Roberto Detrinidad, a violent sex offender sentenced to life in prison for breaking into a San Francisco woman's apartment and sexually assaulting her while she slept, is scheduled to walk out of San Quentin State Prison in May. He served 11 years.
Eleven years. For a life sentence. For sodomy committed against a sleeping woman in 2013 by an HIV-positive felon who planned the attack.
Two parole commissioners, Michael Ruff and Cristina Guerrero, determined that Detrinidad no longer posed an "unreasonable risk" to public safety. The decision came at a January 6, 2026, parole hearing, where Detrinidad himself described what he did.
"I started a plan that if I could get in there, have my way with her and get away, that was my plan."
That is the man California's parole system has decided is safe to release. A man who, in his own words, hatched a plan to break into a bartender's apartment and rape her while she was unconscious. A man who carried it out. A man who did so while HIV-positive.
Detrinidad's path back to the streets runs through a system of early release programs and "good behavior" credits that have expanded under Gavin Newsom. The same system that, during the pandemic, freed nearly 15,000 inmates early, with about 4,600 of them returning to prison, according to the New York Post.
That recidivism number alone should give any reasonable person pause. Nearly a third of early releases ended up back behind bars. But the machinery keeps running. The credits keep accumulating. And a man who received a life sentence for a premeditated sexual assault walks free after barely a decade.
Sacramento District Attorney Anne Marie Schuber vehemently opposed the decision. Her objection cuts to the core of what makes this case indefensible:
"Why is California releasing violent sex offenders before they've even completed serious treatment for the crimes that put them in prison."
That is not a rhetorical question. Detrinidad reportedly failed to complete sex-offender programming. The state sentenced him to life, offered him treatment as a condition of that sentence, watched him not finish it, and is releasing him anyway.
Commissioner Ruff, in explaining the decision, offered a statement that deserves to be read carefully:
"Our decision in no way excuses his behavior in the life offense where he acknowledges that his actions affected the victim for a significant period of time."
"Affected the victim for a significant period of time." A woman was violated in her own bed, in her own home, by an HIV-positive intruder who planned the attack. The bureaucratic language does more to sanitize the crime than any defense attorney ever could.
This is what happens when a system optimizes for throughput instead of justice. The parole board's job, as California has apparently defined it, is not to ask whether the punishment fits the crime. It is to ask whether a statistical model and a checklist of institutional behavior suggest that the offender can be managed on the outside. The victim, the severity of the crime, and the meaning of "life sentence" become afterthoughts.
None of this exists in isolation. California's political class has spent years constructing an elaborate architecture of leniency:
Each piece, taken alone, gets defended with the same toolkit of progressive criminal justice rhetoric. "Mass incarceration." "Restorative justice." "Second chances." But stack them together, and the picture is unmistakable: the system no longer treats violent crime with the seriousness it demands.
A life sentence used to mean something. It communicated to victims that the state took what happened to them seriously. It communicated to the public that certain acts place you outside the boundaries of civil society permanently. In California, it now communicates that you'll be out in about a decade if you follow the rules of your housing unit.
The progressive theory of criminal justice holds that rehabilitation is always possible, that incarceration is inherently excessive, and that the system's primary obligation runs to the offender, not the victim. This case is the theory made flesh.
Detrinidad planned a rape. He executed it. He did so while carrying HIV. He was caught, tried, and sentenced to life. He did not complete the treatment program designed for sex offenders. And two commissioners decided he was safe to release.
At no point in this sequence does anyone with institutional power appear to have asked the simplest question: What about the woman?
She went to sleep in her own apartment. She woke up to a nightmare that would define the rest of her life. The state told her the man who did it would never walk free. Now, 11 years later, the state has changed its mind.
California's leaders built this system. They expanded it. They staffed the parole boards. They wrote the credit formulas. And in May, Roberto Detrinidad walks out of San Quentin because the system worked exactly as they designed it to.
A 50-year-old Philadelphia man who was ordered deported to Mauritania a quarter century ago has been charged with fraudulent voting after allegedly casting ballots in the last five presidential elections. Mahady Sacko never left the country. Instead, he registered to vote, showed up at the polls cycle after cycle, and falsely claimed to be a U.S. citizen every time.
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania announced the charges, stating that Sacko "allegedly unlawfully voted in person in the 2024 general election for federal office" and "falsely represented that he was a U.S. citizen to vote and register to vote." If convicted, he faces up to five years in prison.
Five years. For two decades of fraudulent voting. That's roughly one year per stolen presidential election.
