain in the marriage if the allegations are true.
“He’s a good, upstanding guy. He has morals and everything — he wouldn’t be the type to stay with her if he found out.”
The stepbrother also said the public exposure alone might be decisive.
“Especially since this is already making the news, I feel like that’s enough backlash to be like, ‘All right, maybe we shouldn’t be together anymore.’”
Another relative said, “As far as I know, they’re married and happy together.”
Whatever becomes of that family, the larger moral fact remains: when an adult is accused of exploiting a child, the child is the one who carries the weight longest.
The criminal process will play out in court, beginning with the April 1 bail hearing. But the broader community interest is straightforward and legitimate.
Parents are owed clarity on how a teacher-student relationship is monitored and policed. Taxpayers are owed a school culture that treats professional boundaries as nonnegotiable. Students are owed adults who keep their roles clean, not adults who blur them and then hide behind institutional press releases.
For now, the alleged victim is an adult, but the allegations point back to 2021, to a classroom, to a car, and to a child between 13 and 16 years old. That is the reality this case forces a community to face.
Some lines are not complicated. They are supposed to be unbreakable.
A retired Detroit police sergeant who spent nearly three decades on the force, earning commendations along the way, now faces 14 criminal charges for allegedly kidnapping and sexually assaulting five young women and girls over four years while he wore the badge.
Benjamin Wagner, 68, was arrested earlier this month in Greenville, North Carolina, where he had been living since leaving Detroit. He waived extradition and will face charges in Michigan, including eight counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and five counts of kidnapping.
The victims were between 15 and 23 years old. The alleged assaults occurred between 1999 and 2003 on Detroit's northwest side, just miles from Wagner's own home.
Fox News reported that according to Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, Wagner targeted victims during the early morning hours as they walked to school, home from work, or to visit friends. In each alleged attack, he approached from behind, pointed a pistol at them, forced them to an isolated location, and sexually assaulted them without a condom.
Worthy did not mince words at the news conference where prosecutors and Detroit Police announced the charges:
"The deplorable fact in this case is that the person that we are charging today has led a double life as a law enforcement officer and a serial rapist."
Wagner served with the Detroit Police Department from 1989 until he retired with commendations in 2017. He worked in various units, including criminal investigations and tactical services. The man entrusted with investigating crimes and executing tactical operations stands accused of committing some of the worst offenses in the criminal code.
The charges trace back to a discovery that should haunt every official who let it happen. In 2009, investigators found more than 11,000 untested sexual assault kits abandoned in a Detroit Police Department warehouse.
Eleven thousand. Each kit represented a victim who submitted to an invasive forensic examination, trusting that the system would use the evidence to find the person who attacked them. Instead, the kits sat in a warehouse, untouched, while suspects like Wagner walked free, collected paychecks, and eventually retired with honors.
Worthy called the charges "a culmination of a multiyear journey to justice," adding:
"The alleged facts in this case are disturbing, unsettling and infuriating."
Infuriating is one word for it. The more precise word is failure. Institutional, systemic, prolonged failure.
Worthy did not confirm whether Wagner had any contact with the victims while he was on duty. She also did not confirm whether he had ever been the subject of internal affairs investigations or other criminal allegations during his career. Those non-answers carry their own weight.
A man served 28 years on the police force, rose to the rank of sergeant, worked on criminal investigations, and allegedly committed serial sexual assaults during his tenure. The question isn't just whether internal affairs investigated him. The question is what kind of institution produces that gap between what it knows and what it does.
Wagner will also escape weapons charges entirely. The statute of limitations for the associated weapons crime in Michigan is only six years. The pistol allegedly used to terrorize five young women and girls into compliance is now beyond the law's reach, a consequence of evidence sitting untested for years.
This case illustrates a principle that conservatives understand instinctively: institutions do not police themselves. The same city government that couldn't manage to test 11,000 rape kits was simultaneously asking taxpayers to trust it with more authority, more funding, more jurisdiction over residents' lives.
Detroit in the early 2000s was a city in freefall, governed by a succession of leaders whose priorities had nothing to do with the safety of young women walking to school in the dark. The warehouse full of untested kits wasn't a clerical error. It was a statement of values. Processing those kits costs money and manpower. Someone, at some level, decided those resources were better spent elsewhere.
