The U.S. Navy took the unusual step Saturday of publishing photos of hot meals and stacked food supplies aboard two warships in the Middle East, directly challenging reports that sailors deployed to the region were going hungry during Operation Epic Fury against Iran.
The images, posted to the Navy's official X account, showed full plates of food being served to sailors aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Tripoli. At least one photo displayed boxes of food supplies stacked to the ceiling onboard one of the ships. The Navy's post was blunt.
As Fox News Digital reported, the Navy wrote on X: "Fresh meals. Full service. Mission ready. Sailors aboard USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Tripoli continue to receive regularly prepared meals at sea, no interruptions, no shortages."
The public rebuttal came after days of mounting claims, rejected at the highest levels of the Pentagon, that crews on deployed warships were facing food shortages and substandard meals. By Saturday morning, the Navy had moved from words to pictures, and from denial to documentation.
The pushback began Friday, when Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Daryl Caudle issued a statement flatly denying the allegations. Caudle did not mince words:
"Recent reports alleging food shortages and poor quality aboard our deployed ships are false. Both USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Tripoli have sufficient food onboard to serve their crews with healthy options. The health and wellbeing of our Sailors and Marines are my top priority, and every crew member continues to receive fully portioned, nutritionally balanced meals."
Also on Friday, U.S. Central Command's Adm. Brad Cooper told reporters the claims were "blatantly false."
"Our service members are absolutely being fed across the region. This is an absolute priority."
That two four-star admirals felt the need to address the matter publicly, on the same day, signals how seriously the Pentagon treated the narrative. The Navy rarely responds to press chatter with photographic evidence posted to social media. The fact that it did here suggests military leadership viewed the claims as a direct threat to morale and public confidence in the mission.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth weighed in forcefully, dismissing the allegations as "fake news" and backing the Navy's account with specific logistics figures. Hegseth said his team had confirmed the supply data for both ships.
"My team confirmed the logistics stats for the Lincoln & Tripoli. Both have 30+ days of [Class I supplies (food)] on board. NavCent monitors this everyday, for every ship."
Hegseth added: "Our sailors deserve, and receive, the best." He also took aim at the press, writing, "The U.S. Navy is correct. More FAKE NEWS from the Pharisee Press."
The thirty-plus-day food supply figure matters. It means both carriers had more than a month of provisions aboard at the time of the claims, hardly the picture of ships running on empty. NavCent, the Navy's Central Command component, monitors those supply levels daily for every vessel in the theater, Hegseth said.
The food-shortage controversy unfolded against the backdrop of Operation Epic Fury, the U.S. military campaign targeting Iranian threats in the region. The USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Tripoli are both deployed to the Middle East as part of that operation, which includes an ongoing U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz amid reported Iranian attempts to close the critical waterway once again.
Former Pentagon official Brent Sadler has discussed the blockade and Iran's efforts to shut down the strait, a chokepoint through which a significant share of global oil shipments pass. The operational tempo in the region is high, and supply logistics are a constant concern for any extended naval deployment.
That context makes the food-shortage claims more consequential than ordinary press gripes. If sailors on the front line of a major naval operation were truly going hungry, it would represent a serious failure of command and logistics. But the Navy's response, photographic evidence, logistics data, and statements from the Chief of Naval Operations, a Central Command admiral, and the Secretary of War, amounts to a comprehensive denial backed by specifics.
When political leaders in Washington face embarrassing allegations, the instinct is often to stay quiet and hope the story fades. Democrats have perfected that playbook, whether the subject is misconduct accusations or internal party dysfunction.
The Pentagon chose a different approach. Rather than duck, the Navy produced receipts, literally, photos of food on trays and pallets of supplies.
The Navy's rebuttal is forceful but leaves some questions open. The specific reports or outlets that originated the food-shortage claims are not identified in the Navy's public statements. Without knowing who made the allegations, or what evidence they cited, it is difficult to assess the full picture.
It is also unclear exactly where in the Middle East the Abraham Lincoln and Tripoli were operating when the claims surfaced. The Navy's photos carry a caption dated Saturday, April 18, 2026, but the ships' precise positions are not disclosed, standard practice for operational security.
The pattern of unverified claims gaining traction before anyone checks the facts is not unique to military coverage. Disputed narratives have a way of spreading long before the record catches up. In this case, the Navy moved fast to close the gap.
Still, the episode raises a fair question: who benefits from stories suggesting American sailors are being neglected during a live operation against Iran? At a minimum, such reports undermine public support for the mission. At worst, they hand propaganda material to adversaries watching from Tehran.
The broader media environment rewards sensational claims over careful verification. Political actors and press allies have shown repeatedly that they will amplify a damaging headline first and ask questions later, if they ask at all.
The people who pay the highest price for reckless reporting about military readiness are the service members themselves. Sailors aboard the Abraham Lincoln and Tripoli are deployed far from home, executing a high-stakes mission in contested waters. Their families read the news. False reports of food shortages create needless fear and anger among military families who already carry a heavy burden.
The Navy's Saturday post was aimed squarely at those families, and at the crews themselves. The message: you are fed, you are supplied, and the chain of command has your back.
Whether the press outlets that ran the original claims will issue corrections remains to be seen. The track record on that front is not encouraging. Silence in the face of inconvenient facts has become a default setting for institutions that prize narrative over accuracy.
When the Navy has to post pictures of dinner trays on social media to prove it feeds its own sailors, the problem is not the Navy. The problem is a press culture that treats every unverified claim as a five-alarm headline, and never circles back when the facts say otherwise.
A former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer who was preparing to testify about unidentified aerial phenomena died before he could speak, and now a Missouri congressman wants the FBI to find out why.
Rep. Eric Burlison formally requested that FBI Director Kash Patel open an investigation into the death of Matthew James Sullivan, a 39-year-old Falls Church, Virginia, resident and Air Force veteran who died on May 12, 2024. Sullivan had reportedly been scheduled by the UAP Task Force to come forward as a whistleblower in connection with congressional inquiries into whether the U.S. government has concealed evidence of UFOs.
Sullivan's official cause of death has not been made public. Initial reports described it as a suicide, but the case had reportedly remained in the hands of a local Virginia medical examiner, not federal investigators, until Burlison intervened. The congressman told the Daily Mail on Friday that he has "grave concerns" and considers the circumstances surrounding Sullivan's death "suspicious."
Sullivan was no fringe figure. He served as deputy director at the National Air and Space Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, the same installation long associated with Cold War-era UFO lore, including allegations tied to the 1947 Roswell incident. He also worked for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Pentagon's so-called "idea factory" credited with helping develop the Internet, GPS, and stealth technology. On top of that, he held a role as a Department of War contractor.
Burlison emphasized Sullivan's access to the most sensitive levels of classified information. He told the Daily Mail:
"Look at Matthew Sullivan's credentials and his experience. He certainly was someone who was read in at the highest classification levels and knew some of our nation's most important secrets."
The congressman added bluntly: "And so did a lot of these other people."
That line points to a broader pattern that has caught lawmakers' attention. Burlison referenced 11 other deaths and disappearances documented since 2022 involving individuals connected to aerospace, intelligence, and classified programs. The Daily Mail reported that several scientists and administrative officials with ties to NASA, nuclear research, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory have vanished or turned up dead in recent years. Whether those cases are connected remains an open question, but one that Congress now appears intent on pressing.
The broader pattern of tensions between state-level investigators and federal agencies over accountability and transparency adds context to why lawmakers may feel compelled to push for federal involvement in a case that local authorities have handled quietly.