The criminal complaint lays out a timeline that reads like a catalog of institutional failure. Sacko entered the United States in Miami in March 1998. By June 14, 2000, an Immigration Judge in Philadelphia had ordered him removed. He was present in the courtroom for that decision. He appealed. On November 14, 2002, the Board of Immigration Appeals dismissed his appeal and affirmed the judge's order, as Fox News reports.
And then nothing happened.
According to the complaint, Sacko "did not depart the United States as ordered by the Immigration Judge." The reason? He didn't have a current passport from Mauritania, and ICE could not obtain one for him. So the government placed him on supervision, requiring him to "regularly report to their office as an alien under an order of deportation."
He checked in with ICE more than a dozen times. He was arrested by ICE in Philadelphia in January 2007. And yet he remained. The system knew exactly where he was, knew he had no legal right to be in the country, and let him stay because a foreign government wouldn't issue paperwork.
That is not enforcement. That is a bureaucratic shrug dressed up as a process.
While dutifully checking in with ICE as an illegal immigrant under a removal order, Sacko was simultaneously building a voting record. According to an FBI special agent, Pennsylvania records show Sacko first registered to vote in January 2005, three years after his final deportation appeal was denied.
The agent wrote that Sacko then voted in a string of federal elections:
The FBI agent stated in the complaint that Sacko "voted in person for each of these elections, except for the 2020 primary election, in which he voted by mail. On each occasion, Sacko falsely represented that he was a U.S. citizen."
Every election. Every time. A man the federal government had ordered removed from the country walked into polling places and cast ballots as though he belonged there. Voting records also show Sacko had registered as a Democrat, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer.
For years, Americans who raised concerns about noncitizen voting were told they were chasing a phantom. Election integrity was unassailable. Voter fraud was so rare as to be functionally nonexistent. Demands for citizenship verification at the polls were branded as voter suppression, thinly veiled racism, or conspiratorial hysteria.
Sacko's case does not prove that millions of illegal immigrants are voting. But it demolishes the comfortable fiction that the system makes such fraud impossible. Here was a man under an active deportation order, reporting regularly to federal immigration authorities, who registered and voted in election after election for nearly twenty years without a single safeguard catching it.
Nobody flagged the registration. Nobody cross-referenced immigration databases with voter rolls. Nobody noticed that a man ICE was supervising as a deportable alien was simultaneously exercising the most fundamental right of citizenship. The question is not whether this happens at scale. The question is how we would even know, given that every mechanism designed to prevent it apparently failed.
It is worth noting where this played out. Philadelphia is not some obscure jurisdiction. It is the largest city in one of the most consequential swing states in the country. It is the city where Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris debated ahead of the 2024 presidential election. Pennsylvania has decided recent presidential races by margins so thin that even a small number of fraudulent votes can carry real weight.
None of this means that Sacko's individual votes swung an election. But the principle matters enormously. Every fraudulent ballot cast by someone with no legal right to vote cancels out the legitimate vote of an American citizen. That is not an abstraction. It is a direct, measurable harm to the democratic process, and the people harmed most are voters in the very communities where fraud occurs.
The left treats election integrity measures as threats to democracy. The Sacko case suggests the real threat is a system so porous that a man living openly under a deportation order can vote for two decades without detection. Requiring proof of citizenship to register is not suppression. It is the bare minimum a serious country would demand.
The maximum sentence Sacko faces is five years. Consider the math. He allegedly voted illegally across seven federal elections spanning nearly two decades, falsely claiming citizenship each time. If convicted and given the maximum, he would serve less than nine months per fraudulent election.
More troubling is what the complaint reveals about the enforcement apparatus. ICE had Sacko under supervision. He reported to their office regularly. He was arrested in 2007. Yet the complaint notes plainly that "ICE/ERO was unable to enforce the decision of the Immigration Judge and remove Sacko from the United States" because Mauritania would not provide travel documents.
A foreign government's refusal to cooperate became the reason an illegal immigrant with a deportation order remained in the country for a quarter century. The system treated that refusal as the final word rather than a problem to be solved. Meanwhile, Sacko registered to vote, cast ballots, and lived as though the immigration judge's order had never been issued.
Sacko's case is a single prosecution, but the failures it exposes are systemic. A voter registration process that accepted a noncitizen's claim of citizenship without verification. An immigration enforcement system that tracked a deportable alien for years without removing him. A gap between federal databases and state voter rolls wide enough to drive two decades of fraud through undetected.
Every official who spent the last several years insisting these systems are airtight owes the public an explanation. Not for this one case, but for the architecture that made it possible.