The victims in this case were teenage girls and young women in northwest Detroit. They were not politically connected. They were not part of any constituency that could exert pressure. They were exactly the people that a functioning justice system is supposed to protect, and the system chose not to.
Officials urged any other potential victims to contact the Detroit Police Department's Sex Crimes Unit. It's the right thing to do. But consider what that request demands: trust the same department that employed the alleged rapist for 28 years and let 11,000 rape kits rot in a warehouse.
Wagner's alleged victims waited more than two decades. Some were children when they were attacked. They are now women in their thirties and forties who have carried this for most of their adult lives, while the man prosecutors say assaulted them collected a pension.
Fourteen charges. Five victims have been identified so far. One retired sergeant who, if the allegations hold, spent his career surrounded by the very tools and colleagues that should have caught him.
Detroit failed these women. The only question left is how many others it failed alongside them.
House Speaker Mike Johnson pointed directly at Democrat immigration and sanctuary policies after the fatal shooting of Sheridan Gorman, an 18-year-old Loyola University Chicago freshman who was gunned down near a lakefront pier on March 19 while watching the Northern Lights with friends.
Jose Medina-Medina, a 25-year-old Venezuelan national who entered the United States in 2023, has been charged with first-degree murder and other felonies after allegedly approaching Gorman and her friends and opening fire. Gorman tried to flee. She didn't make it.
Johnson, speaking at the weekly House GOP leadership press conference on Wednesday, did not mince words about who bears responsibility. He framed the killing not as a system failure but as a system functioning precisely as Democrats designed it.
"The irony of all this is that the system did not fail Sheridan. That worked exactly as the Democrats intended."
According to Johnson, Medina-Medina was in the custody of law enforcement twice before the shooting. Two separate encounters with the justice system. Two opportunities to remove a man who, in Johnson's words, "had no legal right to be in this country."
"He was in the custody of law enforcement twice, and there were two chances to stop him. But Democrats' open borders guaranteed the release, and their soft-on-crime sanctuary policies ensured his impunity."
This is the pattern that Americans have watched repeat itself in city after city. An illegal immigrant with a criminal record encounters the system, the system processes him, and the system releases him back into the community. Then someone dies. Then politicians express condolences. Then nothing changes.
Johnson described Gorman in terms that made the human cost impossible to abstract away, Newsmax reported:
"Sheridan Gorman was a beautiful 18-year-old — a freshman ... enjoying time with her friends out on the pier looking at the Northern Lights."
"And now her family is mourning her tragic and totally unnecessary loss."
Unnecessary. That word carries weight because it's precise. This was not an act of God. It was not unforeseeable. It was the predictable consequence of policies that prioritize the presence of illegal immigrants over the safety of American citizens.
Johnson connected Gorman's death to a broader pattern of Democratic obstruction on enforcement. Just last week, he noted, 190 House Democrats voted against two bills that would have expedited the deportation of illegal aliens who abuse service animals and those who commit fraud.
These are not controversial proposals by any reasonable standard. Deporting people who are in the country illegally and committing additional crimes should be the lowest bar in American governance. And yet 190 Democrats couldn't clear it.
"You don't have to take our word for it. Look at their actions ... they tell you what they prioritize, and it is the welfare of criminal illegal aliens over American citizens."
Johnson is right to make this point through votes rather than rhetoric alone. Votes are permanent. They sit in the congressional record long after press releases fade. When 190 members of one party vote against common-sense deportation measures in the same month that an illegal immigrant allegedly murders a college freshman, the juxtaposition speaks for itself.
Layered on top of the policy failures is the ongoing partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, which Johnson placed squarely on Democrats' shoulders.
"We're 40 days into this shutdown. It's the second-longest in history."
"They shut down the exact law enforcement agencies that are responsible for apprehending criminal illegal aliens."
Think about the sequence. Democrats craft sanctuary policies that shield illegal immigrants from federal enforcement. They vote against bills that would expedite deportations. And then they allow the very agencies tasked with immigration enforcement to go unfunded for 40 days and counting.
At some point, this stops looking like a policy disagreement and starts looking like a coordinated effort to ensure that enforcement simply does not happen. Johnson put the question bluntly:
"They're holding the government hostage, and why? At the root of all, they want to reopen the border, and they want to protect criminal illegal aliens just like this murderer here."