Central to the story is David Grusch, the retired U.S. Air Force Major who became a household name in the UAP world after testifying before Congress in 2023. Grusch spent 14 years in the Air Force before serving as an intelligence officer at the National Reconnaissance Office, the agency that builds and launches surveillance satellites for the Pentagon. He became a whistleblower after allegedly learning of hidden UFO retrieval and reverse-engineering programs.
Grusch now serves as a senior advisor to Burlison. The congressman confirmed Friday that Grusch had been in contact with Sullivan before his death and was actively helping him come forward.
"Grusch was helping him come forward as a whistleblower."
Burlison said he himself had not spoken to Sullivan directly. But the congressman described Sullivan as someone who had been specifically scheduled by the UAP Task Force to provide testimony.
"The fact that he had been scheduled by the UAP Task Force. That he had been scheduled to come and speak... After hearing about this tragedy, I felt it was worth looking into."
What Sullivan was prepared to disclose remains unknown. Burlison told the Daily Mail he did not know the specific information Sullivan intended to share. That gap, between what Sullivan apparently knew and what anyone outside the classified world will ever learn, sits at the center of this case.
The question of what federal agencies know and choose not to share is hardly new. Recent reporting on the FBI's handling of the Epstein files has raised similar concerns about institutional transparency and the selective release of information in politically sensitive matters.
Burlison's letter to Patel pulled no punches. In it, the congressman wrote that "the sudden and suspicious circumstances surrounding his death raise significant concerns about potential foul play and the safety of other individuals involved in this matter." He also cited an investigation by the Intelligence Community Inspector General that uncovered what he described as "serious allegations of misconduct and potentially unlawful activities", findings that, in Burlison's view, pointed away from suicide as an explanation for Sullivan's death.
The congressman is not acting alone. He and House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer are preparing a joint letter to the FBI listing several cases lawmakers want investigated as part of what they describe as a possible conspiracy. Burlison, a member of the Oversight Committee, has been part of a broader congressional effort investigating claims that the federal government has not been truthful about the existence of UFOs.
Burlison told the Daily Mail he had been in contact with members of the FBI, but the bureau neither confirmed nor denied whether the intelligence community had been investigating Sullivan's death, or the 11 other deaths and disappearances documented since 2022.
That kind of institutional silence is a familiar frustration. Lawmakers across the political spectrum have encountered similar stonewalling from the FBI in other politically charged investigations, where information flows upward but rarely back to the officials who are supposed to exercise oversight.
Perhaps the most revealing part of Burlison's comments had nothing to do with Sullivan specifically. It had to do with what Sullivan's death means for everyone else who might step forward.
The congressman described a climate in which potential whistleblowers feel physically unsafe. Some, he said, have chosen to go public precisely because they believe visibility offers protection.
"There's some that came forward, that have come forward to try to be public just to avoid any kind of foul play. In a lot of ways, going public can be a protection in and of itself. I do know of at least one individual that did come forward, and has been very public, and did so because he felt that his life was in danger."
That is a remarkable statement from a sitting member of Congress. Burlison is not describing a policy disagreement or a bureaucratic turf war. He is describing people inside the national security apparatus who believe they could be harmed for speaking to lawmakers. Whether those fears are justified, the fact that they exist, and that a congressman takes them seriously enough to petition the FBI director, deserves attention.
The pattern of federal agencies operating with minimal external accountability is a recurring theme. Separate FBI probes involving classified information and national security personnel have raised persistent questions about who watches the watchers.
There are no new whistleblower hearings on UAPs currently scheduled, the Daily Mail reported. Sullivan cannot testify. His cause of death remains unpublicized. The specific information he intended to share is unknown even to the congressman who asked the FBI to investigate.
The Daily Mail reached out to local authorities in Virginia for comment. No response was reported.
Skeptics will note that "suspicious" is a word that carries weight but not evidence. And Burlison himself acknowledged he did not speak to Sullivan directly. But the congressman's letter, the involvement of the Oversight Committee chairman, and the documented trail of deaths and disappearances among individuals connected to classified programs add up to something that warrants more than a local medical examiner's file.
Investigations into alleged misconduct by government officials are never comfortable for the institutions involved. That discomfort is not a reason to look away.
When people inside the government believe they need to go public just to stay alive, the problem is no longer about UFOs. It is about whether the institutions Americans fund and trust are capable of policing themselves, or whether they have decided that silence, one way or another, is the preferred outcome.
Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty moved swiftly to file felony charges against an ICE agent over a February traffic confrontation in Minneapolis, but weeks after a Turning Point USA reporter was shoved, pushed into a fence, and knocked to the ground by anti-ICE protesters outside a federal building, no one in that case has been charged. The contrast tells you everything about where this prosecutor's priorities lie.
Gregory Donnell Morgan Jr., 34, an agent with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, faces two counts of second-degree assault tied to a Feb. 5 incident on Highway 62 near the Interstate 35W interchange, Fox News Digital reported. Each count carries up to seven years in prison. Authorities issued a nationwide warrant for Morgan's arrest, and bail was set at $100,000 with conditions that include surrendering all weapons and appearing at every court date.
Moriarty announced the charges Thursday at a press conference in Minneapolis, framing the prosecution as a milestone in what she called her office's broader effort to hold federal agents accountable.
The criminal complaint lays out a sequence that began around 4:20 p.m. as rush-hour traffic slowed to a single lane near the I-35W interchange. Prosecutors said Morgan was driving a rented, unmarked SUV, no markings identifying it as a federal vehicle, and drove on the shoulder to bypass congestion.
Moriarty described what happened next:
"Mr. Morgan sped up to pull alongside the victim's vehicle. Mr. Morgan then visibly slowed his vehicle to match the pace of the victim's vehicle, opened his window, and pointed his duty weapon directly at both victims in the other vehicle while continuing to drive illegally on the shoulder."
Both victims told investigators they felt threatened. Morgan, for his part, told investigators he feared for his safety, yelled "Police! Stop," and believed the individuals were "agitators" who had cut him off because he was a federal agent. Investigators noted, however, that Morgan was not responding to an emergency at the time. He told authorities he was heading back to the Whipple Federal Building to end his shift and get gas.
Breitbart reported that Morgan admitted drawing his firearm after the other vehicle had already rejoined the normal flow of traffic, a detail Moriarty said corroborated the victims' accounts. That admission undercuts any claim of an imminent threat.
If the facts in the complaint hold up, this was reckless conduct unbecoming of a federal law enforcement officer. No serious conservative defends an agent brandishing a weapon in rush-hour traffic over a perceived slight. Accountability for law enforcement officers is not a left-wing value, it is a bedrock expectation of ordered liberty.
But the speed with which Moriarty moved on the Morgan case throws the Hernandez situation into sharp relief. Turning Point USA reporter Savanah Hernandez was covering an anti-ICE protest outside the Whipple Federal Building when, according to video from the scene, protesters blew horns in her face, yelled obscenities, and shoved her as she tried to leave. At one point, a protester pushed her into a fence. Another later shoved her to the ground.
Hernandez can be heard on video saying, "Stop touching me" and "Leave me, I am trying to leave!" She later said she suffered minor injuries, including scrapes and soreness.
No arrests were made at the time. A spokesperson for the Hennepin County Attorney's Office told Fox News Digital that three cases tied to the Hernandez incident have been submitted by law enforcement and are under review for potential charges. The cases were submitted "out of custody," meaning no one was taken in. The office offered no timeline for a charging decision.
So a federal agent who pointed a gun at motorists gets a nationwide warrant and a $100,000 bail package within weeks. Protesters who physically assaulted a journalist on camera? Still under review. The asymmetry is hard to miss, and harder to justify. This pattern of selective urgency from Democratic officials who clash with federal immigration enforcement has become familiar across the country.
