A replica of the Christopher Columbus statue that protesters ripped down and hurled into Baltimore's Inner Harbor during the 2020 riots now stands on the grounds of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, steps from the White House. The statue's journey from the bottom of a harbor to the most prominent address in American politics is, on its own, a story worth telling.

White House spokesperson Davis Ingle left no room for ambiguity about the gesture:

"In this White House, Christopher Columbus is a hero. And he will continue to be honored as such by President Donald Trump."

The original monument was unveiled by President Ronald Reagan in 1984. On July 4, 2020, amid the wave of statue-toppling that swept the country, protesters used ropes and chains to bring it down and dump it into Baltimore's Inner Harbor. Sculptor Will Hemsley was later hired to restore the statue, combining recovered pieces from the harbor with new additions and repairs.

Italian American Organizations United, which owns the statue, voted unanimously to loan it to the federal government after being contacted by a White House intermediary around Columbus Day last year. John Pica, the organization's president, captured the sentiment plainly:

"We are delighted the statue has found a place where it can peacefully shine and be protected."

From the harbor floor to hallowed ground

Maryland state Delegate Nino Mangione, a Republican from Baltimore County, told Newsweek last month what the statue's restoration and relocation meant to the community that built it:

"The statue had to be repaired after the thugs attempted to destroy it and threw it into the Inner Harbor. The statue is repaired and ready to be displayed in a prominent position of honor, worthy of the great Christopher Columbus…We are so pleased at the prospect of the statue being displayed on the hallowed grounds of the White House."

Something is fitting about the destination. A mob destroyed the statue to make a political statement. Now it sits closer to the seat of American power than it ever did in Baltimore. The mob's statement has been answered.

Columbus Day and the war over American memory

Columbus Day has been a federal holiday since President Franklin D. Roosevelt designated it in 1934. Its roots stretch back further. The first Columbus Day celebration followed the 1891 lynching of 11 Italian-American immigrants in New Orleans, a moment when Italian Americans claimed Columbus as a symbol of their place in the American story. That history matters, even if it has become fashionable to forget it.

Former President Joe Biden became the first U.S. president to formally issue an Indigenous Peoples' Day proclamation in 2021, celebrating the "invaluable contributions and resilience of Indigenous peoples" in a gesture that effectively split the holiday's meaning in two. Trump has declined to continue that practice. He ignored Indigenous Peoples' Day entirely and, last October, issued a Columbus Day proclamation calling Columbus "the original American hero, a giant of Western civilization, and one of the most gallant and visionary men to ever walk the face of the Earth."

Trump posted on Truth Social in 2025:

"I'm bringing Columbus Day back from the ashes. The Democrats did everything possible to destroy Christopher Columbus, his reputation, and all of the Italians that love him so much."

This is not a new position for him. As early as 2017, Trump spoke out against a review of the 76-foot Columbus statue at New York's Columbus Circle. The statue near the White House is simply the most visible expression of a principle he has held publicly for nearly a decade.

What the statue debate is really about

The left spent the summer of 2020 insisting that tearing down statues was a necessary reckoning with history. Columbus was a particular target because he could be recast from explorer to villain with minimal effort, provided you stripped away every bit of context about why Italian Americans adopted him as their symbol in the first place.

But statue removal was never really about history. It was about power: who gets to decide which figures are honored, which stories are told, and which communities' heritage is worth protecting. When a mob pulls down a statue and throws it in a harbor, it is not engaging in scholarship. It is asserting dominance over public memory.

The response to that assertion matters. Replacing the statue, restoring it, and placing it on federal grounds sends a clear message: the mob does not get the final word. Destruction is not policy. Vandalism is not democracy.

As the country approaches the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the question of how America remembers its past will only intensify. There will be louder demands to erase, rename, and redefine. There always are.

But somewhere near the White House, a statue that was dragged through harbor water now stands in the sun. That, too, is an answer.

President Trump announced Saturday that he will deploy ICE agents to U.S. airports as early as Monday if congressional Democrats refuse to fund the Department of Homeland Security. The move would put federal immigration enforcement officers in charge of airport security operations while TSA employees continue working without pay during the partial government shutdown.

Trump posted the threat on Truth Social, framing the deployment as both a security measure and an immigration enforcement opportunity.

"I will move our brilliant and patriotic ICE Agents to the Airports where they will do Security like no one has ever seen before."

He followed up with a second post that left no room for ambiguity.

"I look forward to moving ICE in on Monday, and have already told them to, 'GET READY.' NO MORE WAITING, NO MORE GAMES!"

Trump also claimed that ICE agents handling airport security would arrest illegal immigrants, specifically targeting individuals from Somalia. The White House, when asked for comment, referred reporters to Trump's social media posts. DHS did not respond to requests for comment.