A man ordered deported in 2000 voted in 2024. The system didn't catch him. The system watched him do it.
Denis Bouchard, a Canadian national living in North Carolina, pleaded guilty to voting illegally in the 2022 and 2024 elections, the U.S. Department of Justice announced. Prosecutors say he has lived in the United States since he was a child but never became a citizen.
WRAL reported that he lied on his voter registration form and said he was a citizen, allowing him to cast ballots. But here's the part that should stop you cold: prosecutors allege Bouchard voted in New Hanover and Pender County elections over the past 20 years.
Two decades. Not a one-time mistake. Not a clerical mix-up. Twenty years of an illegal vote diluting the voice of every lawful citizen in the Wilmington area.
Bouchard faces up to 10 years in federal prison, but only for the 2022 and 2024 elections. The DOJ did not explain why prosecutors charged him only for those two cycles when they believed the illegal voting stretched back two decades. Nor did anyone explain why he was never flagged before.
A spokesperson for U.S. Attorney W. Ellis Boyle pointed to the fact that some federal felonies carry five-year statutes of limitations, then declined to comment further. That's a legal explanation, not a satisfying one. If a man can vote illegally for 20 years before anyone notices, the system that allowed it deserves at least as much scrutiny as the man who exploited it.
Court documents didn't list a lawyer for Bouchard. Efforts to reach him were unsuccessful.
For years, Americans who raised concerns about non-citizens voting were told they were chasing a myth. The standard line from the left was that illegal voting essentially doesn't happen, that the system's safeguards are robust, and that anyone who questioned election integrity was peddling conspiracy theories to justify "voter suppression."
Denis Bouchard voted for 20 years. The safeguards didn't catch him. He caught himself in the sense that a federal investigation had finally landed on his doorstep. The question is how many others haven't been caught.
That's not a conspiracy theory. It's the logical inference from a case where the system failed for two full decades.
Boyle, the U.S. attorney overseeing the case, framed the outcome as a deterrent:
"Every eligible citizen should have confidence that an alien voting illegally will get sniffed and prosecuted."
Confidence is earned, not declared. When it takes 20 years to catch one man in one county, the word "confidence" does a lot of heavy lifting.
The voter registration process asked Bouchard a simple question: are you a citizen? He said yes. That was enough. For two decades, no verification mechanism flagged the discrepancy between his immigration status and his voter file.
State Board of Elections Director Sam Hayes praised the work of the FBI and prosecutors and said the board will continue investigating credible claims of voter fraud. That's the right posture going forward. But praise for catching the problem doesn't answer why the problem existed for so long.
Consider the timeline:
Every one of those bullet points represents a failure. Not a failure of voters, who trusted the process, but a failure of institutions that assured the public no such failure was possible.
One illegal vote in a local election can swing a school board race, a county commission seat, or a bond referendum. Multiply that by 20 years of elections across two counties, and the damage isn't theoretical. Real candidates won or lost by margins that included at least one vote that should never have been counted.
The left's insistence that non-citizen voting is too rare to worry about has always served a convenient purpose: it preempts the very enforcement mechanisms that would reveal the scope of the problem. You can't find what you refuse to look for.
Bouchard's case doesn't prove the system is overrun. But it proves the system is porous. And it proves that the people who told you otherwise were either wrong or uninterested in finding out.
Twenty years. Two counties. One man who simply checked a box and walked right through.
Rep. Burgess Owens, the Utah Republican and former NFL champion, announced Wednesday that he will not seek reelection to Congress and will not pursue any elected office once his current term ends.
Owens, who has represented Utah's 4th Congressional District since 2021, posted his decision on X, framing the move as a transition rather than a retreat.
"I will finish this term fully committed and fully accountable. My final political sprint will be here in Utah and across the country, helping my colleagues expand our Republican majority."
The announcement comes as Utah's congressional map has been redrawn by a state judge, creating a new Democratic-leaning seat and forcing GOP Reps. Mike Kennedy and Celeste Maloy into the same district. That kind of redistricting chaos tends to accelerate retirements, and Owens appears to have made his calculus early.
Owens is not alone. Just the News reported that since the beginning of 2025, 35 other GOP Congress members have resigned, announced retirements, or launched campaigns seeking other elected positions. That number should concern every Republican strategist with a calendar and a calculator.
A slim House majority doesn't survive a talent drain. Every open seat is a vulnerability, every retirement announcement a signal that the party's bench must deepen fast. Republicans hold the trifecta in Washington right now. The legislative window for advancing the conservative agenda is measured in months, not years. Vacancies don't help.