Moriarty made clear that the Morgan prosecution is not a one-off. She said her office is continuing to investigate more than a dozen other incidents involving federal agents in the Twin Cities, all connected to Operation Metro Surge, the immigration enforcement operation that drew protests and political friction in Minneapolis.
She told reporters the Morgan case moved faster than other investigations because authorities were able to complete their work "without obstruction or interference." The implication, that other cases have been obstructed, went unexplained. Moriarty did not name who or what interfered.
Just The News noted that Moriarty suggested this may be the first state criminal charge against a federal agent connected to the Trump administration's immigration enforcement in Minnesota. She declared that "there is no such thing as absolute immunity for federal agents who violate the law in the state of Minnesota."
That statement is legally correct in the narrow sense. Federal agents are not above state criminal law. But Moriarty's framing, casting herself as a check on the Trump administration's immigration operations, raises a fair question about whether this prosecution is driven by the facts of the Feb. 5 incident or by a broader political project. The backlash from law enforcement groups against Democratic officials who target ICE agents with hostile rhetoric has been building for months.
The FBI has also opened a federal investigation, though the scope and target of that probe remain unclear from available details.
Conservatives have watched this script play out in city after city. Local Democratic prosecutors treat every allegation against a federal immigration agent as an emergency, press conferences, warrants, public statements about accountability. Meanwhile, violence against people who support enforcement, or who simply report on it, gets shuffled into the review pile.
Newsmax reported that the charges include a nationwide warrant, meaning Morgan will be arrested and extradited to Hennepin County to face prosecution. That is the system working as designed. No one should object to a lawful prosecution backed by evidence.
But the system should work for Savanah Hernandez, too. She was physically assaulted on camera while exercising her First Amendment rights. The video exists. The cases have been submitted. And yet the Hennepin County Attorney's Office cannot offer even a rough timeline for a charging decision.
The broader political environment makes the disparity worse, not better. Across the country, Democratic officials have been working to obstruct, restrict, or penalize ICE agents at every turn, from mask bans to threatened lawsuits to inflammatory public statements about self-defense against federal officers. Moriarty's office operates in that same current.
Several facts are still missing from the public record. The names of the two victims in the Highway 62 incident have not been released. The exact statutes cited in the charging documents are not publicly detailed beyond "second-degree assault." The court that issued the warrant and the case docket number have not been identified in available reporting.
More pressing: Will Moriarty's office ever charge anyone for the assault on Hernandez? Three cases sit in review. No arrests. No timeline. No press conference. The political fight over ICE funding and enforcement continues in Washington and in statehouses, but the people who live with the consequences, agents, reporters, ordinary motorists, deserve equal treatment under the law regardless of which side of the immigration debate they fall on.
Fox News Digital reached out to both ICE and DHS for comment on the charges. Neither response was included in available reporting.
If Morgan broke the law, he should face the consequences. That principle is not complicated. But a prosecutor who races to charge a federal agent while letting the assault of a journalist gather dust isn't enforcing the law equally, she's making a political choice and calling it justice.
Former UCLA gynecologist James Heaps, 69, pleaded guilty Tuesday to 13 felony counts of sexual abuse and was immediately sentenced to 11 years in prison, the same term he had already been serving before an appeals court threw out his earlier conviction on procedural grounds. The plea spared Heaps a retrial and spared his victims the ordeal of testifying again, but it did nothing to erase the scale of the scandal: hundreds of accusers, nearly $700 million in university settlements, and a case that stretches back almost a decade.
The 13 counts, as detailed by the Associated Press, included six counts of sexual penetration of an unconscious person, five counts of sexual battery by fraud, and two counts of sexual exploitation of a patient. Five victims were involved in the plea. Heaps will be required to register as a sex offender for life.
A judge sentenced Heaps immediately after the plea. There was no delay, no drama over a sentencing date. Eleven years, again.
Heaps was first convicted in 2023 on five counts of sexual battery and penetration involving two patients he treated while affiliated with UCLA. He received an 11-year sentence. But in February, an appeals court ruled he had been denied a fair trial. The reason: the trial judge reportedly failed to share the jury foreman's concerns about one juror's command of English with Heaps' defense lawyers.
That procedural failure, not any question about the evidence, gave Heaps a second chance at trial. Instead of facing a jury again, he chose to plead guilty to a broader set of charges covering more victims.
His defense lawyer, Leonard Levine, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the AP.
Nicole Gumpert, one of Heaps' accusers, appeared at the sentencing and addressed him directly. Her words were measured and unsparing.
"Now you have finally admitted what you have done, and while your sentence falls short of the justice truly demands, your ultimate prison will endure in perpetuity, a depraved legacy stripped of respect, honor, and integrity filled instead with shame."
Gumpert continued, as reported by the Los Angeles Times:
"History will not remember you for reverence. It will remember you with contempt. Your name will carry no honor, no redemption."
In a separate statement to KTLA, Gumpert said that while no sentence could restore what was taken from her or any survivor, "this matters." She also told reporters, as the AP noted: "There were many, many women involved in this case. We refuse to be silent."
Those words carry weight. The women who accused Heaps did not have the benefit of a system that moved quickly on their behalf. The charges stemmed from alleged assaults of seven women between 2009 and 2018, a span of nearly a decade. A grand jury did not indict Heaps until 2021, on multiple charges including sexual battery by fraud, sexual exploitation of a patient, and sexual penetration of an unconscious person by fraudulent representation.
The criminal case against Heaps is only one piece of a far larger institutional failure. Over 300 of his former patients have sued UCLA, alleging the university ignored or concealed abuse allegations against him. UCLA ultimately paid almost $700 million to settle those claims, as the New York Post reported.
That figure, nearly $700 million, is not a typo. It reflects the volume of accusers, the severity of the allegations, and the university's apparent exposure. When an institution pays that kind of money, it is not because a handful of complaints slipped through the cracks. It is because something went deeply wrong for a long time, and the people in charge either did not notice or did not act.
The pattern is familiar. A trusted professional exploits a position of authority. An institution that should have provided oversight instead provides cover, or at least inertia. Victims bear the cost for years before anyone in power takes the problem seriously. Taxpayers and tuition-payers ultimately foot the bill for the settlements. It is a cycle that plays out across healthcare fraud cases and institutional scandals alike.
Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman framed the plea as a measure of accountability, even if an imperfect one. Fox News reported his full statement:
"Today marks the second time that we're holding James Heaps responsible for the unconscionable crimes he committed while being entrusted with the safety of his patients. For years, Heaps exploited the sacred trust between a doctor and patient to prey on vulnerable victims during medical procedures. This sentence ensures that Heaps will finally be held accountable for the harm he inflicted under the guise of care."
Hochman also said, as the Washington Times reported: "While no sentence can undo the incredible harm that James Heaps engaged in... hopefully these admissions of guilt and the sentence he received today are a small measure of justice for all that the survivors had to endure."
Attorney John Manly, who has represented victims in related civil litigation, struck a broader note, telling Newsmax that "there will be severe consequences for any violation of patients' rights and dignity."
The timeline tells its own story. Heaps allegedly abused patients from 2009 to 2018. He was indicted in 2021. He was convicted and sentenced in 2023. An appeals court overturned that conviction in February on a procedural error that had nothing to do with the strength of the evidence. He pleaded guilty and was re-sentenced this week. The whole process took the better part of seven years from indictment to final resolution, and far longer from the first alleged offense.