Airport chaos Democrats built

The consequences of the funding standoff are already visible. Security lines at Newark Liberty International Airport stretched past capacity on March 21, with some travelers reporting delays of over an hour. Similar scenes played out in Atlanta and Houston. TSA officers, who earn between $46,000 and $55,000 on average, missed their first full paychecks last week. They are still required to show up and work because much of DHS is classified as essential under the Antideficiency Act, which bars federal agencies from spending funds Congress has not appropriated, as CNBC reports.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned Friday that the situation will deteriorate rapidly without a deal.

"If a deal isn't cut, you're going to see what's happening today look like child's play."

Earlier in the week, Duffy warned that smaller airports could shut down entirely due to staffing shortages. The agents screening your bags and checking your IDs are doing it for free right now. That's not a sustainable model, and everyone in Washington knows it.

Musk steps in where Congress won't

Elon Musk, Tesla CEO and former Trump advisor, offered Saturday to personally cover the salaries of TSA personnel for the duration of the funding impasse.

"I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse that is negatively affecting the lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country."

It's unclear how such an offer would work mechanically. Musk did not respond to requests for further comment. But the symbolism is hard to miss: one private citizen is willing to reach into his own pocket to keep airports running while an entire congressional caucus plays games with homeland security funding.

This isn't the first time a private donor has stepped into the gap during a government shutdown. Last year, Trump announced that an unnamed donor had provided $130 million to help cover military pay shortfalls during the administration's first shutdown. The New York Times later reported that the donor was Timothy Mellon, an heir to a renowned Gilded Age banking family. That donation worked out to about $100 per service member, against a backdrop where it costs nearly $6.4 billion to pay U.S. troops every two weeks.

The fact that billionaires keep having to underwrite basic government functions because Democrats won't pass funding bills tells you everything about where the obstruction actually lives.

Negotiations limp forward

Behind the scenes, a bipartisan group of senators met with DHS border czar Tom Homan to discuss additional immigration enforcement concessions the White House offered on Friday, according to POLITICO. The specifics of those concessions have not been made public. The Senate held sessions Saturday and Sunday, though it remained unclear whether those sessions would produce any movement on the DHS funding dispute specifically.

The White House and Democrats have been trading proposals for over a month. Over a month of back and forth, while TSA agents work for nothing, travelers miss flights, and smaller airports inch toward closure. The administration has made concessions. It has come to the table. At some point, the question stops being "what is the White House willing to offer" and becomes "what are Democrats willing to accept."

The leverage play

Trump's ICE threat is a pressure move, and it's designed to work on multiple levels. On the surface, it addresses the immediate operational crisis: airports need security personnel, and if TSA can't function at full capacity, someone has to fill the gap. But the deeper message targets Democrats where they are most uncomfortable. ICE agents at airports don't just screen luggage. They enforce immigration law. The prospect of federal agents identifying and arresting illegal immigrants at major transit hubs puts Democrats in the position of either funding DHS or explaining why they'd rather let airports collapse than allow immigration enforcement to expand.

That's not a comfortable position for a party that spent years insisting border security and public safety aren't connected.

Democrats have spent the shutdown framing the standoff as reckless governance. But the recklessness runs in one direction. The administration offered concessions. A bipartisan group of senators sat down with Homan. The White House has signaled flexibility. What Democrats have signaled is that they would rather watch TSA agents go unpaid and airport operations degrade than give ground on immigration enforcement.

Travelers stuck in hour-long security lines in Newark, Atlanta, and Houston aren't thinking about legislative strategy. They're thinking about whether they'll make their flight. The people working those checkpoints for free aren't thinking about messaging. They're thinking about rent.

Monday is coming. The ICE agents have been told to get ready. The only people who can stop this from escalating are the same people who refused to fund DHS in the first place.

A 27-year-old Guatemalan man accused of raping a 5-year-old girl on Long Island was nearly released back onto the streets, stopped only because investigators found a procedural workaround to keep him within reach of federal immigration agents. Carlos Aguilar Reynoso now faces up to 25 years behind bars if convicted on the top count. He almost faced nothing at all.

The reason he nearly walked free wasn't a lack of evidence or a failure of police work. It was New York law, working exactly as designed.

According to The New York Post, the victim's mother asked Reynoso to babysit her daughter last month. On Feb. 1, when the mother returned home from work, she discovered blood in the child's underwear and rushed her to the hospital. The child was later transferred to a specialty hospital, where medical staff collected a rape kit and were forced to perform surgery to repair internal injuries.

She is five years old. With the investigation ongoing and DNA from the child not yet processed, Reynoso could only initially be charged with endangering the welfare of a child.

Under New York's bail reform laws, prosecutors are not allowed to seek bail for that offense. He would have been released. ICE would also have been barred from picking Reynoso up over his illegal immigration status on his way out of court, because New York's sanctuary laws limit local authorities' cooperation with federal immigration agents.

A man who allegedly entered the country illegally, who was suspected of one of the most depraved crimes imaginable against a small child, would have walked out the door and potentially disappeared.