Some of those departures are natural. Members leave for gubernatorial bids, Senate runs, or administration roles. That's politics. But the sheer volume of turnover puts pressure on state parties and recruitment operations to field strong candidates who can hold seats that should never be competitive.
The redistricting decision that reshaped Utah's congressional landscape deserves scrutiny beyond the Owens retirement. A judge implemented a map that carved out a Democratic-leaning seat in a state where Republicans dominate at every level of government. That kind of judicial mapmaking has consequences that ripple well past one election cycle.
Kennedy and Maloy now face the prospect of a primary against each other, a situation that burns resources, creates intraparty wounds, and hands Democrats exactly the kind of opening they cannot manufacture on their own. Courts drawing maps that pit incumbent Republicans against each other while gifting the opposition a favorable district is a pattern conservatives have seen before. It rarely happens by accident.
Before he ever cast a vote in Congress, Owens won a Super Bowl with the Oakland Raiders in 1981. He brought to Washington something rare: a life lived entirely outside the political class before entering it. That background shaped a member who spoke about opportunity, family, and education with the authority of experience rather than polling data.
His closing statement pointed forward, not backward.
"Though this chapter closes, my commitment to advancing opportunity, advocating for our children, and strengthening families will continue in new ways."
What those "new ways" look like remains to be seen. But Owens made clear he isn't disappearing from the fight. He's changing the arena.
The real question isn't whether Burgess Owens will stay busy. It's whether Republicans in Utah can hold what he's leaving behind. A redrawn map, an open seat, and a national environment where every House race matters mean the 4th District just became a recruitment priority.
Owens pledged to spend his remaining time in office helping expand the Republican majority. Given the math, his colleagues should hold him to it. The margin for error in this House is zero, and the clock is already running.
The Iranian operative who orchestrated the plot to assassinate President Donald Trump is dead. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced Wednesday that U.S. and Israeli forces tracked down and eliminated the man responsible for directing the Islamic Republic's most brazen act of aggression against an American leader.
Hegseth delivered the news during a morning debrief on Operation Epic Fury at the Pentagon.
"The leader of the unit who attempted to assassinate President Trump has been hunted down and killed."
Hegseth did not publicly identify the target. Israeli media named him as Rahman Mokadam, head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' special operations division. The strike reportedly occurred during the final days of the 2024 election campaign, meaning the operation was kept quiet for months before Hegseth chose to reveal it.
Hegseth was careful not to declare victory prematurely, calling it "not a mission accomplished moment." But he made the larger point unmistakable.
"Iran tried to kill President Trump, and President Trump got the last laugh."
The scope of Iran's assassination conspiracy remains staggering even in summary. The New York Post reported that according to federal prosecutors, the IRGC tasked Afghan national Farhad Shakeri in September 2024 to "focus on surveilling, and, ultimately, assassinating" Trump. Shakeri, who emigrated to the U.S. as a child and was deported in 2008 after serving a 14-year prison sentence for robbery, had become a willing asset of the Iranian regime.
The timeline was urgent. On October 7, 2024, an Iranian official told Shakeri to have a plan in place to kill Trump within seven days. When Shakeri indicated the operation would cost a "huge" amount of money, his IRGC handler was unmoved. The response, according to court documents: "We already spent a lot of money … so the money's not an issue."
Tehran officials reportedly calculated that if Trump lost the election, it would then be easier to assassinate him. Either way, they wanted him dead. This was not a contingency plan. It was a standing order.
Shakeri didn't build his network through intelligence tradecraft. He built it in a U.S. prison cell. He recruited Brooklyn native Carlisle Rivera and Staten Islander Jonathan Loadholt, men he met while incarcerated, to serve as hitmen on American soil.
Before the Trump plot accelerated, Shakeri initially directed Rivera and Loadholt toward another target: Masih Alinejad, an Iranian American activist and journalist who had been an outspoken critic of the Tehran regime and had been targeted for assassination in the past. Iran offered Shakeri $1.5 million to kill Alinejad. Shakeri promised Rivera and Loadholt $100,000.
The two men surveilled Alinejad's Brooklyn home and planned to watch her speak at Fairfield University in Connecticut. They pursued her for nine months. Rivera, in a phone conversation captured by investigators, offered this assessment of his target: "This b—h is hard to catch, bro."
The charges eventually caught up with them:
Beyond the reach of American courts, but apparently not beyond the reach of American and Israeli forces.