The officials who built Chicago's sanctuary infrastructure have reportedly expressed condolences to Gorman's family. Condolences are easy. They cost nothing. They change nothing. They are the political equivalent of thoughts and prayers from the same people who created the conditions that made the tragedy possible.
Every time a story like this surfaces, the same cycle plays out. A life is lost. Politicians from sanctuary cities offer sympathy. Critics are accused of "politicizing" a tragedy. And then another illegal immigrant with a criminal record walks free in another American city, and the clock resets until the next victim.
Johnson closed with a question that deserves an answer from every Democrat who voted against those deportation bills, from every official who defends sanctuary policies, and from every leader prolonging the DHS shutdown:
"How many more times this story have to be repeated? Everybody needs to be asking that question."
Sheridan Gorman was 18 years old. She was looking at the Northern Lights. She should still be alive.
Jessi Pierce, a sports reporter who covered the Minnesota Wild for NHL.com, and her three young children perished in a house fire over the weekend. Hudson, Cayden, and Avery were all found dead alongside their mother and the family dog when firefighters arrived at the scene.
The White Bear Lake Fire Department responded to the reported fire just before 5:30 a.m. Saturday. The cause remains under investigation.
Pierce was 37 years old. She had been a contributor to NHL.com for the past ten years.
The NHL announced the deaths on Sunday, according to Penn Live. The league's statement captured the weight of the loss plainly:
"The entire National Hockey League family sends our prayers and deepest condolences to the Pierce family on the passing of Jessi Pierce and her three young children."
"Jessi loved our game and was a valued member of the NHL.com team for a decade. We will miss her terribly."
The Minnesota Wild organization issued its own tribute, calling Pierce "a kind, compassionate person who cared deeply about her family and those around her." The team said she "served as a dedicated ambassador for the game of hockey during her time covering the Wild and the NHL."
"Jessi and her children will be greatly missed. Our thoughts and deepest condolences go out to their family, friends, and all who knew and loved them."
Phil Mackey, a colleague, posted on X with a message that named each of the children and spoke to the kind of person Pierce was in the lives of those around her:
"We are absolutely heartbroken and devastated by the death of our coworker and friend Jessi Pierce, as well as her three kids, Hudson, Cayden and Avery."
"Jessi was a joy to be around and work with. ... Jessi was just the best. We all loved her."
Mackey added that those who knew her are thinking of Pierce's husband, Mike, and everyone in her orbit.
There is no ideological frame that makes sense of a mother and three children dying in a fire before dawn. There is no policy debate to be had here, no villain to name, no system to blame. Not yet, at least, and perhaps not ever. Sometimes the news simply demands silence and grief.
What can be said is this: a woman spent a decade doing honest work covering a sport she loved, raising children, building a life in a Minnesota community. That life ended in the worst way a family can lose someone, multiplied by four.
The investigation into the cause of the fire is ongoing. Until those answers come, the only appropriate response is the one the hockey world has already offered: mourning for Jessi, for Hudson, for Cayden, for Avery, and prayers for Mike and the family left behind.
Some stories don't need a lesson. They just need to be told.
A Robinson R44 helicopter carrying two people slammed into the roof of a vacant warehouse in Boynton Beach, Florida, on Monday, killing both occupants on impact. Police confirmed there were no survivors.
The crash occurred around 12:30 p.m., according to the Federal Aviation Administration. Police and fire officials arriving on the scene discovered the small helicopter had plummeted through the roof, punching a hole in the structure and scattering debris across the site.
The identities of the two people killed have not been released.
Rhett Savidge, who was driving to work at a nearby tractor dealership, said he saw the maroon-colored helicopter quickly dropping out of the sky, the New York Post reported. What he described was not a slow mechanical failure or a controlled emergency descent. It was a freefall.
"It just nosedived right into the roof, and it punched a hole in the roof."
The helicopter also damaged a sprinkler system inside the warehouse, adding water damage to the wreckage left behind. That the building was vacant likely prevented additional casualties. An occupied warehouse at midday on a Monday could have turned a two-fatality crash into something far worse.
The National Transportation Safety Board will lead the investigation into the crash. The FAA has confirmed the aircraft type, the number of occupants, and the basic circumstances, but the critical questions remain unanswered: what caused a helicopter to nosedive into a building in the middle of the day?
