A federal judge in North Carolina on Friday set a July 15 trial date for former FBI Director James Comey, who faces two criminal charges stemming from a social media post that prosecutors say amounted to a threat against President Trump. The case, which centers on a photo of seashells arranged to read "86 47," is now on a fast track toward a courtroom showdown less than ten weeks away.
U.S. District Judge Louise Flanagan, a George W. Bush appointee who serves on the federal bench in New Bern, N.C., issued a scheduling order that also set a June 5 deadline for pretrial motions and pushed Comey's arraignment to June 30, roughly two weeks before the trial is set to begin. The Hill reported that Flanagan agreed to postpone a Monday arraignment after Comey's attorneys noted he had already made an initial appearance in Virginia shortly after the charges were filed.
The compressed timeline leaves Comey's defense team little room to maneuver. His attorneys have signaled they will seek to toss the indictment, arguing the prosecution is selective and vindictive. Whether Flanagan entertains that motion, and how quickly she rules, will shape whether the case actually goes to a jury in mid-July.
The charges trace back to a deleted Instagram post from May 2025. Comey shared a photo of seashells on a beach arranged to display the message "86 47." Prosecutors allege the image was a coded threat against Trump, the 47th president, citing the slang use of "86" to mean eliminate or get rid of someone. Newsmax reported that the indictment was handed down by a North Carolina grand jury on two charges tied to the post.
Comey took the post down and offered an explanation at the time. As the Washington Examiner reported, Comey wrote afterward:
"I posted earlier a picture of some shells I saw today on a beach walk, which I assumed were a political message. I didn't realize some folks associate those numbers with violence. It never occurred to me but I oppose violence of any kind so I took the post down."
That explanation has done little to satisfy prosecutors, or the many Americans who found the post alarming. The phrase "86 47" circulated widely among Trump critics, and the government's position is that a former FBI director knew exactly what the numbers meant.
Comey, who was fired by Trump as FBI director in 2017, has called the renewed prosecution a campaign of retribution. He denies wrongdoing and is expected to formally enter a not guilty plea at the June 30 arraignment.
This is not the first time Comey has faced criminal charges in connection with the post. Previous charges were dismissed, though the details of that earlier proceeding were not spelled out in the court's scheduling order. The current indictment represents a fresh prosecution, one that the government apparently believes is on stronger footing.
The procedural path forward is tight. Flanagan's order requires Comey's legal team to file all pretrial motions by June 5. Just The News noted that the judge may schedule additional hearings to decide those motions before the trial begins. That means the court could be weighing dismissal arguments, evidentiary disputes, and other legal challenges within a window of just a few weeks.
Comey lives in Virginia but will have to appear in Flanagan's North Carolina courtroom for the June 30 arraignment. Both sides supported the postponement of the originally scheduled Monday appearance, a small procedural courtesy that belies the intensity of what lies ahead.
The broader legal landscape around Trump, both cases brought against him and those brought on his behalf, continues to produce significant courtroom developments. A federal appeals court recently denied a bid to reopen the E. Jean Carroll defamation verdict, while other federal judges have weighed in on matters ranging from prediction markets to administrative authority.
Comey's attorneys have previewed a defense built around the argument that the prosecution is both selective and vindictive. That is a high legal bar. To prevail on a selective-prosecution claim, the defense would typically need to show that Comey was singled out for prosecution based on impermissible criteria, and that similarly situated individuals were not charged.
A vindictive-prosecution argument would require evidence that the government brought the case to punish Comey for exercising a legal right. Given Comey's long and public history of conflict with Trump, from the 2016 Clinton email investigation through his firing and subsequent testimony, the defense will likely argue the case is inseparable from political grievance.
Whether that argument gains traction with Flanagan remains an open question. The judge has not yet tipped her hand on the merits, and her scheduling order suggests she intends to keep the case moving briskly. The broader question of FBI conduct during the Trump era has generated years of scrutiny, and this trial will inevitably draw that history into the courtroom, even if the formal charges are narrow.