Iran's obsession with killing Trump did not begin with the 2024 campaign. It stretches back to 2020, when President Trump ordered the drone strike that killed Qasem Soleimani, head of the IRGC's elite Quds Force. Tehran never forgave and never moved on. In 2022, a video animation posted on then-Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's website carried the message "Revenge is Definite."
That revenge campaign spanned assassination plots on American soil, the recruitment of convicted felons as contract killers, and the mobilization of IRGC special operations resources against a sitting and former president. The regime wagered it could strike at the heart of American politics without consequence.
Khamenei himself was killed in strikes on February 28, alongside dozens of other top Iranian officials. The IRGC operative who ran the Trump assassination unit is now dead. The foot soldiers who stalked an Iranian American journalist in Brooklyn are headed to federal prison for years.
Trump, in characteristic fashion, did not mince words about the outcome. He told ABC News' Jonathan Karl simply: "They tried twice. Well, I got him first." In a separate interview with NewsNation this past January, he said he had left instructions about what would happen if Iran's plot succeeded.
"We're going to blow the — the whole country is going to get blown up."
For years, the foreign policy establishment treated Iran as a rational actor that could be managed through negotiation, incentive structures, and strategic patience. The assassination plots against Trump and Alinejad tell a different story. This is a regime that recruited ex-convicts from American prisons to carry out contract killings on U.S. soil. A regime whose supreme leader posted animated fantasies about revenge on his personal website. A regime that told its operatives money was no object when the target was an American president.
Rational actors don't behave this way. Regimes that believe they can act without consequence do.
The elimination of Mokadam, the death of Khamenei, and the ongoing prosecution of Iran's recruited assets on American soil represent a comprehensive answer to that belief. Every layer of the conspiracy, from the IRGC handler in Tehran to the hitmen in Brooklyn, has now faced consequences.
Iran wanted to prove that no one was beyond its reach. It proved the opposite.
More than 9,000 Americans have returned safely to the United States from the Middle East since the U.S. and Israel launched strikes on Iran over the weekend, President Trump announced Tuesday on Truth Social.
The number reflects a massive logistical mobilization. In just days, the federal government coordinated charter flights, commercial bookings, and a round-the-clock State Department task force to extract American citizens from an active conflict zone. Trump urged any U.S. citizens still in the region who want to come home to register with the State Department immediately.
"We are already chartering flights, free of charge, and booking commercial options, which we expect will become increasingly available as time goes on."
That's the president speaking directly to Americans abroad, with a concrete offer attached. Not a press release laundered through three layers of bureaucratic hedging. A direct message with a direct plan.
The sequence of events moved fast, The Hill reported. On Friday, the State Department authorized the departure of all nonemergency government workers and their families from Israel through an updated travel advisory. Early Saturday morning, the U.S. and Israel launched attacks against Iran as part of a joint operation dubbed "Operation Epic Fury," killing Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
By Monday, the situation had escalated enough that the State Department issued an urgent warning for Americans to leave the Middle East entirely. Mora Namdar, assistant secretary of State for consular affairs, posted on X with unmistakable clarity:
"The @SecRubio @StateDept urges Americans to DEPART NOW from the countries below using available commercial transportation, due to serious safety risks."
That same day, Secretary of State Marco Rubio posted a video on X addressing affected U.S. citizens and sharing resources. Rubio said the department authorized a 24/7 task force to assist Americans in the region.
"To all American citizens in the Middle East: Your safety and security is our number one priority."
By Tuesday, more than 9,000 Americans were already home.
The contrast with past evacuations hardly needs stating, but it's worth pausing on what competent execution actually looks like. Friday: advisories go out. Saturday: strikes begin. Monday: urgent warnings, task force activated, cabinet-level officials personally addressing citizens on social media. Tuesday: thousands already stateside.
That's four days. No stranded civilians left on a tarmac with no plan. No weeks of ambiguity while bureaucrats debated messaging. The machinery of government moved at the speed the situation demanded.
Trump's message to remaining Americans was characteristically direct. Register with the State Department. The department will identify where you are and provide travel options. The flights are free. The message carried the weight of someone who understood that Americans abroad during a military operation aren't an afterthought. They're the first obligation.
The updated travel advisory from Friday made clear that conditions on the ground remain fluid. The U.S. Embassy reserved the right to further restrict or prohibit government employees and their family members from traveling to certain areas of Israel, the Old City of Jerusalem, and the West Bank. The advisory noted that such restrictions could come "without advance notice."
The advisory also carried a pointed recommendation for private citizens:
"Persons may wish to consider leaving Israel while commercial flights are available."