Robinson R44 helicopters are among the most widely used light helicopters in the world, common in private aviation, flight training, and aerial work. They are not exotic or experimental aircraft. That makes the circumstances of this crash all the more important to understand. Mechanical failure, pilot error, medical emergency: investigators will work through each possibility.
For now, two families are waiting to learn what happened to their loved ones, and a community is processing the kind of sudden, violent event that offers no warning and no explanation. The NTSB investigation will take time. The answers, when they come, will matter not just for closure but for the safety of everyone who flies or works beneath a flight path.
Two people left the ground on Monday and never came home. That is the only fact that matters right now.
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Tuesday in Noem v. Al Otro Lado, a case that could reshape the legal foundation of asylum claims at the U.S.-Mexico border. The central question is deceptively simple: at what point does a person "arrive in the United States" such that asylum protections kick in?
The answer will determine whether foreign nationals who never set foot on American soil can claim the legal rights of those who have.
According to Just the News, the case pits the Trump administration against an immigration advocacy group that argues the U.S. Department of Homeland Security instituted a policy to prevent migrants from attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border. According to the advocates' brief to the court, border patrol officers "identified asylum seekers, and prevented them from stepping onto U.S. soil."
The government's position is straightforward. As lawyers for the government stated in their brief to the court:
"An ordinary English speaker would not use the phrase 'arrives in the United States' to describe someone who is stopped in Mexico."
That's the crux of it. The 1990 Immigration and Nationality Act allows an individual who "arrives in the United States" to apply for asylum status and be inspected by an immigration officer. The legal fight turns on whether someone physically present in Mexico qualifies.
Eric Wessan, solicitor general in the Iowa Office of the Attorney General, laid out the constitutional stakes plainly:
"An alien stopped at the border in Mexico is definitionally not in the United States and therefore is not afforded what one would get were that alien in the United States."
Wessan argued that the executive branch holds constitutional authority to manage disputes that occur on the country's borders. His framing cuts through the legal fog that immigration advocates have spent years building. If you haven't entered the country, the country's domestic legal protections don't attach to you. That's not a radical proposition. It's a geographic fact.
But Wessan also acknowledged limits on executive discretion. Federal immigration law requires inspection of all aliens who are applicants for admission, he noted, and once someone presents himself at a port seeking entry, the government cannot simply refuse to acknowledge that person's presence to avoid the statutory processing requirement.
This is a nuanced position, and it matters. The conservative argument here isn't that border officials can ignore people altogether. It's that the legal rights triggered by "arriving" in the United States should not be extended to individuals standing on Mexican soil.
The case also brushes against deeper constitutional territory. Wessan raised the 14th Amendment, noting that while the amendment was designed to confer citizenship for newly freed slaves, its modern application has drifted far from that original purpose.
"It seems unlikely that the 14th Amendment was intended to serve as a magnet for birth tourism or to reward illegal reentry."
He's right that the amendment's framers weren't contemplating a world where its protections would be invoked by foreign nationals who haven't crossed the border. That observation alone won't decide this case, but it speaks to the broader legal trend of stretching constitutional provisions well beyond their original meaning to accommodate open-border outcomes.
The immigration advocacy industry has built an elaborate legal architecture on the idea that asylum protections are essentially borderless. If you're near the border, you're close enough. If an officer prevents you from stepping across, that officer violated your rights. The logical endpoint of this argument is that American legal protections begin not at the border, but wherever someone forms the intent to cross it.
That framework collapses the very concept of sovereignty. A nation that cannot define where its legal obligations begin cannot define where its borders are. And a nation that cannot define its borders isn't much of a nation at all.
The Trump administration's position, and the position of states like Iowa backing it, reasserts something basic: words in statutes mean what they say. "Arrives in the United States" means arrives in the United States. Not approaches. Not intended to. Arrives.
The court also has before it the related case of Trump v. Barbara, described as a landmark decision. Together, these cases represent the judiciary's opportunity to draw a clear legal line that the political branches have fought over for decades.
The justices will likely decide the case by the end of June. Between now and then, the legal briefs, oral arguments, and inevitable media coverage will be filtered through the usual lens: enforcement equals cruelty, borders equal bigotry, and any limitation on asylum access equals a violation of international norms.