The Workaround That Shouldn't Have Been Necessary

Investigators, aware of the legal trap they were in, used their discretion. Instead of processing Reynoso through the court system, where bail reform and sanctuary protections would have shielded him, cops issued the man a desk-appearance ticket. That procedural move meant he was released from the precinct, not from a courtroom.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers were then allowed to nab him on his way out of the precinct the day after the alleged rape.

On Feb. 13, the DNA results came back. Reynoso was charged with first-degree rape, predatory sexual assault against a child, sexual abuse, and endangering the welfare of a child.

He is being held until his court appearance. His relationship to the mother remains unclear. A source with knowledge of the situation told The Post that Reynoso allegedly entered the country illegally. His lawyer did not return a request for comment.

The System Working Against Its Own Citizens

Consider what New York's legal architecture almost produced here. A child was allegedly brutalized so severely that she required reconstructive surgery.

The suspect was in custody. And the state's own laws nearly guaranteed his release, not because he was innocent, not because the evidence was thin, but because the initial charge available to prosecutors fell below the threshold that allows judges to set bail.

Bail reform was sold to New Yorkers as a measure to prevent poor defendants from languishing in jail over minor offenses. Whatever the original intent, the policy now functions as a conveyor belt that processes suspects back onto the street regardless of the danger they pose, so long as the paperwork at the moment of arrest doesn't meet an arbitrary severity line.

The facts on the ground can be horrifying. The charging document just has to be modest enough.

Sanctuary laws compound the problem. These policies exist to signal virtue to progressive constituencies, but their practical effect is to build a wall, not at the border, but between federal immigration enforcement and local law enforcement. ICE agents knew who Reynoso was. They knew where he was. New York law told them they couldn't touch him.

The only reason this story doesn't end with a suspected child rapist vanishing into the community is that investigators found a creative loophole. That's not a system working. That's a system being defeated by the people forced to operate within it.

Laws Have Consequences

Every policy choice carries a cost. New York legislators chose bail reform. They chose sanctuary protections. They chose to restrict cooperation with ICE.

Those choices have a price, and that price is not paid by the legislators who voted for them or the activists who demanded them. It is paid by a five-year-old girl on Long Island and by the communities that have to hope their local cops are clever enough to find a procedural trick the next time the law fails them.

There is no version of this story where the system performed admirably. Individual investigators showed ingenuity. The laws they navigated around showed rot.

Reynoso faces up to 25 years if convicted on the top count. But the question New York has to answer isn't about one suspect. It's about the next one, and whether there will be an investigator resourceful enough to find another trick, or whether the sanctuary state will do what it was built to do.

Sen. Ron Johnson wants the American public to see what U.S. intelligence knows about China's efforts to access state voter registration data, and he wants it now.

The Wisconsin Republican, who chairs the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, urged President Donald Trump on Wednesday night to declassify any intelligence showing that Chinese operatives gained access to American voter registration databases or attempted to influence voters, with evidence reportedly stretching back to 2020.

What the declassified documents reportedly show

Johnson made his case on the "Just the News, No Noise" television show, calling for full transparency:

"I wish they briefed the American people on it. I don't know why you want to keep this classified or hidden. This needs to be thoroughly investigated, and when we have the results of that investigation, make it available to the public."

His message on timing was even simpler: "The sooner, the better."

Johnson's call follows a disclosure earlier this week by Just the News, which reported on declassified documents showing Chinese intelligence gained access to multiple states' voter registration data in 2020 and conducted voter influence efforts during that cycle. According to the reporting, this intelligence was kept quiet because spy agency analysts opposed Trump and his policies regarding Beijing.

That detail alone deserves sustained attention. If accurate, it means the national security apparatus sat on evidence of a foreign adversary penetrating American election infrastructure, not because disclosure would compromise sources and methods, but because the analysts in question didn't like the president's China policy. That is not risk management. That is political suppression of intelligence.

The 2020 election was already marred by pandemic-driven disruptions that weakened standard election safeguards. The possibility that Chinese intelligence was simultaneously probing voter databases adds a dimension that voters deserved to evaluate in real time, not years later through piecemeal declassification.

This isn't without precedent abroad. Similar revelations surfaced in 2024 that China hacked Great Britain's voter registration database, confirming that Beijing views democratic election systems as legitimate intelligence targets across the Western world.

The SAVE Act and why Democrats won't touch it

Johnson's push for declassification arrives at a strategically useful moment. The Senate began debate this week on the SAVE America Act, legislation the House has already passed that would mandate proof of citizenship and photo ID to vote. Two measures supported by a supermajority of Americans. Democrats are generally opposed to the bill, currently preventing it from reaching the 60 votes needed for passage.

Johnson sees the amendment process as the path to putting Democrats in an impossible position:

"You put a piece of legislation on the floor, and then you allow the amendment process to hone that piece of legislation, to improve it."

His strategy is straightforward: use floor debate to craft a bill so reasonable, so grounded in common sense, that opposing it becomes politically untenable. As he put it, the goal is to "craft a piece of legislation that would make it very difficult for Democrats to vote against."