That language is diplomatic, but the meaning is plain. Commercial options exist now. They may not tomorrow. The window is open, and no one is guaranteeing how long it stays that way.
Americans still in the region who wish to return must register with the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program at step.state.gov. Trump emphasized that the State Department will locate registrants and arrange their travel home.
Operation Epic Fury represents a defining moment, not just militarily but in how a government treats its own citizens during wartime. The elimination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the joint U.S.-Israel strikes reshaped the strategic landscape of the Middle East in a matter of hours. That kind of action creates consequences that ripple outward, and the first people caught in those ripples are always civilians.
The 9,000 Americans who made it home didn't get lucky. They got a government that planned the extraction alongside the operation, not as an afterthought weeks later. The charter flights were already in motion. The task force was already staffed. The communication channels were already live.
Nine thousand Americans, home in four days. That's not a talking point. That's a logistics operation executed under pressure with real lives on the line.
The ones still there have a number, a website, and a secretary of state who went on camera to tell them they matter. Now it's on them to register and get to a departure point.
The door is open. The flights are free. The clock is ticking.
As American missiles struck Iranian targets and ended the 86-year-old theocratic dictator Ali Hosseini Khamenei, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz took to X with a two-word foreign policy treatise: "No new wars."
It did not go well for him.
The 2024 vice presidential nominee joined the chorus of Democrats criticizing the Trump administration's strikes on Iran, and the internet responded with the kind of bipartisan contempt rarely seen in American politics. Walz managed to unite the left and the right, not behind a cause, but against himself.
The responses came fast and from every direction, Fox News noted. Aviva Klompas, whose bio includes time at the Israeli mission to the United Nations, dismantled the premise entirely:
"Iran started this war 47 years ago when they took Americans hostage. Honestly, can people crack open a book before posting nonsense?"
Comedian Michael Rapaport slammed Walz by retweeting Klompas's response and then offered his own assessment of Khamenei's demise:
"I'm glad that old bag of s--- and his entire regime are gone."
Rapaport, who has been vocal against New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, went on to take issue with critics of the Iranian strikes more broadly. He condemned those who remained silent as Khamenei oversaw mass murders of tens of thousands of dissidents in recent months. On Monday, he added further commentary on the dictator's death in characteristically colorful fashion.
Rep. Randy Fine, R-Fla., a top pro-Israel voice in Congress, skipped the geopolitics entirely and went straight for the jugular: "Will this affect your Somali kickbacks?"
Conservative videographer Cam Higby, who had tweeted videos of his stringer-type visits to Minneapolis unrest, posed a different question: "Didn't you just try to start a war with Trump a month ago?"
That last one lands harder than it might seem.
Tim Walz has spent the past year as one of the most visible state leaders and Trump critics in the country. He has repeatedly condemned the Department of Homeland Security's immigration enforcement efforts in his state. He has pushed the idea that President Donald Trump is a monarch, posting "No kings" alongside his opposition. He has positioned himself as the conscience of the resistance.
And yet the man who wants to be the moral authority on executive overreach once stood with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and declared:
"Minnesota stands with the people of Ukraine as they fight to defend freedom and democracy."
So military engagement abroad is noble when it involves a cause Walz approves of, but a strike against a regime that took American hostages, sponsored terrorism across the Middle East, and brutalized its own people is somehow a bridge too far. The principle isn't "no new wars." The principle is "no wars that help Trump."
This is the feedback loop that defines so much of the modern left. Opposition to the current administration becomes the only consistent value. Everything else, including coherence, is negotiable.
Fine's jab about "Somali kickbacks" wasn't random. Minnesota has wrestled with a Somali-linked childcare fraud problem that metastasized to other sectors, and Walz has faced scrutiny over his handling of it. The governor who positions himself as a guardian of democratic norms has presided over a state where fraud flourished under lax oversight. That context doesn't disappear because he posted two words about Iran.
Late Monday, reports surfaced that Khamenei's wife, Mansoureh Khojasteh Bagherzadeh, succumbed to her injuries from the missile strike that killed her husband. The regime that terrorized its own citizens, hanged dissidents from cranes, and funded proxy wars across the region has been decapitated.
The appropriate response from an American governor is not complicated. You don't have to celebrate. You don't have to wave a flag. But "No new wars" in response to the elimination of one of the world's most brutal theocrats tells you everything about where Walz's priorities sit. Not with the Iranian women beaten for showing their hair. Not with the hostages taken 47 years ago. Not with the dissidents who disappeared into regime prisons.
With the narrative. Always with the narrative.