None of that changes what the statute says. And for the first time in a long time, the court has a chance to say so clearly.
President Donald Trump flatly dismissed Pope Leo XIV's plea for a ceasefire in Iran, telling EWTN News White House Correspondent Owen Jensen on March 20 that the administration has no intention of stopping military operations against a country he says has already been gutted.
Trump, speaking to MS Now, did not mince words.
"We can have dialogue, but I don't want to do a ceasefire."
The response came five days after the Holy Father urged "those responsible for this conflict" to "let the fire cease and let paths of dialogue be reopened." Trump acknowledged the Pope's message but made clear the United States sees no strategic reason to relent. Not now. Not when the mission is working.
The conflict in Iran broke out on February 28 when the U.S. and Israel launched joint strikes against the Middle Eastern country. Iran responded by launching strikes against U.S. and Israeli bases. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed in the protracted barrage, along with multiple other top-ranking Iranian officials, as NC Register reports.
Trump laid out the damage in blunt, inventory-style terms when asked why a ceasefire was off the table:
"[Iran doesn't] have a navy, they don't have an air force, they don't have any equipment, they don't have any spotters, they don't have anti-aircraft, they don't have radar, and their leaders have all been killed at every level."
That is not the language of a president entertaining negotiation. It is the language of a commander-in-chief cataloging a destroyed adversary. And then the line that carried the most weight:
"You don't do a ceasefire when you're literally obliterating the other side."
The strategic logic is straightforward. Iran's military infrastructure has been dismantled. Its chain of command has been decapitated. Stopping now would hand Tehran a pause it could use to reconstitute. Trump made the calculus explicit:
"If we left right now, it would take them at least 10 years to rebuild, but rebuild they will."
The goal, he said, is to ensure Iran can "never rebuild." That is not an offhand remark. It is a stated war aim.
Pope Leo XIV's March 15 call for peace occupies the space the Vatican has always occupied in wartime: moral witness. The Church calls for dialogue. It calls for the cessation of violence. It grieves for those caught in the crossfire. The conflict has already upended Catholic pilgrimages in the region and sent Catholics scrambling to evacuate the war zone.
None of that is trivial. The human cost of any military campaign deserves acknowledgment, and the Pope's concern for civilians and displaced communities reflects the Church's long tradition of advocating for peace in moments of profound suffering.
But moral appeals and strategic imperatives operate on different planes. The Vatican does not have to worry about what a reconstituted Iranian regime does with ten years of rebuilding. It does not have to calculate the threat of a nuclear-capable Iran reassembling its air defenses, its radar systems, and its proxy networks across the Middle East. The White House does.
The Pope asks for dialogue. Trump says dialogue is fine. But a ceasefire that lets a hostile regime regroup is not dialogue. It is a gift to an enemy that launched strikes against American and Israeli bases. The distinction matters.
There is a certain kind of foreign policy mind that reflexively reaches for "ceasefire" as though the word itself constitutes a strategy. It doesn't. A ceasefire is a tactic, and like all tactics, its value depends entirely on context. When the opposing force has been stripped of its navy, its air force, its radar, and its senior leadership, the ceasefire benefits only one side. It is not hard to identify which one.
The same voices who spent years warning about Iran's growing regional influence, its ballistic missile program, and its march toward nuclear capability now counsel restraint at the precise moment those threats are being neutralized. The contradiction is not subtle.
For decades, American foreign policy in the Middle East has been defined by half-measures. Campaigns that started strong and ended in negotiated settlements that preserved the very regimes responsible for the instability. The pattern is familiar: strike, escalate, grow weary, negotiate, withdraw, watch the problem metastasize. Trump is signaling he has no interest in repeating the cycle.
Trump's remarks leave little room for interpretation. The administration intends to press forward until Iran's capacity to threaten the United States and its allies is not merely degraded but eliminated. Whether that timeline is weeks or months, the president's public posture suggests there will be no premature off-ramp driven by international pressure or papal diplomacy.
The Pope will continue to call for peace. That is his role, and it is an honorable one. But the president's role is different. He is not charged with moral witness. He is charged with the security of 330 million Americans and the stability of a region that has exported terror for a generation.