Several questions hang over the case. The specific statutes underlying the two criminal charges have not been publicly detailed in the available reporting. The exact date of the original Instagram post, the case docket number, and the precise circumstances under which the earlier charges were dismissed all remain unclear.
It is also unknown whether the government plans to introduce additional evidence beyond the social media post itself, communications, context, or testimony about Comey's intent. The defense's ability to challenge the prosecution may hinge on what discovery reveals in the weeks ahead.
Flanagan's earlier decision to cancel a prior hearing contingent on a waiver filing showed she is willing to accommodate procedural requests, but not without conditions. That pattern may continue as both sides jockey for position before the July 15 date.
For years, James Comey operated at the highest levels of federal law enforcement with minimal personal legal consequence, even as his decisions reshaped presidential politics. He investigated a sitting president's political rival, was fired, leaked memos to trigger a special counsel, and became one of the most polarizing figures in modern Washington.
Now he sits on the other side of the process. A grand jury indicted him. A judge set a trial date. His attorneys will file motions. And in a North Carolina courtroom this summer, a jury will weigh the evidence.
That is how the system is supposed to work, for everyone, including former FBI directors who spent years insisting they were above the fray.
Police arrested rapper Kodak Black on a felony drug trafficking charge Wednesday in central Florida, the latest in a string of legal troubles for the 28-year-old artist whose real name is Bill Kapri. The charge, trafficking between 14 and 200 grams of MDMA, stems not from a fresh incident but from a probe that began in November 2025, when officers responded to reports of gunfire near a children's facility.
Kapri was booked into the Orange County Jail and pleaded not guilty, requesting a jury trial. A judge set bond at $75,000. He was scheduled to appear before a judge May 7.
The arrest warrant, prepared by an Orlando police officer, lays out a scene that reads less like a celebrity encounter and more like a routine narcotics stop, except for the Lamborghini.
The November 2025 incident that triggered the investigation began with calls about gunfire close to Children's Safety Village on Fairvilla Road. When officers arrived, they found several people gathered around a BMW SUV and a Lamborghini SUV.
Officers said they smelled burnt cannabis that appeared to come from the BMW. A search of the vehicle turned up cannabis and a pink pill later identified as MDMA. Inside the vehicle, police also found a pink bag. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement later determined the bag held 25 grams of MDMA, along with approximately $37,000 in cash and documents bearing Kapri's name.
Cops also recovered firearms inside the vehicle, though the warrant details reported by the Daily Caller do not specify how many weapons were seized or from which vehicle. A bag and lighter were also among the items found.
The warrant said Kodak Black approached officers while they conducted the search. He and the others at the scene denied the pink bag belonged to them. But when informed that cash was inside the bag, the rapper made several requests for officers to hand him the money, claiming it belonged to his business.
That contradiction, denying the bag, then claiming the cash, sits at the center of the prosecution's case. Investigators went further, comparing the bag, lighter, and other items found on scene with images posted to Kodak Black's Instagram accounts. The warrant claimed the items matched.
This is not Kodak Black's first arrest involving drugs, cash, and a vehicle search. In a separate earlier incident reported by Fox News, Florida Highway Patrol troopers stopped his purple SUV in Fort Lauderdale because the window tint appeared darker than the legal limit. Troopers reported smelling marijuana and, after searching the vehicle, found a small clear bag containing 31 oxycodone tablets and nearly $75,000 in cash. That stop also led to drug possession and trafficking charges.
The Fort Lauderdale arrest followed the same basic script: a traffic or disturbance-related encounter, the smell of marijuana, a vehicle search, and drugs found alongside large amounts of cash. For law enforcement, that pattern is textbook probable cause. For defense attorneys, it is a pattern ripe for challenge.
The broader trend of aggressive criminal charging by prosecutors across the country has drawn scrutiny from both sides of the aisle, but felony drug trafficking remains one area where most Americans expect the justice system to act decisively.
Bradford Cohen, Kodak Black's lawyer, told TMZ the arrest was a coordinated surrender, not a dramatic takedown. He asserted the trafficking charge will be challenged and said he believes the case rests on a "weak legal basis."