For the victims, that is seven years of uncertainty layered on top of years of trauma. For the public, it is a reminder that the criminal justice system can grind slowly even when the facts are damning. Heaps' own guilty plea to 13 felonies makes the appeals court's procedural reversal look all the more frustrating, not because the court was wrong on the law, but because the original trial judge's error forced everyone back to square one.
Cases like this raise a straightforward question: who was watching? UCLA employed Heaps for years. Hundreds of women say they were harmed. The university has now paid a staggering sum in settlements. Yet the criminal accountability fell to prosecutors and a jury, and even that process stumbled once before reaching the same destination.
It is worth noting that when public figures face criminal consequences, the system's slowness often benefits the accused at the expense of victims and taxpayers. Heaps will serve 11 years. Whether that is enough is a question the victims themselves have answered plainly: it falls short.
The life registration as a sex offender, confirmed by Fox News, adds a permanent mark. But for the women who trusted a doctor in an examination room and were betrayed, permanent marks were already inflicted long ago.
Heaps' case is not an isolated incident in a world where institutions routinely fail to police their own. From ethics violations on Capitol Hill to fraud in the healthcare system, the pattern repeats: insiders exploit trust, institutions look the other way, and ordinary people pay the price.
The question that lingers after every case like this is never really about the sentence. It is about why it took so long, and whether anyone at the institution that enabled the abuse will ever face consequences of their own.
Several questions hang over the case. The specific court that heard Tuesday's plea and sentencing was not identified in available reporting. The exact breakdown of all 13 felony counts beyond the AP's summary remains unclear. And the broader question, what UCLA knew, when it knew it, and why it took hundreds of lawsuits and nearly $700 million in payouts before the full scope became public, has never been fully answered in a criminal forum.
Heaps admitted guilt. UCLA wrote checks. The victims spoke. But institutional accountability, the kind that might actually prevent the next scandal, remains, as it so often does, an unfinished chapter.
When a university pays $700 million and nobody in its administration faces a courtroom, the system has punished the crime but not the culture that made it possible.
Two Omaha police officers fatally shot a 31-year-old woman in a Walmart parking lot after she slashed a 3-year-old boy across the face with a stolen kitchen knife, ignoring repeated commands to drop the weapon, authorities said. The child survived. The woman, identified as Noemi Guzman, did not.
Officers responded to the Omaha Walmart just after 9:10 a.m. on reports of an armed woman holding a young child, the New York Post reported. What they found in the parking lot, Guzman standing beside a shopping cart with the boy inside, a large kitchen knife in her hand, forced a split-second decision that Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer later called an act of courage.
The sequence that led to the shooting, captured on store surveillance footage and body-worn cameras, began inside the Walmart. Police said the footage showed Guzman shoplifting the knife, then approaching the 3-year-old and his female guardian in an aisle. She brandished the blade, forced the guardian to walk ahead of the cart, and led them through the store and out into the parking lot.
Deputy Chief Scott Gray described Guzman's actions bluntly at a press conference. She "took possession of the child, essentially kidnapping the child," Gray said. The boy's guardian, whose identity police did not release, was powerless to intervene while Guzman held the knife.
A two-officer patrol unit arrived and found Guzman in the parking lot. Body-worn camera images showed the standoff: the woman, the blade, and a toddler in a shopping cart. Officers pleaded with her multiple times to put the knife down.
She refused. Then, authorities said, she slashed the boy.
Both officers fired. Guzman was struck and went down. Lifesaving measures were administered at the scene, but she died there. The toddler's guardian and a bystander pulled the child from the cart and began medical aid. The boy suffered a large laceration across the left side of his face and a wound on his hand. He was taken to a hospital and was expected to survive.
The incident is a grim reminder that violent attacks in everyday public spaces, grocery stores, restaurants, parking lots, keep confronting American families and the officers who respond.
Guzman was not unknown to law enforcement. Fox News reported that she had a prior violent arrest in 2024 involving an alleged knife attack on her own father, an attempt to start a fire, and a barricade inside a church. Omaha police at the time described the episode as a mental health crisis.
"She was in a mental health crisis," Lt. Jake Ritonya said of the 2024 church incident, Fox News reported. Yet Guzman was subsequently freed, free enough to walk into a Walmart, steal a kitchen knife, and seize someone else's child.
That timeline raises hard questions. A woman who allegedly attacked a family member with a knife and barricaded herself in a house of worship was back on the street with no apparent barrier between her and the next victim. The next victim turned out to be a 3-year-old boy shopping with his guardian on an ordinary morning.
Across the country, cases keep surfacing in which individuals with documented violent histories cycle through the system and emerge to harm again. In Charlotte, a man accused of fatally stabbing a woman on a light rail train was later found incompetent to stand trial, another instance of the justice system struggling to keep dangerous people away from the public.
Chief Schmaderer issued a statement defending the two officers who fired:
"The responding officers acted with professionalism and direct action to intervene and save a child's life."
He added that the community should take reassurance from the response.
"The community can be reassured in knowing that Omaha police officers stand ready to act with courage and decisiveness in the most serious situations to protect the public."
The Omaha Police Department also extended condolences to Guzman's family, saying in a statement: "The Omaha Police Department offers its sincere condolences to the family and friends of Ms. Guzman during this difficult time." That gesture, even toward a woman police say attacked a child, reflects an institutional discipline worth noting.
The department's Officer-Involved Investigations Team will review the shooting alongside the Nebraska State Patrol and the Douglas and Sarpy County Sheriff's Offices. The names of the two officers who fired have not been released.
Multiple agencies investigating a single officer-involved shooting is standard protocol in Nebraska, and the multi-agency review should provide accountability on both sides of the encounter. But the larger accountability question, how Guzman ended up free to commit this act, sits with a different set of institutions entirely.
Several facts remain unclear. Police have not identified which Walmart location in Omaha was involved. The guardian's name has not been released. The exact terms under which Guzman was freed after her 2024 arrest, whether charges were dropped, reduced, or resolved through a diversion program, have not been publicly detailed.
Nor has any motive been established. Nothing in the police account explains why Guzman walked into a store, stole a knife, and seized a stranger's child. Whether mental illness, substance abuse, or something else drove her actions, the public deserves answers, and the boy's family deserves them most of all.
Violent episodes like this one shake communities. In recent weeks, gunfire near the White House and deadly attacks in public transit systems have reinforced the sense that no setting is automatically safe. When the system fails to contain someone with a proven record of violence, ordinary people, in this case, a toddler, pay the price.
Body-worn camera footage exists. Surveillance footage exists. Police have spoken publicly. The factual record here, at least on the question of what happened in the parking lot, appears strong. The harder question is what happened before, in the courts, in the mental health system, in whatever process returned Guzman to the community after she allegedly attacked her father and barricaded herself in a church.
Violent crime in public spaces, from subway platforms in New York to Walmart parking lots in Omaha, does not happen in a vacuum. It happens in the gap between what the system knows and what the system does about it.
Two officers arrived at a parking lot and found a woman holding a knife over a 3-year-old child. They gave her every verbal chance to stop. She didn't stop. She cut the boy. They fired.
In a culture that has spent years second-guessing police at every turn, this case is clarifying. The officers did exactly what the public expects them to do: they protected a child who could not protect himself. Chief Schmaderer was right to say so plainly.
The boy is alive because those two officers acted. The real failure happened long before they ever drew their weapons.
King Charles III and Queen Camilla will fly to the United States on April 27 for a four-day state visit that includes a private tea with President Donald Trump, a ceremonial welcome at the White House, a state dinner, and an address to Congress, all while the British government quietly hopes the monarch's presence can smooth over a widening rift between Washington and London.