Johnson was blunt about why he believes Democrats resist even basic election integrity measures:

"The reason they oppose it is because this is their game plan. Flood America with millions of illegal immigrants, send them into sanctuary cities and states. Plump up the census. Plump up your members of Congress, but also do everything you can to degrade the control of our elections."

"They want to make it easy to cheat. So this is a hill they are more than willing to die on."

Strong words, but the evidence keeps stacking in his direction.

The cases keep coming

Consider the facts already on the table:

  • A top DOJ official disclosed that tens of thousands of noncitizens ineligible to vote have made it onto voter rolls, and dozens have illegally voted.
  • Since 2020, two local elections in New Jersey and Connecticut have been overturned and redone due to election misconduct by Democrats.
  • This week, FOX News reported that Mahady Sacko, a 50-year-old illegal immigrant from Mauritania living in Philadelphia, was arrested on charges of illegally voting in several federal elections dating back to at least 2008. According to a criminal affidavit, Sacko is accused of registering and casting ballots despite not being a U.S. citizen.

One man. Multiple federal elections. Nearly two decades of illegal ballots. And the party that controls every major city where these cases emerge tells you that requiring proof of citizenship to vote is somehow an attack on democracy.

Transparency is the weapon

Johnson's instinct here is exactly right. The most effective tool against both foreign interference and domestic election fraud isn't another classified briefing that gets leaked selectively to friendly reporters. It's sunlight.

Declassifying intelligence about China's operations against American election systems accomplishes two things simultaneously. It informs voters about a genuine national security threat. And it demolishes the argument that requiring citizenship verification to vote is a solution in search of a problem.

Foreign adversaries are probing our voter rolls. Noncitizens are casting ballots. Elections have been overturned. And the Democratic response to all of it is to block a bill requiring you to prove you're an American before you pick America's leaders.

Johnson framed it plainly:

"I would like to have all this information out. I appreciate your reports while we have this piece of legislation on the floor of the Senate."

The timing matters because the debate is happening now. Every day the Senate argues over the SAVE Act without the public seeing the full scope of the threat is a day Democrats can pretend the threat doesn't exist. Declassification removes that cover.

Americans don't need to be protected from the truth about who is accessing their voter data. They need to see it, judge it, and demand that their representatives act on it. The intelligence community already kept this quiet once to serve its own preferences. That cannot happen again.

Nearly 15 years after a 27-year-old realtor was found shot to death inside a model townhome in West Des Moines, Iowa, authorities have finally made an arrest. Kristin Elizabeth Ramsey, 53, of Woodward, was arrested on Tuesday and charged with first-degree murder in the death of Ashley Okland.

Ramsey's arrest follows an indictment from a Dallas County grand jury. She is currently being held in the Dallas County Jail on a $2 million cash bond.

Officials did not provide details on what information led to the arrest.

A Friday Afternoon That Changed Everything

On April 8, 2011, the body of Ashley Okland was discovered inside a model townhome where authorities say she was hosting an open house. She had been shot twice. An employee working in the complex found her and dialed 911.

What followed was one of Iowa's most stubborn cold cases, according to Fox News. By the fourth anniversary of Okland's death, authorities revealed that nearly 900 leads had been investigated and approximately 500 people had been interviewed. And still, nothing broke the case open.

At the time of Okland's death, Ramsey worked as an administrative assistant and sales manager for Rottlund Homes, according to the Des Moines Register. The proximity of that detail to the crime scene speaks for itself.

A Family That Refused to Forget

Ashley Okland's siblings spoke to reporters on Thursday, the day after the charges were announced. The relief was evident, but so was the weight of 14 years of waiting.

Her brother, Josh Okland, thanked investigators for their unrelenting efforts on the case.

"Today is a day my family has thought about very often over the last 14 years."

Her sister, Brittany Bruce, was more pointed about what the years of silence had cost them.

"We had lost our hope in finding answers and having any justice for Ashley. It was really difficult to accept that the case had gone cold."

Bruce also expressed her gratitude to both the investigators and prosecutors handling her sister's case, adding that the family has "full confidence in their abilities to see this through."

The Long Game of Local Law Enforcement

In a media environment saturated with stories of institutional failure, this case is worth pausing on. West Des Moines police never closed the book. West Des Moines Assistant Police Chief Jody Hayes made that clear at the press conference.

"Ashley's story has kept many of us awake at night, revisiting the details over and over in our minds."

Hayes described the years-long effort as a relentless search for the piece that would "tie everything together and lead us down the right path to identifying a person that was responsible for this act."

That kind of dogged, unglamorous police work rarely makes national news. There are no viral clips, no protest marches, no politicians grandstanding at podiums. Just officers grinding through 900 leads and 500 interviews across nearly a decade and a half, until the case finally gave way.

It is a reminder that the quiet, steady work of local law enforcement still matters. The people who do this work deserve recognition precisely because they so rarely receive it. Policing in America has been treated as a punching bag for the better part of a decade by activists and politicians who have never walked a beat or reopened a cold case file at midnight. Cases like this are the answer to every defund-the-police slogan ever spray-painted on a courthouse wall.