Iran's navy is gone. Its air force is gone. Its supreme leader is dead. And the President of the United States just told the world he is not finished.
Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, turned away questions on Wednesday about why her office had hired a security guard with a criminal history, days after the man was shot and killed in an armed standoff with law enforcement in Dallas, Texas.
Fox News reported that the bodyguard, 39-year-old Diamon-Mazairre Robinson, went by the alias "Mike King." He had a track record of run-ins with the law for theft, violating probation, and impersonating law enforcement.
Last week, he was killed in a standoff with SWAT after he barricaded himself inside the garage of a children's hospital while local police were looking to detain him while investigating an active warrant.
Local authorities said they had recovered 11 firearms during their investigation.
A children's hospital. Eleven firearms. An alias. A rap sheet. And this was the man standing guard for a United States congresswoman.
When Fox News Digital pressed Crockett for answers on Wednesday, she offered the kind of non-response that has become a hallmark of officials who know they have no good answer.
"I'm going to refer you to my page."
When pushed further, Crockett escalated from evasive to combative:
"I made a statement and I said there would be no additional statements. You need someone to read it for you? I can find someone to do that."
That's not the tone of someone who followed the rules and got unlucky. That's the tone of someone who wants the story to go away.
Crockett's office did release a statement, and it deserves a careful read. She said she had known Robinson under the name Mike King and that he had been employed by her office "for years." During that time, she said, he had not given her reason to suspect him of wrongdoing.
Her office further claimed that the team had vetted Robinson according to standards laid out for lawmaker security:
"Our team followed all protocols outlined by the House to contract additional security. We were approved to use this vendor who also provided security services for additional entities in the local community and worked closely with law enforcement agencies, including Capitol Police."
So a man using a fake name, with a history of impersonating law enforcement, managed to pass vetting processes designed to protect members of Congress. And he did so not for a few weeks, but for years.
Crockett noted that she was surprised her office hadn't discovered his background until the time of his death. Her office then tried to reframe the scandal as a systemic failure rather than a personal one:
"The fact that an individual was able to somehow circumvent the vetting processes for something as sensitive as security for members of Congress highlights the loopholes and shortcomings in many of our systems."
This is a neat trick. Hire a convicted criminal under an alias to protect you for years, then blame "the systems" when the truth comes out over his dead body. The passive voice does a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence.
An individual was able to "somehow circumvent" the process. Somehow. As though it were a mystery of the universe and not a failure that happened on Crockett's watch, with Crockett's money, for Crockett's protection.
Consider the layers of failure here:
Any one of those facts would be a serious story. Together, they paint a picture of either breathtaking negligence or something worse. And when a reporter dared to ask about it, Crockett's response was to mock them.
This is the same Jasmine Crockett who has built a media profile on fiery rhetoric and moral certainty. She is never short on opinions when the cameras are rolling in committee hearings. But when the questions land on her own doorstep, she retreats behind a prepared statement and tells journalists to find someone who can read it to them.
The "loopholes and shortcomings in many of our systems" line is doing exactly what it's designed to do: diffuse responsibility across an abstraction. Nobody is accountable when "the system" fails. It's the Washington equivalent of a shrug.
But someone hired this vendor. Someone approved Robinson, or "Mike King," or whatever name he presented. Someone in Crockett's office worked alongside this man for years and never ran the kind of background check that would have flagged a criminal history and an alias.
If the House protocols are truly that porous, that is itself a scandal. But it does not absolve the office that benefited from the arrangement.
Crockett wants it both ways. Her team "followed all protocols," and yet the protocols failed. The system has "loopholes," but she bears no responsibility for falling through them. She is both compliant and a victim.
The larger question now is whether anyone in Congress plans to investigate how a man with a criminal record and a false identity embedded himself in the security apparatus surrounding a member of the House.
The statement references Capitol Police as one of the agencies the vendor "worked closely with." If that's true, the breach extends well beyond one congresswoman's office.
But accountability starts at the top. Crockett employed this man. Crockett's office paid this vendor. And when the story broke, Crockett's first instinct was not transparency or contrition. It was contempt for the reporter asking the question.
A man with a fake name and a real criminal record guarded a congresswoman for years, then died in a hail of gunfire at a children's hospital. And the congresswoman wants you to know she has no additional statements.