Buckingham Palace unveiled the details on Tuesday. The trip marks the 250th anniversary of American independence from Britain and will take the royal couple from Washington to New York to Virginia before Charles heads on to Bermuda, a British overseas territory where he serves as head of state.
The diplomatic stakes are real. Trump has repeatedly singled out Prime Minister Keir Starmer and the British government for refusing to provide active support for the U.S.-led offensive against Iran, which launched in late February alongside Israel. That friction has turned what might have been a feel-good anniversary tour into something closer to a rescue mission for the U.S.-U.K. relationship, with the monarchy itself drafted as the instrument of repair.
Trump confirmed the visit on Truth Social, as Breitbart reported, calling Charles "a friend of mine" and "a great gentleman."
"I look forward to spending time with the King, whom I greatly respect. It will be TERRIFIC!"
Trump said he had invited Charles as a reciprocal gesture after the King and Queen hosted him in Britain during a 2025 state visit. The White House banquet is scheduled for the evening of April 28.
The warm tone from the president stands in sharp contrast to the mood in certain quarters of the British Parliament. Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey used the House of Commons on Monday to call Trump "a dangerous and corrupt gangster" and demand the visit be called off.
AP News reported Davey's full broadside:
"To send the king on a state visit to the U.S. after Trump dismissed our Royal Navy as toys is a humiliation and a sign of a government too weak to stand up to bullies."
Davey added: "I really fear for what Trump might say or do while our king is forced to stand by his side. We cannot put His Majesty in that position."
The objection tells you more about Britain's left than about the visit itself. Davey's party has no power to cancel anything. And the Starmer government, whatever its private anxieties, is pressing ahead, because it has no better option.
Starmer personally delivered the King's invitation to Trump in Washington back in February 2025, a detail that underscores how deliberately London has cultivated this moment. The prime minister has tried to distance himself from the Iran conflict while avoiding any direct rebuke of the president, a tightrope act that has satisfied almost nobody at home and drawn open scorn from Washington.
Trump has not been subtle. He publicly called Britain's prime minister "not Winston Churchill" and dismissed the Royal Navy's assets as "toys." In a separate Truth Social post, the Washington Examiner reported, Trump wrote: "All of those countries that can't get jet fuel because of the Strait of Hormuz, like the United Kingdom, which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran... build up some delayed courage."
That is the backdrop against which Starmer is now sending the King across the Atlantic. The prime minister framed the monarchy's role in conciliatory terms.
"The monarchy, through the bonds that it builds, is often able to reach through the decades on a situation like this."
A foreign office spokesperson described the U.S.-U.K. relationship as "the closest of friendships." A Buckingham Palace spokesperson struck a more strategic note, saying the visit "recognizes the challenges the United Kingdom, the United States, and our allies face across the world" and is "a moment to reaffirm and renew our bilateral ties as we address those challenges together, in the UK's national interest."
Read plainly, that language concedes the relationship needs reaffirming, which is another way of admitting it has frayed. The British government hopes Charles's personal rapport with Trump can accomplish what Starmer's government has failed to achieve through normal diplomatic channels. That is a remarkable admission of political weakness dressed up as a celebration of soft power.
Trump, for his part, has shown no reluctance to engage. His public statements about Charles have been consistently warm, and the planned itinerary, tea, a state dinner, a formal meeting, suggests the president views the visit as a genuine opportunity, not a chore. The contrast with Trump's recent high-profile confrontations on the domestic front only highlights how differently he treats allies who show respect.
Charles will address a joint session of Congress during the visit, becoming only the second British monarch to do so. Queen Elizabeth II was the first, in 1991. Just The News confirmed the expected address, placing it in the context of rising tensions between Trump and NATO allies over the Iran campaign.
The speech will carry weight. Charles will stand before a Congress that has watched the British government hedge on Iran while asking Washington for continued goodwill on trade, intelligence sharing, and defense. What the King says, and what he avoids saying, will be parsed on both sides of the Atlantic.
But the visit also carries a more uncomfortable complication. Some U.S. lawmakers have said the King should meet with victims of Jeffrey Epstein, the late disgraced financier. Charles's brother, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, faces police scrutiny over his ties to Epstein. First lady Melania Trump gave an address last week denying that she had had any relationship with Epstein.
A palace source said the King would not meet with Epstein's victims because doing so might affect potential criminal proceedings. The reasoning, as the palace framed it, was protective of the survivors themselves.
"Even though the risk may be small that a meeting or any public comments could impact on those inquiries, or the proper course of the law, that is a risk that we simply can't take, for the best interest for the survivors themselves."
The palace also said: "We fully understand and appreciate the survivors' position." Whether that explanation satisfies the lawmakers pressing for a meeting remains an open question. The Epstein issue is unlikely to derail the visit, but it adds an awkward undercurrent to what London wants to present as a clean diplomatic triumph.
After Washington, the royal couple will travel to New York, where they will meet families of people killed in the September 11, 2001, attacks. The gesture ties the visit to the deepest shared bond between the two nations in recent memory, the moment when Britain stood with America without hesitation. It is a pointed reminder, intentional or not, of what unquestioning alliance looks like.
The trip's U.S. leg ends with a visit to Virginia. Charles then continues to Bermuda. The full itinerary, spanning four days on American soil, is the most ambitious royal engagement with the United States in years.
Opinion polls reportedly show Trump is deeply unpopular in Britain, which makes the Starmer government's decision to proceed all the more telling. London is betting that the relationship with Washington matters more than domestic optics, a calculation that would be easier to respect if the same government had shown more spine on the substance of the alliance, rather than outsourcing the hard work to a 77-year-old monarch.
The pattern is familiar in international politics: leaders who refuse to do the difficult thing themselves, whether it's flying to Washington with a wish list or simply picking up the phone, eventually find themselves relying on someone else's credibility to clean up the mess.
Strip away the pageantry, and the King Charles state visit tells a clear story. The Starmer government picked a fight it couldn't win by refusing to back the U.S. on Iran, then watched Trump publicly humiliate its military and its prime minister. Now it is sending the one British institution Trump openly admires, the monarchy, to rebuild what Starmer's own policies have damaged.
Trump has every reason to welcome the visit. A state dinner, a congressional address, and a warm handshake with the King all reinforce America's standing and Trump's personal stature on the world stage. The president is not the one who needs rescuing here.
The broader context matters, too. At a time when the administration is engaged in major legal and policy confrontations at home, the willingness of foreign leaders to come to Washington on respectful terms signals that Trump's approach to alliances, demanding reciprocity, not just rhetoric, is producing results.
Charles, to his credit, appears willing to play the role. His planned meeting with 9/11 families in New York shows a seriousness of purpose that goes beyond ceremony. And his address to Congress will be a moment watched far beyond Capitol Hill.
Whether the visit actually repairs the U.S.-U.K. relationship depends on what comes after the banquet plates are cleared. If Starmer's government continues to hedge on the hard questions, Iran, defense spending, alliance commitments, no amount of royal charm will bridge the gap. Allies who show up only for the photo opportunities tend to find themselves at the back of the line when the real decisions get made.
The Crown can open a door. But as recent clashes over federal authority have shown on this side of the Atlantic, good intentions without follow-through buy very little in Washington.
Sending a king to do a prime minister's job is a confession, not a strategy.
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down a Reconstruction-era federal law that banned Americans from distilling spirits in their own homes, ruling that Congress exceeded its taxing authority when it criminalized the practice in 1868. The decision, handed down Friday, affirms a lower court ruling and marks a significant win for individual liberty and limited government.