"We look forward to yet another fruitful resolution to another case that should have never been filed."
Cohen has represented the rapper through prior legal scrapes and has a track record of public confidence before trial. After the earlier Fort Lauderdale arrest, Cohen struck a similar tone.
"Never Judge a case based on an arrest. There are always additional facts and circumstances that give rise to a defense, especially in this case."
Whether that confidence is warranted here remains to be seen. The warrant details, MDMA confirmed by a state crime lab, cash and personal documents in the same bag, and the rapper's own alleged statements at the scene, give prosecutors a concrete evidentiary trail. Cohen's task will be to break the chain linking Kapri to the bag, the drugs, and the money.
Kapri's written not-guilty plea and jury trial request signal that the defense intends to fight the charge rather than negotiate quietly. That decision carries risk. A trafficking conviction in Florida for 14 to 200 grams of MDMA carries mandatory minimum prison time under state law.
Several details remain unclear. The warrant does not specify how many firearms were recovered or from which vehicle they came. The exact location of the incident beyond "central Florida" and "close to Children's Safety Village on Fairvilla Road" has not been fully identified in public reporting. The specific statute citation and case number have not been disclosed in available accounts.
It is also unclear which court is handling the May 7 appearance, or whether additional individuals present at the November scene face charges of their own. The gap between the November 2025 encounter and the May 2026 arrest, roughly six months, suggests investigators took time to build the case, possibly waiting on lab results from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement before seeking the warrant.
High-profile arrests in Florida have drawn national attention in recent months, from security confrontations to violent crime. This case adds another layer: a celebrity defendant, a felony drug charge, and a defense team already signaling a fight.
The facts of the case also raise a straightforward question about accountability. When officers respond to reports of gunfire near a facility designed to teach children about safety, and they find suspected narcotics, tens of thousands of dollars in cash, and firearms, someone needs to answer for it.
Florida's criminal justice system has dealt with serious criminal cases at a steady clip, and the state's prosecutors have shown little appetite for leniency on trafficking charges. Kodak Black's fame may generate headlines, but it will not rewrite the mandatory sentencing guidelines.
Kodak Black is not the first rapper to face felony drug charges, and he will not be the last. The entertainment industry has long treated run-ins with the law as part of an artist's brand, arrest records packaged as authenticity, mugshots recycled as album art.
But a felony trafficking charge is not a branding exercise. It carries years in prison. It involves a controlled substance found near a children's facility. And it follows a prior arrest on strikingly similar facts.
Investigators in criminal cases across the country have shown a willingness to pursue charges methodically, and the six-month timeline between the November encounter and the May arrest suggests Orlando police did exactly that. Cohen may call the case weak. The warrant tells a different story.
Kapri now faces a jury, a judge, and Florida's trafficking statutes. His lawyer promises another "fruitful resolution." Prosecutors have 25 grams of MDMA, $37,000 in cash, and a defendant who allegedly asked for the money back.
The justice system doesn't owe anyone a pass because they can sell records. It owes the public an honest accounting, especially when the drugs turn up near a place built for kids.
A veteran NYPD captain who spent nearly two decades on the force was stripped of his precinct command and shipped to a Bronx call center after a viral video caught him criticizing Mayor Zohran Mamdani during an anti-ICE protest outside a Brooklyn hospital.
Capt. James G. Wilson, 51, had served as the second-highest-ranking officer at the 94th Precinct station house covering Greenpoint. He was among the officers deployed to handle a late May 2 demonstration outside Wyckoff Heights Medical Center in Bushwick, where protesters clashed with police over allegations that the NYPD was illegally helping immigration agents at the facility. Nine protesters were arrested after the standoff.
What got Wilson removed was not the arrests. It was what he said on camera. The New York Post reported that Wilson was captured on video, later posted to Instagram by the activist group Until Freedom, calling Mamdani "an embarrassment and total nonsense," describing him as "expendable" and "temporary," and declaring flatly: "Not my mayor." He also used the phrase "waste of human race," according to the Post's account of the footage.