Justice Delayed

Ashley Okland was 27 years old. She was doing her job, showing a home on a Friday afternoon. Someone walked in and shot her twice. For nearly 15 years, that person walked free.

Now Kristin Elizabeth Ramsey sits in a Dallas County jail cell, and a grand jury has spoken. The trial ahead will determine whether the evidence matches the charge. But for the Okland family, the silence is finally over.

As Brittany Bruce put it, that Friday afternoon "seems so long ago." It was. But the case file never gathered dust, and the people who kept it open earned every word of thanks the Okland family offered them this week.

The United Farm Workers announced Tuesday that it will not participate in any Cesar Chavez Day activities this year, confirming that allegations of abuse involving young women and minors have been made against the former labor union leader whose name adorns a federal holiday.

The announcement arrived ahead of what would have been Chavez's 99th birthday, as several local organizations across the country began canceling their own celebrations in anticipation of an upcoming story detailing what the UFW described as "deeply troubling allegations."

The details remain sparse. The UFW acknowledged it has no firsthand knowledge of the claims. But the union's own language tells you how seriously the organization is treating them:

"However, the allegations are serious enough that we feel compelled to take urgent steps to learn more and provide space for people who may have been victimized to find support and to share their stories if that is what they choose."

It is unclear at this time what the source of the allegations is and the specific details surrounding them. What is clear is that the institutions built in Chavez's name are moving fast to distance themselves from the man himself.

The Foundation Pivots to Damage Control

According to Fox News, the Cesar Chavez Foundation released its own statement Tuesday, announcing a joint effort with the UFW to create what it called "a safe and confidential process for those who wish to share their experiences of historic harm." The Foundation also said it is investing resources to ensure its workplace culture is "safe and welcoming for all."

"We ask for our community's patience as we learn more. Throughout this process, our organization and our partners in the movement will continue our work together to protect and uplift the families and communities that we serve."

Read that again carefully. The Foundation isn't denying anything. It isn't pushing back. It is building an infrastructure for victims to come forward. That is not the posture of an organization that believes these allegations will evaporate.

Another Progressive Icon, Another Reckoning

Cesar Chavez has occupied a singular place in the progressive pantheon for decades. Streets bear his name. Schools bear his name. A federal holiday bears his name. His image has been deployed by the left as shorthand for moral authority on labor, immigration, and civil rights.

The irony is thick enough to cut. Chávez himself previously spoke out against illegal immigration, a fact the modern left has spent years quietly burying because it complicates their open-borders narrative. The man they turned into a symbol for mass immigration actually opposed it. Now the man they turned into a symbol of justice for the vulnerable may have victimized the most vulnerable people imaginable.

This is a pattern the left never seems to learn from. Build a cult of personality around a political figure. Suppress any inconvenient facts about them. Use their name as a weapon against anyone who disagrees with your policy agenda. Then act shocked when the full truth surfaces, 22 years after his death.

Conservatives have watched this cycle before:

  • Elevate a figure to sainthood based on political utility
  • Silence anyone who raises questions
  • Scramble to "reckon" with the legacy once denial is no longer viable

The UFW's pivot is instructive. Rather than address the Chavez allegations directly, the union urged supporters to redirect their energy toward "immigration justice events and acts of service to support farmworkers." The iconography crumbles, but the political project must continue. The messenger changes; the message stays the same.

What Comes Next

The upcoming story that triggered this wave of preemptive cancellations has not yet been published. When it lands, it will test whether the institutions that canonized Chavez are willing to follow the truth wherever it leads, or whether they'll manage the fallout just enough to preserve his political usefulness.

If the allegations involve the abuse of minors during his time leading the UFW, the questions won't stop at Chavez. They'll extend to everyone who knew, everyone who stayed silent, and every institution that wrapped itself in his legacy without asking hard questions.

The UFW says it has no firsthand knowledge. The Foundation says it wants patience. Across the country, events are going dark. Nobody is defending Chavez on the merits. That silence carries its own weight.

The street signs are still up. The holiday is still on the calendar. But the man behind them is about to be examined in a light his allies spent decades making sure never reached him.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit ruled Monday that the Trump administration may continue deporting illegal immigrants to countries where they have no ties while a legal challenge plays out. The 2-1 decision lifts limits imposed by a lower court judge and keeps his order halted until the appeal is fully resolved.

The panel also expedited the schedule for the next stage of the case, signaling that a final resolution may come faster than the usual appellate crawl. The ruling contained no explanation from the majority, which let the action speak for itself.

The judges and the vote

According to The Hill, the two judges in the majority were Jeffrey Howard, nominated by former President George W. Bush, and Seth Aframe, nominated by former President Biden. The sole dissenter was Lara Montecalvo, a Biden nominee. That a Biden appointee joined the majority is notable. It suggests the administration's legal position carries weight beyond partisan lines.