The case was brought by the Hobby Distillers Association and several of its members, including Rick Morris, a man who manufactures stills for legally approved distilling operations. Morris wanted to distill bourbon whiskey at home for his brother and friends. When he discovered that doing so could land him in federal prison, he founded the association and took the fight to court, UPI reported.
The law in question dates to July 1868, when Congress imposed excise taxes on distilled spirits and tobacco. Alongside the tax came a flat prohibition: no one could produce spirits at home, period. Violators faced penalties of up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. The government's rationale was simple, a home distiller could more easily hide the strength of a spirit or conceal an entire operation from tax collectors.
For 158 years, that reasoning held. It doesn't anymore.
The Fifth Circuit's opinion drew a sharp line between Congress's power to tax and its power to prohibit. The federal government argued the ban was necessary to prevent tax evasion. The court disagreed, writing:
"Congress's taxing power 'reaches only existing subjects,' not activity that may generate subjects of taxation."
In other words, Congress can tax distilled spirits. But it cannot use the threat of taxation as a pretext to ban an activity outright, especially one conducted privately, in a citizen's own home. The court went further, warning that the government's theory had no limiting principle.
Circuit Judge Edith Hollan Jones, writing for the panel, put it bluntly. The New York Post reported her opinion stated:
"Without any limiting principle, the government's theory would violate this court's obligation to read the Constitution carefully to avoid creating a general federal authority akin to the police power."
The court also found the ban failed the "necessary and proper" test, the constitutional standard for whether a law is a legitimate exercise of an enumerated power. Banning an entire category of private activity to make tax collection easier, the court held, goes well beyond what that clause permits.
The ruling upheld a July 2024 decision by U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman, who first found the ban unconstitutional. The government appealed. It lost again.
The decision fits into a broader judicial trend of courts scrutinizing the outer boundaries of federal power. In recent months, appellate courts have shown increasing willingness to push back when the government stretches constitutional authority past its plain meaning, whether the issue involves legislative overreach in state redistricting or longstanding criminal statutes that rest on shaky constitutional footing.
Attorney Andrew Grossman, who represented the Hobby Distillers Association, called the ruling "an important victory for individual liberty" that lets the plaintiffs "pursue their passion to distill fine beverages in their homes." Grossman is also involved in a separate case in Ohio, where a man named John Ream is challenging the same federal ban through the Sixth Circuit after a district court dismissed his suit on standing grounds. The Washington Examiner reported that the Buckeye Institute argues Ream should be allowed to contest the law's constitutionality without first risking criminal prosecution.
That parallel case underscores just how broadly the old ban reached, and how many Americans it affected. Home brewing of beer and wine has been legal at the federal level since 1978. Home distilling never got the same treatment.
The Hobby Distillers Association said the ruling was a major victory and a turning point for hobby distillers nationwide. The organization noted that under the decision, people can obtain permits from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, follow federal regulations, and pay applicable taxes, the same framework that already governs commercial distilling operations.
The ruling does not automatically legalize home distilling across the country. The Washington Times noted that state laws still apply, and many states maintain their own restrictions on home production of spirits. The federal government may also appeal the decision, potentially setting up a showdown at the Supreme Court.
Before the ruling, the U.S. Department of Treasury stated on its website that producing spirits at any location not qualified and licensed by the bureau was illegal. That position now stands in direct conflict with a federal appellate court's finding. How the Treasury Department responds, whether it updates its guidance, seeks further review, or simply digs in, remains an open question.
The broader legal landscape is shifting, too. The Supreme Court has shown a growing appetite for re-examining the scope of federal authority, from administrative law to criminal statutes. The recent vacating of Steve Bannon's contempt conviction is just one example of the judiciary revisiting cases where the government's legal footing looked less solid on closer inspection.
And in the Minnesota protest-rules case, another federal appeals court weighed the boundaries of government power against individual rights. The direction of travel is clear: courts are asking harder questions about what Washington can and cannot do.
The 1868 law was a product of its time. The federal government, desperate for revenue after the Civil War, cast a wide net over anything that could generate tax dollars. Distilled spirits were a prime target. The prohibition on home distilling was aimed at preventing people from skirting tax collectors, a reasonable concern in an era of limited enforcement capacity.
But the Constitution doesn't grant Congress a blank check to ban private activity simply because that activity might, in theory, make tax collection harder. That was the Fifth Circuit's core finding. The government's argument, taken to its logical end, would have allowed Congress to criminalize any private conduct that could conceivably touch a taxable good. Bake bread at home? That's flour that wasn't commercially sold and taxed. Grow tomatoes in your garden? Same logic.
The court refused to go there. And it was right to refuse.
Rick Morris just wanted to make bourbon for his brother. The federal government told him that doing so, in his own home, with his own equipment, for personal consumption, was a crime punishable by five years in prison. He fought back, built an organization, and won. Twice.
The case now sits as binding precedent in the Fifth Circuit, covering Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Whether it spreads further depends on the government's next move and whether other circuits follow suit. The Sixth Circuit case involving John Ream could provide an early signal.
For now, the 158-year-old ban is dead in three states. The principle behind the ruling, that the taxing power is not a general police power, is alive everywhere.
When the federal government can't even articulate a limiting principle for its own authority, it shouldn't be surprised when a court draws the line for it.
Atlanta police arrested a 14-year-old boy on a murder charge Sunday, one day after a 12-year-old was fatally shot inside a southeast Atlanta home where the two boys had been playing with guns in a bedroom. The victim was rushed to a hospital in critical condition Saturday afternoon but did not survive.
Homicide detectives obtained an arrest warrant Sunday for the juvenile suspect, who was taken into custody without incident and transported to the Metro Youth Detention Center, Fox News Digital reported. Police have not released the names of either boy.
Officers were dispatched to the residence around 1:49 p.m. ET Saturday after a report of a person shot. When they arrived, they found the 12-year-old suffering from a gunshot wound. Despite what police described as life-saving efforts, the boy died. Detectives began questioning the juvenile suspect and the adults who were inside the home at the time of the shooting.
Police told local WSB-TV 2 that the boys were playing with guns in a bedroom when the 12-year-old was shot. Authorities have not said publicly what led to the gunfire, and the investigation remains active and ongoing. Atlanta police cautioned that the information released so far is preliminary and could change.
The shooting did not happen in a vacuum. One neighbor, who asked not to be identified, told WSB-TV 2 that he had already called police after watching young boys engage in shootouts near his home earlier in the week.
"Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, around the same time, kids would come by my house, duck behind the church and just shoot. I was concerned for my safety."
That account paints a picture of a neighborhood where children had access to firearms and were firing them openly, days before one of those children ended up dead inside a home. Whether any of those earlier incidents involved the same boys or the same weapons remains unclear from the information police have released.
Longtime neighbor Michael Dennis told Fox 5 Atlanta that the area is ordinarily quiet. But his plea afterward spoke to the weight of what happened.
"This neighborhood is pretty peaceful most of the time. Every now and then we may hear something. I encourage [family: Stick together], love one another, hug one another. This is a space in life where everybody needs to just come together."
APD Capt. Germain Dearlove, speaking to Fox 5 Atlanta, directed his remarks squarely at the adults in the equation. His message was blunt: lock up your guns and supervise your children.
"For parents and guardians, check your home, make sure these weapons are secured. If they have friends over, don't let them close that door, check on them, do periodic updates."
Dearlove added that police need cooperation from homeowners and that the department's paramount concern is public safety for juveniles. He said detectives intend to build a complete picture of what happened.