Walz wanted to score a point against the administration. Instead, he reminded everyone, left and right alike, why voters didn't send him to the White House.
The FBI terminated roughly 10 agents on Wednesday, all of whom participated in the investigation into Donald Trump's handling of classified documents after his first term. The firings mark the latest in a series of personnel actions taken since Trump returned to the White House in January, as the Justice Department and FBI have moved to remove employees who participated in federal investigations against him.
FBI Director Kash Patel did not publicly detail specific misconduct by the terminated employees. But Patel himself has personal experience with the investigation's reach: he told Reuters that federal agents subpoenaed his phone records when he was a private citizen during the documents probe. Now, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles also had her phone records subpoenaed as a private citizen during the same investigation.
That context matters. These weren't distant bureaucratic exercises. Investigators reached into the private lives of people who are now among the most senior officials in the U.S. government.
After Trump left the White House in 2021, Special Counsel Jack Smith led two federal investigations into him. One focused on classified documents Trump brought back to his Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida and his alleged efforts to obstruct the Department of Justice from retrieving them. Trump and two of his associates were indicted in 2023 following Smith's investigation.
Then it fell apart.
In 2024, a federal judge in Florida dismissed the case against Trump, finding that Smith was unlawfully appointed. This year, a federal appeals court in Georgia dropped the case against the last two defendants at the request of Trump's Justice Department.
So the investigation that consumed years of federal resources, generated breathless media coverage, and swept up the phone records of private citizens produced zero convictions. The special counsel who ran it was found to have been unlawfully appointed. Every indictment has been dismissed.
The agents who executed that investigation are the ones who just lost their jobs.
According to the BBC, the FBI Agents Association pushed back on the terminations, framing them as a threat to national security:
"These actions weaken the Bureau by stripping away critical expertise and destabilizing the workforce, undermining trust in leadership and jeopardizing the Bureau's ability to meet its recruitment goals - ultimately putting the nation at greater risk."
It's a familiar argument. Every time personnel changes come to a federal agency, the institutional defenders claim the sky is falling. Critical expertise. Destabilized workforce. National risk. The language is always the same, whether it's ten agents or ten thousand bureaucrats. The premise is that no one inside federal law enforcement can ever be held accountable for their role in a failed, legally deficient investigation without endangering the republic.
That premise deserves scrutiny. The classified documents case didn't just fail on the merits. It failed on legitimacy. A federal judge ruled the man running it had no lawful authority to do so. If that doesn't warrant a review of who carried out the work and how, what would?
The firings are not isolated. Since January, the Justice Department has also:
This is a systematic effort to impose consequences on officials who used the machinery of federal law enforcement against a political opponent. Whether the institutional class in Washington likes it or not, elections have consequences. So do investigations that turn out to be built on unlawful foundations.
The FBI Agents Association worries about "undermining trust in leadership." That concern arrives several years too late. Trust in the FBI didn't erode because Kash Patel fired ten agents. It eroded because the bureau allowed itself to become a tool of political warfare, subpoenaing the phone records of private citizens in an investigation led by a special counsel who had no legal authority to hold the job.
You don't rebuild institutional credibility by protecting everyone who participated in the credibility crisis. You rebuild it by demonstrating that the rules apply to the enforcers, too.
Ten agents lost their jobs this week. The investigation they worked on lost its legal standing last year. The sequence speaks for itself.
Wesley Dingus, the 48-year-old mayor of Butler, Ohio, resigned from office Tuesday after the village council convened a special meeting to address what it called "personnel reasons." His resignation letter was read aloud at the meeting and unanimously accepted.
The letter was brief and strange in equal measure. Dingus wrote that he was stepping down "not under stress but under duress," a distinction without much of a difference for a man facing two misdemeanor voyeurism charges and a separate arrest for aggravated assault.
Council President Eric Tron will assume the mayor's role.
Dingus was arraigned on February 19 in Mansfield Municipal Court on two misdemeanor charges of voyeurism. According to the report, he was captured on camera twice smelling a girl's underwear. He pleaded not guilty in both cases.
Those charges arrived on top of an already existing legal mess. Dingus was arrested on August 17, 2025, on charges of aggravated assault and vehicular assault tied to a July 11 incident that gained national attention. The man held public office throughout it, as Beacon Journal reports.
Tron, the council president who now inherits the mayor's duties, spoke to News 5 Cleveland after the meeting:
"I have mixed feelings about everything, but I'm just happy that things turned out the way they did, as far as how it went tonight. I think everybody's kind of relieved the mayor resigned."