The case originated with U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy, another Biden nominee, who oversees a class action lawsuit filed by four noncitizens a year ago. Murphy had required the administration to first attempt removal to a migrant's home country or country of citizenship before sending them elsewhere. He also ruled that migrants must receive a "meaningful opportunity" to contest their deportation once a third country is selected.

In his final ruling last month, Murphy said material differences had emerged in the case and blocked the policy once again. His own words were blunt:

"It is not fine, nor is it legal."

The appeals court disagreed. Or at minimum, it decided Murphy's restrictions should not stand while the government makes its case.

A policy with teeth

As part of its aggressive immigration crackdown, the Trump administration has ramped up sending illegal immigrants to places other than their home countries. It has struck deals with Cameroon, South Sudan, and Eswatini, among other nations, to take in deportees. The strategy targets a persistent logjam in immigration enforcement: countries that refuse to accept their own citizens back. If a home country won't cooperate, the administration now has alternatives.

This is not a new fight. Last year, the Trump administration went to the Supreme Court and won after Murphy limited third-country removals at an earlier stage of the case. Monday's ruling continues that pattern of appellate courts siding with the executive branch's authority to enforce removal.

A DHS spokesperson said the administration had "once again been vindicated" and framed the stakes in direct terms:

"The Biden Administration allowed millions of illegal aliens to flood our country, and the Trump Administration has the authority to remove these criminal illegal aliens and clean up this national security nightmare."

DHS also aimed the lower court resistance:

"If these activists judges had their way, aliens who are so uniquely barbaric that their own countries won't take them back, including convicted murderers, child rapists and drug traffickers, would walk free on American streets."

The legal resistance pattern

The broader dynamic here is one conservatives have watched for years. A district judge, often appointed by a Democratic president, issues a sweeping injunction against immigration enforcement. The administration appeals. A higher court stays the injunction or overturns it. Repeat.

It is a cycle designed to delay, not to adjudicate. Each injunction buys weeks or months during which enforcement is frozen, and the status quo of non-removal continues. Even when the government wins on appeal, the time lost is enforcement that never happened, deportations that never occurred, and illegal immigrants who remained in the country while lawyers argued about the process.

Murphy's insistence that migrants receive a "meaningful opportunity" to contest removal to a specific third country sounds reasonable in a law school seminar. In practice, it creates another procedural chokepoint in a system already drowning in them. Every additional hearing requirement is another delay. Every delay is another month someone remains in the United States instead of being removed.

The other side knows the clock is the weapon

Trina Realmuto, executive director of the National Immigration Litigation Alliance, which represents the migrants in the case, acknowledged the setback while highlighting the expedited timeline:

"While the order unfortunately delays implementation of the decision, we appreciate that the First Circuit ordered a swift resolution of the merits of the government's appeal."

Note the framing. The ruling that allows deportations to continue is characterized as a "delay" of the decision blocking deportations. In this worldview, the default state is that enforcement is halted, and any period where the government actually exercises its removal authority is a temporary aberration. That tells you everything about the assumptions driving the legal challenge.

What comes next

The expedited schedule means the 1st Circuit will hear the merits of the government's appeal on a faster track. The administration has mainly argued that federal judges have no authority to intervene in these removal decisions at all, a position that, if accepted, would shut down the entire line of attack.

For now, the policy stands. Illegal immigrants can be removed to third countries. The deals with Cameroon, South Sudan, Eswatini, and others remain operational. And the administration's record in appellate courts on this question continues to build.

Canadian police have charged two Iranian residents of Vancouver with first-degree murder in connection with the killing of Masoud Masjoudi, an activist who opposed the Islamic Republic. The remains of Masjoudi, an Iranian-born mathematician who lived in British Columbia, were discovered on March 6 in the city of Mission, near Vancouver.

The suspects, 48-year-old Mehdi Ahmadzadeh Razavi of Maple Ridge and 45-year-old Arezoo Soltani of North Vancouver, were arrested on Friday, March 13. Investigators believe the killing appears to have been "targeted." The investigation is still ongoing.

Police are also examining whether Masjoudi's disappearance and murder may be connected to political activities related to Iran, although no conclusion has been announced.

A life spent opposing the Islamic Republic

According to Iranwire, Masjoudi was among the earliest members of "Farashgard," a group that supported a prominent role for Prince Reza Pahlavi, although he later distanced himself from the group. His opposition to the Iranian regime made him a figure of interest in the Canadian-Iranian community, and his disappearance triggered immediate alarm among those who understood what it might mean.

Nazanin Afshin-Jam MacKay, a prominent member of the Canadian-Iranian community and well-known human rights activist, wrote on social media shortly after Masjoudi's disappearance that he had been "under threat for months." MacKay, the wife of former Canadian Defense Minister Peter MacKay, claimed Masjoudi had been trying to expose affiliates of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Canada.

That claim has not been officially corroborated. But the speed with which the community connected Masjoudi's disappearance to the Iranian regime tells its own story. These fears don't materialize from nothing.