"We're going to get the full story, and then we will make our full report on it."
Several basic questions remain unanswered. Police have not said how many firearms were recovered from the home, who owned them, or whether any adults face potential charges. The specific charge or charges listed in the arrest warrant beyond "murder" have not been disclosed, nor has the court that issued it.
The Atlanta case lands amid a broader national reckoning with violent incidents involving minors. In one recent Pennsylvania case, an 11-year-old was charged as an adult in the shooting death of his adoptive father, a reminder that the justice system is grappling with children accused of homicide at younger and younger ages.
The 14-year-old suspect in Atlanta now sits in a juvenile detention center. Georgia law allows prosecutors to seek transfer of certain juvenile cases to adult court depending on the charge and circumstances, though nothing in the public record so far indicates whether that path will be pursued here.
Across the country, similar cases have forced communities to confront hard questions about supervision, accountability, and consequences. A child in Los Angeles was arrested on a murder charge after a classmate died from injuries sustained at school, another case where the accused was barely old enough for middle school.
The common thread is not complicated. Children are committing acts of lethal violence, and the systems meant to prevent it, families, schools, law enforcement, courts, are failing to intervene before someone dies.
In Washington, D.C., officials have wrestled with the problem from a policy angle. The D.C. mayor pushed for a permanent youth curfew as youth crime surged, an acknowledgment that something structural has broken down in how cities protect both the public and the young people themselves.
Nationally, the toll from gun violence continues to climb. A separate AP/USA Today/Northeastern University database tracking identified dozens of mass killings in the United States in recent years, including cases where teenagers were taken into custody after multiple victims were found dead inside homes. The pattern is not slowing.
Captain Dearlove's appeal to parents and guardians carries a particular edge in this case. Adults were inside the southeast Atlanta home when the shooting occurred. Police said detectives were questioning them. Yet somehow, two boys ended up alone in a bedroom with at least one loaded firearm.
The question of adult responsibility looms over this investigation. When a 12-year-old is killed by a 14-year-old with a gun inside a home where grown-ups are present, the failure is not abstract. It is specific, immediate, and fatal.
Georgia, like many states, has laws addressing the negligent storage of firearms where minors can access them. Whether those statutes come into play here will depend on what detectives find as the investigation develops. The fact that a neighbor reported children firing guns openly in the area earlier the same week only sharpens the question of what the adults in this community knew, and what they did about it.
Holding the justice system accountable for how it handles cases involving child victims is a recurring challenge. In Florida, Governor DeSantis signed legislation and demanded judicial accountability after a child was killed following a judge's decision to release a convicted offender, a case that underscored how institutional failures can have irreversible consequences for the most vulnerable.
In Atlanta, the investigation is still in its early stages. Police have been careful to label everything released so far as preliminary. But the core facts are not in dispute: a 12-year-old boy is dead, a 14-year-old boy is in custody on a murder charge, and guns were in the hands of children inside a home where adults were present.
The arrest warrant is only the beginning of what promises to be a difficult legal process. Juvenile cases in Georgia carry their own procedural complexities, and the public may never learn the full details if the case remains in juvenile court.
For the neighborhood, the damage is already done. A child is dead. Another child's life is effectively over in any recognizable form. And the adults who were supposed to prevent exactly this outcome will have to answer for what happened on their watch, if not in a courtroom, then at least to their own consciences.
No policy paper or press conference brings a 12-year-old back. But the simplest intervention, a locked cabinet, a closed door checked by an adult, a phone call to police acted on before Saturday, might have.
The Supreme Court on Thursday shut down a former Democratic candidate's bid to force his way onto Ohio's Republican congressional primary ballot, ending a months-long dispute that state officials called a brazen scheme to infiltrate the GOP from within.
The Court denied an emergency application for injunction filed by Sam Ronan, a self-described progressive with a long Democratic pedigree who signed a declaration claiming Republican Party membership in order to appear on the May 5 primary ballot. Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose had removed Ronan from the ballot in March, and two lower courts declined to reverse that decision.
The one-line order, reported by Newsweek, was direct: "The application for injunction pending appeal presented to Justice Kavanaugh and by him referred to the Court is denied." With that, the lower court's ruling stands, and Ohio officials may keep Ronan off the Republican primary ballot as the May 5 election approaches.
The facts of the case read less like a garden-variety ballot-access dispute and more like a political sabotage operation caught in broad daylight. Attorneys representing LaRose, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, Solicitor General Mathura J. Sridharan, and Deputy Solicitor General Layne H. Tieszen, laid out a damning paper trail in their filings to the Court.
They alleged Ronan had "spent over a decade on a mission" to get Democrats to "primary Republicans in deep red districts, as Republicans." And the evidence did not stop with Ronan himself. His own campaign manager, Ana Cordero, they said, "confirmed that even in the upcoming Midterm Elections, their intent was to 'torpedo the republican party from within.'"
That is not a characterization from political opponents. Those are words attributed directly to the people running the campaign.
Just the News reported that court documents filed in U.S. District Court showed Ronan publicly admitted his candidacy was part of a Democratic strategy to run members of his party against Republicans in GOP-leaning districts. Ronan had previously run as a Democratic state and national candidate before attempting to challenge Republican Rep. Mark Carey in Ohio's 15th Congressional District GOP primary.
The timeline tells the story of a state election apparatus that caught the problem and acted. On February 17, the Franklin County Board of Elections certified Ronan to Ohio's Republican primary ballot. By March 19, LaRose had removed him, citing Ohio's good-faith candidacy-declaration requirement.
LaRose's attorneys argued Ronan was removed for "lying on his candidacy form about his membership in the Republican Party and willingness to abide by the Party's principles." In filings described by the Washington Times, LaRose wrote that "Mr. Ronan's public statements, and those of individuals associated with him and his candidacy, make clear that Mr. Ronan is seeking the Republican nomination as part of his longstanding strategy to have Democrats run as Republicans in Republican primaries."
LaRose did not mince words about the endgame: "The goal of his scheme is to get voters to vote for Democrats, believing they are voting for Republicans."
The Supreme Court's recent term has seen a range of consequential rulings, including its decision to vacate the Steve Bannon contempt conviction, reflecting the Court's continued willingness to weigh in on politically charged cases.
Ronan did not go quietly after LaRose pulled him from the ballot. The day after the March 19 removal, a district court issued a temporary restraining order that briefly restored him. But that reprieve was short-lived. In April, the same district court entered an order denying further preliminary injunctive relief.
That meant Ronan had already been refused an injunction twice in lower courts before asking the Supreme Court to intervene. LaRose's attorneys drove that point home in their filing:
"Ronan asks this Court to circumvent any standards at all, much less the very high one for injunctions pending appeal, and to enter an interim injunction, fashioned as an administrative stay. Having been refused an injunction twice below, Ronan cannot ask for a stay to obtain what he wants, placement on the ballot. This Court should reject both overreaching requests."
Chief U.S. District Judge Sarah D. Morrison, who handled the case at the district level, wrote in her ruling that the First Amendment argument Ronan raised did not save him: "It cannot be the case that a State must allow a candidate on a partisan ballot even if he lied about his party affiliation simply because the First Amendment is implicated."
That is a line worth reading twice. A federal judge stated plainly that the Constitution does not give someone a right to lie their way onto a party's ballot.
Ronan's legal team, attorneys Mark R. Brown and Oliver Hall, tried to frame the case as one of political evolution, not deception. They called the matter "urgent" as the May 5 primary neared and argued Ronan had been honest about his background.