"Mixed feelings" is generous. The village council had to drag this to a special session just to get a resignation out of a mayor facing voyeurism charges involving a minor. That it required a formal meeting, public pressure, and what Dingus himself characterized as "duress" tells you everything about how voluntarily he left.
There is a broader pattern here that conservatives understand instinctively: public officials cling to power long past the point where decency demands they let go. It doesn't matter the party or the size of the office. A village mayor in rural Ohio and a big-city machine politician share the same reflex. The title becomes the identity, and the identity doesn't surrender easily.
What makes cases like this particularly corrosive is the smallness of the stage. Butler is not a metropolis with layers of bureaucracy to absorb the shock. In a village, the mayor is someone your kids see at the gas station. The betrayal of public trust lands differently when the public is your neighbors.
Dingus pleaded not guilty. He is entitled to the presumption of innocence in court. But a courtroom and a mayor's office operate under different standards. Criminal guilt requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Public service requires the public's confidence. Those two thresholds are not the same, and elected officials who hide behind the first to avoid the second do their constituents no favors.
The council did what it had to do. It called the meeting. It accepted the resignation. It moved on. That's how self-governance is supposed to work at every level: when an officeholder becomes a liability to the people he serves, the people's representatives act.
Butler gets a clean start. The residents deserve one.
Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Friday that 30 more people have been indicted for their alleged roles in an anti-ICE protest at a Minnesota church, bringing the total number of defendants to 39.
News Nation Now reported that twenty-five of the newly indicted individuals had already been arrested, with more arrests expected before the day was out.
The sweep dramatically expands a case that first drew national attention when former CNN anchor Don Lemon was named as one of nine people initially charged.
Now, with 30 additional names on the indictment, the Justice Department is making clear that the original arrests were an opening salvo, not a final word.
All 39 defendants face the same pair of federal charges: conspiracy against the right of religious worship and violating a law that forbids obstructing access to houses of worship.
Read that again. The protesters who claimed to be standing up for the vulnerable are being prosecuted for targeting a church. For interfering with the right of Americans to worship freely.
There is a deep irony here that the left will never acknowledge. The same political movement that wraps itself in the language of rights and tolerance descended on a house of worship to obstruct a lawful federal operation.
They didn't picket a government building. They didn't march on a courthouse. They chose a church. And the charges reflect exactly what that choice was: an assault on religious liberty.
Bondi did not mince words in a social media post announcing the indictments:
"YOU CANNOT ATTACK A HOUSE OF WORSHIP. If you do so, you cannot hide from us — we will find you, arrest you, and prosecute you."
She followed that with a pointed declaration about the Justice Department's priorities:
"This Department of Justice STANDS for Christians and all Americans of faith."
FBI Director Kash Patel echoed the attorney general's resolve in his own statement:
"Let it be known: This FBI will never tolerate anyone who targets, intimidates, or attacks Americans peacefully exercising their right to worship freely. Thank you @AGPamBondi and @TheJusticeDept for your relentless pursuit of this case."
The tone from both officials is unmistakable. This is a DOJ that views obstruction of worship as a serious federal crime, not a misdemeanor footnote to be plea-bargained into community service.
When the original charges dropped, and Don Lemon's name surfaced, the predictable machinery of progressive sympathy kicked into gear.
Protesters were cast as brave dissidents. The church was reframed as a staging ground for ICE operations, as though that justified mobbing it. The actual congregants, the people who use the building to pray, were erased from the narrative entirely.
This is a pattern. The left champions "sanctuary" when it means shielding illegal immigrants from federal law. But the actual sanctuary of a house of worship? That gets trampled the moment it becomes politically inconvenient. The word only matters when it serves their purposes.
Consider what the charges tell us about what happened at that church:
This was not a candlelight vigil. This was not a peaceful assembly. It was a coordinated effort to prevent Americans from accessing their own church.
The expansion from nine to 39 defendants signals that investigators took their time building this case.
They identified participants methodically, secured evidence, and brought charges in waves. That's how serious federal prosecutions work. Bondi's note that more arrests were expected later Friday suggests the net may not be fully drawn yet.
For those who participated in the Minnesota church protest and assumed the original nine indictments were the end of it, Friday delivered a different message.
The DOJ kept working. The FBI kept identifying faces. And 30 more people woke up to the reality that obstructing a house of worship carries federal consequences.
The celebrity defendant in this case may be Don Lemon, but the story is bigger than one disgraced cable news anchor looking for a second act. It's about whether a movement that claims moral authority can bulldoze the religious liberty of ordinary Americans and walk away clean.
Thirty-nine indictments say it cannot.