The long arm of Tehran

Sergeant Fereda Fong of the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team acknowledged the weight of this case in a statement:

"We know this case has impacted the Iranian community and has sparked widespread public concern and attention."

That's a careful statement from law enforcement in an active investigation. But read what it concedes: the Iranian community felt the impact immediately, and the public concern was "widespread." When a dissident who opposed the Islamic Republic turns up dead in a Western democracy, and investigators call the killing "targeted," the political implications don't require a final police conclusion to be visible.

Western nations have spent years grappling with the reality that authoritarian regimes do not respect borders when it comes to silencing their critics. Iran, in particular, has a well-documented history of pursuing dissidents abroad. Canada, with its large Iranian diaspora and its historically permissive immigration posture, presents an obvious environment for such operations.

The question is not whether hostile foreign governments attempt to intimidate and harm dissidents on Western soil. The question is what Western governments are prepared to do about it.

Canada's credibility problem

Canada has long positioned itself as a haven for refugees, dissidents, and those fleeing persecution. That brand means nothing if the people who flee to Canada end up dead at the hands of agents connected to the regimes they escaped. A country that cannot protect political dissidents within its own borders is not a sanctuary. It is a hunting ground with better scenery.

The arrests of Razavi and Soltani are a necessary step. First-degree murder charges indicate premeditation, which aligns with the "targeted" characterization from investigators. But arrests are the floor, not the ceiling. If this killing is ultimately connected to a foreign state's campaign of repression, the response must extend far beyond a criminal prosecution of two individuals.

Conservative critics of Canada's national security posture have raised these concerns for years. The IRGC has operated with alarming freedom in Western countries, building networks that serve Tehran's interests while host governments debate whether to designate them as the threat they plainly are. Every delay in confronting that reality creates space for exactly this kind of outcome.

What comes next

The investigation remains ongoing. Police have not drawn a conclusion about the political dimensions of Masjoudi's killing. That caution is appropriate for law enforcement. It should not, however, become an excuse for political inaction.

If a man can be killed in British Columbia for opposing the Iranian regime, and the suspects are Iranian nationals living freely in Canadian cities, then Canada's immigration vetting, its intelligence posture, and its willingness to confront state-sponsored threats all deserve scrutiny. Not after the investigation concludes. Now.

Masoud Masjoudi came to Canada and used his freedom to oppose tyranny. That freedom was supposed to be the whole point.

A 39-year-old man who reportedly worked as a member of Rep. Jasmine Crockett's security team was shot and killed by Dallas police after he pointed a gun at officers during a standoff in a hospital parking lot.

Officers with the Dallas Fugitive Unit were investigating a "wanted suspect" when the man barricaded himself in a vehicle at the Children's Medical Center parking lot. Dallas Police Chief Daniel C. Comeaux said the man exited the vehicle with a gun, pointed it at officers, and was shot. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

The man was later formally identified by sources, through CBS News Texas, as Diamon-Mazairre Robinson. He reportedly went by the alias "Mike King."

A security figure with a complicated past

Robinson reportedly used the alias Mike King to establish several businesses and oversaw teams of security officers at several downtown Dallas hotels and at his church. According to CBS News Texas, he had a history of arrests leading to misdemeanor and felony charges.

That a man with that kind of background was reportedly entrusted with the physical safety of a sitting member of Congress raises questions that deserve answers. Crockett, 44, is a Democrat from Texas and a U.S. Senate candidate. The connection between Robinson and her security operation was reported by CBS News Texas and Fox 4, citing sources, as People reports.

Neither Crockett's press office nor the Dallas Police Department responded to requests for comment from PEOPLE, which first reported the story.

The questions Crockett hasn't answered

The silence from Crockett's office is notable. A member of your security team dies in a police shootout in a children's hospital parking lot, and the public gets nothing. No statement. No acknowledgment. No explanation of the vetting process that put this individual in a position of trust around a federal lawmaker.

This is a woman running for the United States Senate. Voters in Texas are entitled to know how her team selects the people responsible for her protection, whether those individuals undergo background checks, and what her office knew about Robinson's criminal history and use of an alias.

If the roles were reversed, if a Republican member of Congress had a former security team member killed in a standoff with police after drawing a weapon on officers, there would already be demands for a full accounting from every major newsroom in the country. The asymmetry is predictable at this point, but it doesn't make it less instructive.

A standoff at a children's hospital

The location of this incident deserves its own moment of recognition. This was the Children's Medical Center parking lot. Families bring their sick children there. The Dallas Fugitive Unit tracked a wanted suspect to that location, and the confrontation that followed unfolded in a space where parents walk their kids to oncology appointments and surgical consultations.

The officers involved made the call they had to make when a man pointed a firearm at them. That is the reality of law enforcement when a suspect forces the situation. Every officer who responded went home that day. The man who pointed a gun at them did not. That sequence of events has a cause, and it starts with the choices Robinson made.

What happens next

Chief Comeaux held a press conference that was shared on social media on Wednesday, March 11, laying out the basic facts. The investigation will continue through normal channels. But the political dimension of this story is only beginning.