"Here, Ronan did not act in bad faith. He was honest. He made plain that though he was once a Democrat he is now seeking to transport across the aisle ideas that were not embraced by the Democratic Party. Ronan's campaign is a good faith attempt to win over Republican voters by advocating his values, values he believes Democrats have forsaken. That is not a 'strategic candidacy' or some kind of trick. It is not unlawful. It is not wrong."
They went further, arguing that party-switching is a time-honored American tradition:
"The historical record is replete with elected officials, candidates and voters changing political parties from one election to the next. The one constant in American politics is change. People evolve politically just like parties. America's political system fortunately facilitates these changes. Neither voters nor candidates historically have been forcibly fixed into their political positions."
The argument has a surface appeal. People do change parties. Ronald Reagan was once a Democrat. But the state's case was not about a genuine convert. It was about a candidate whose own team described the strategy as torpedoing the Republican Party from within, and who signed a legal declaration affirming Republican membership that state officials concluded was false.
The Court has faced no shortage of high-profile emergency requests in recent terms, as Justice Sotomayor herself has noted in complaints about the pace of emergency appeals. But in this case, the full Court moved quickly and without dissent to deny Ronan's bid.
The practical effect is straightforward: Ronan stays off the Republican primary ballot, and Ohio voters in the 15th Congressional District will not have to sort out whether a candidate who publicly strategized about infiltrating their party is genuinely one of them.
The broader principle matters more. States enforce good-faith candidacy declarations precisely to prevent this kind of manipulation. If a candidate can sign a sworn statement claiming party membership, get caught publicly plotting to subvert that party, and still demand ballot access under the First Amendment, then the declaration requirement is meaningless.
The New York Post reported that lower courts and Ohio officials concluded Ronan fraudulently misrepresented his party affiliation and that the First Amendment did not protect that conduct. The Supreme Court's refusal to disturb those findings sends a clear signal: states have a legitimate interest in policing the integrity of their primary elections.
The case also raises questions about how often similar schemes go undetected. Ronan's plan was exposed in part because he and his campaign manager said the quiet part out loud. Not every infiltration attempt comes with a public confession.
The Court continues to shape the legal landscape around elections and executive authority, with major cases still pending on issues from asylum protections at the border to other contested questions of federal power. This Ohio ruling may not generate the same headlines, but it reinforces a principle that should be uncontroversial: you don't get to lie your way onto a ballot.
Several open questions remain. The specific congressional district, Ohio's 15th, where Republican Rep. Mark Carey holds the seat, will now proceed to its May 5 primary without Ronan on the ballot. Whether Ronan pursues further legal action or attempts to run under a different banner is unclear. The full scope of whatever network was behind the "primary Republicans in deep red districts, as Republicans" strategy remains unexplored in the public record.
But the outcome here is the right one. Ohio officials identified a candidate who, by the state's account, lied about his party affiliation to gain access to a primary election. Two lower courts agreed. The Supreme Court declined to override them. The system worked.
When someone tells you they plan to torpedo your party from within, believe them, and keep them off the ballot.
The Department of Homeland Security on Friday ordered every furloughed employee back to work, ending a staffing standoff that left the nation's largest security agency short-handed for nearly two months while Congress failed to pass a funding bill. The recall notice told all sidelined workers to report on their next regularly scheduled workday, Monday for most, and pointed to a White House emergency order covering their lost pay.
The move came after President Trump signed an April 3 memo authorizing the equivalent compensation and benefits that DHS employees lost during the partial government shutdown. A Trump administration official separately confirmed the directive and said it orders that every DHS worker be paid, the New York Post reported.
DHS employs roughly 270,000 people. That workforce spans border agents, airport screeners, immigration officers, cybersecurity analysts, and disaster-response teams. Leaving any meaningful share of them idle, or working without pay, while illegal border crossings and homeland threats persist is the kind of governing failure that falls hardest on the public, not on the politicians who caused it.
A DHS spokesperson told the Federal News Network that DHS chief Markwayne Mullin "will be utilizing available funding to recall the entire DHS workforce" and that "paychecks are now being processed." The statement placed blame for the partial shutdown squarely on Democrats in Congress, though the spokesperson did not name specific lawmakers.
Trump himself framed the action as relief for families caught in the crossfire. AP News reported that the president said of DHS employees:
"Their families have suffered far too long."
The president had already used a similar executive maneuver earlier in the shutdown to restore pay for TSA employees after staffing shortages triggered airport delays. That precedent made Friday's broader recall a logical next step, and an implicit rebuke of Congress for letting the impasse drag on.
Lawmakers have yet to agree on a fiscal 2026 funding measure for DHS. The partial shutdown, now approaching the two-month mark, has persisted because neither chamber could reconcile competing priorities over immigration enforcement spending.
Republican leaders and Trump aligned around a two-step plan: fully fund most of DHS first, then address Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol funding through separate legislation. Trump signaled confidence in the approach on social media, writing that "Republicans are UNIFIED, and moving forward on a plan that will reload funding for our FANTASTIC Border Patrol and Immigration Enforcement Officers." The strategy reflects a political reality, Democrats have resisted funding Trump's immigration crackdown, especially the expanded use of ICE agents.
That resistance has real consequences. While House Republicans have blocked Democratic attempts to curtail executive authority on multiple fronts, the DHS funding fight shows how the same obstructionist impulse can leave federal workers in limbo and border security understaffed.
For nearly two months, thousands of DHS employees either worked without pay or sat at home on furlough. These are not abstract budget-line items. They are customs officers, intelligence analysts, and Coast Guard personnel whose missed paychecks meant late rent, skipped bills, and mounting stress, all because elected officials could not do the most basic part of their job.
Trump has defended his broader approach to DHS by arguing that his actions aim to improve domestic security and curb illegal immigration. Critics, mainly Democrats and some rights groups, have pushed back, particularly on the administration's use of ICE in enforcement operations. Federal agents fatally shot two U.S. citizens earlier this year in Minnesota, an episode that drew scrutiny and fueled the political debate around immigration enforcement tactics.
But the shutdown itself was never about whether ICE should exist. It was about whether Congress would fund the department responsible for protecting the homeland. On that question, the legislative branch failed, and the executive branch stepped in.
The president has shown a willingness to act unilaterally when he believes the situation demands it. That pattern extends well beyond domestic policy. Trump recently suspended military operations and offered a ceasefire in the Iran conflict, demonstrating the same preference for decisive executive action over prolonged institutional stalemate.
The recall gets bodies back to their desks and paychecks into bank accounts. It does not, however, resolve the underlying funding dispute. Congress still has not passed a fiscal 2026 DHS appropriation. The two-step Republican plan remains a work in progress, and Democrats show little sign of dropping their objections to robust immigration enforcement funding.
Open questions remain. What "available funding" DHS is tapping to pay 270,000 recalled workers is unclear. Whether that funding can sustain full operations for weeks or months without a congressional appropriation is equally uncertain. And the political dynamics that produced a two-month partial shutdown have not changed just because the president signed an emergency order.
Trump's willingness to confront institutional resistance head-on has drawn both praise and criticism throughout his presidency. His blunt assessments of foreign adversaries and his domestic policy moves share a common thread: impatience with delay and a belief that executive authority exists to be used.
In this case, that impatience served the 270,000 men and women who keep the country's borders, airports, and coastlines secure. They did not create the funding impasse. They should not have been the ones paying for it.
Democrats who blocked DHS funding to protest immigration enforcement made a political choice. The people who bore the cost of that choice were not politicians. They were federal employees and the communities that depend on them, the same people Washington always claims to champion and always leaves holding the bill.
When Congress won't govern, someone has to. This time, the president did.