Crockett is in the middle of a Senate campaign. She spoke at a Texas primary election night event on March 3. The timeline means this story landed in the middle of an active political operation, which makes her office's silence a strategic choice, not an oversight.

Texas voters should expect more from a candidate who wants to represent 30 million people. When someone on your team dies in a shootout with police, you don't get to say anything. You owe the public an explanation of who he was, how he got hired, and what your office knew. That is not an unfair standard. It is the minimum.

The facts here are still emerging, and Robinson's precise role and the full scope of his background have yet to be confirmed beyond sourced reporting. But the confirmed details alone, a wanted suspect, a criminal history, an alias used to run businesses, a fatal confrontation with law enforcement, paint a picture that demands scrutiny, not silence.

Crockett's office can answer questions now, or answer them later under far less favorable conditions. That choice is hers.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt unloaded on CNN Friday, calling a report that President Trump's national security team failed to anticipate Iran's potential closure of the Strait of Hormuz "100% FAKE NEWS."

The rebuke came after CNN reported Thursday that Trump's national security team "failed to fully account for the potential consequences" of U.S. strikes, specifically the possibility that Iran would move to shut down the strait, through which roughly one-fifth of the world's oil shipments pass.

Leavitt didn't mince words on X:

"The idea that chairman Cain and Secretary Hegseth weren't prepared for this possibility is PREPOSTEROUS."

She went further, pointing out that neutralizing Iran's ability to threaten the strait was baked into the operation itself:

"The President was fully briefed on it, and a goal of the Operation itself, to annihilate the terrorist Iranian regime's navy, missiles, drone production infrastructure, and other threat capabilities is quite literally intended to deprive them of their ability to close the Strait."

Read that again. The entire point of Operation Epic Fury was to destroy the Iranian regime's capacity to hold global shipping hostage. CNN's thesis is that the administration never considered the very thing the operation was designed to prevent, as Fox News reports.

The pushback was swift and bipartisan within the right

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth blasted the report during remarks at the Pentagon Friday, calling it "more fake news from CNN" and "patently ridiculous."

Hegseth framed the threat in terms that anyone paying attention for the last several decades would recognize:

"For decades, Iran has threatened shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. This is always what they do, hold the strait hostage."

Then the line that landed hardest: "CNN doesn't think we thought of that."

Sen. Tom Cotton, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, added his own assessment on X, and it wasn't subtle:

"As chairman of the Intelligence Committee, let me make clear: whoever leaked this lied."

He followed up with a suggestion CNN might want to consider: "CNN should do some fact-checking."

CNN's quiet Friday edit tells its own story

Here's where it gets interesting. CNN issued a clarification to the story on Friday. The updated version now acknowledges that "top Trump administration officials briefed lawmakers on long-standing military plans to address a major disruption to the Strait, according to one official." That's a significant concession buried inside an update.

But the clarification also tried to thread a needle, noting that "multiple sources familiar with the session said there was no indication there were any near-term solutions." The original report leaned on anonymous sources claiming the administration was blindsided. The updated version concedes there were plans. Those are two very different stories.

When Fox News Digital reached CNN for comment, the network responded: "We stand by our reporting." CNN Chairman and CEO Mark Thompson echoed the sentiment on X: "We stand by our journalism."

Standing by a story you've already materially amended is a choice.

A pattern that extends beyond CNN

The CNN dustup wasn't an isolated incident. The White House has repeatedly clashed with major news outlets this week over coverage of the Iran conflict. On Thursday, Leavitt called for ABC News to retract a separate story, accusing the network of spreading "false information to intentionally alarm the American people."

According to Leavitt, the ABC report was based on "one email that was sent to local law enforcement in California about a single, unverified tip." ABC News has since updated its story with an editor's note acknowledging that the FBI's alert included the detail that the information was unverified, a fact the original story apparently failed to emphasize.

Two major networks. Two stories require significant corrections or clarifications. One week.

The real question no one at CNN is asking

The pattern here isn't complicated. Anonymous sources feed breathless claims to outlets already predisposed to frame military action as reckless. The claims get published. The administration pushes back with named officials making on-the-record denials. The outlets quietly update their stories while insisting nothing was wrong in the first place.

Cotton's point deserves weight. He chairs the Intelligence Committee. He has access to the classified briefings CNN's anonymous sources claim to be describing. And he says whoever leaked to CNN lied. That's not a vague denial from a communications staffer. That's the senator with the most direct oversight authority calling the sourcing fraudulent.

The Strait of Hormuz has been a flashpoint in U.S. strategic planning for decades. Every military planner who has ever war-gamed a conflict with Iran has accounted for it.

The suggestion that an administration actively striking Iranian naval and missile infrastructure somehow forgot about the strait those assets are designed to threaten is not serious analysis. It's narrative construction.

CNN wanted the story to be about incompetence. The story is actually about an operation designed to eliminate the very threat CNN accused the administration of ignoring. The clarification they were forced to publish proves it.

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