Officials transferred Wilson from his Greenpoint command to the NYPD's 911 call center in the Bronx. An NYPD spokesperson confirmed Wilson "remains on active duty after his transfer to the Bronx" and added that "the captain's disciplinary process remains ongoing."
Wilson joined the NYPD in July 2006. He is nearing the 20-year mark, a threshold that typically unlocks full pension eligibility. He had only recently transferred to the 94th Precinct in April before the incident cost him that assignment weeks later.
The potential discipline centers on what officials described as a prohibition on officers expressing political views while on duty. Wilson, in uniform and apparently on the scene in an official capacity, made remarks that were plainly political, directed at the city's sitting mayor and, by extension, at the Democratic leadership that protesters were aligned with.
When the Post called Wilson for comment, he hung up.
The speed of the transfer raises an obvious question: does the NYPD punish officers this quickly for other on-duty conduct, or only when the conduct embarrasses City Hall? Mamdani has made his opposition to federal immigration enforcement a signature issue, signing executive orders that require judicial warrants before ICE can access city properties. An NYPD captain publicly mocking the mayor at an anti-ICE protest cuts directly against that political brand.
The demonstration outside Wyckoff Heights Medical Center erupted after immigration agents reportedly brought an illegal Nigerian migrant to the hospital for medical attention. Anti-ICE protesters gathered and accused the NYPD of illegally assisting the federal agents on-site. Mamdani denied that assertion, though the Post did not publish the mayor's exact statement.
Nine arrests followed the standoff. The protest was the kind of scene that has become routine in New York under Mamdani's administration, a volatile confrontation between federal enforcement priorities and a city government that has positioned itself as a sanctuary jurisdiction.
Wilson's recorded comments suggest a police captain who had seen enough. His words, "He's expendable, he's temporary" and "Not my mayor", were blunt and personal, the kind of thing officers might say privately but rarely on camera. Whether those remarks deserved a precinct transfer or a conversation with a supervisor is the sort of proportionality question the NYPD's disciplinary process is supposed to answer.
The mayor's office, meanwhile, has been under pressure from multiple directions. Mamdani scrapped 5,000 planned NYPD hires in his proposed $127 billion budget while pushing tax increases, a combination that has not endeared him to rank-and-file officers already stretched thin.
Police officers do not forfeit their First Amendment rights when they put on a badge. But courts have long recognized that departments can restrict political speech while officers are on duty and in uniform, on the theory that the public needs to trust that cops enforce the law impartially regardless of who holds office.
That principle is real. So is the selective-enforcement risk. If the NYPD disciplines Wilson for calling Mamdani "an embarrassment" on camera, the department sets a standard it will have to apply evenly, including to officers who praise the mayor or echo his policy positions while on duty.
Wilson's situation also sits inside a broader pattern of friction between Mamdani and the police force he oversees. The mayor has pursued an agenda that many officers view as hostile to their mission, from sanctuary policies to budget cuts. His controversial tax proposals have drawn criticism well beyond police ranks, fueling talk that New York's remaining taxpayers may simply leave.
None of that excuses an on-duty officer making political speeches at a protest scene. But it does explain why the video resonated, and why the NYPD's response felt, to many observers, less like neutral enforcement of a speech policy and more like a loyalty test.
The NYPD spokesperson said Wilson's disciplinary process remains ongoing but offered no timeline or detail about what penalties he might face. Wilson remains on active duty, answering phones at the 911 call center instead of commanding officers in Greenpoint.
For a captain nearing retirement eligibility after nearly 20 years, the stakes are personal. A formal reprimand is one thing. Anything that threatens his pension is another entirely.
Mamdani, for his part, continues to face skepticism about his leadership from inside and outside the city. He recently flew to Washington with a $21 billion wish list for the Trump administration, a trip that drew its own share of raised eyebrows. His political standing among New York's uniformed services appears no stronger for having punished a captain who said out loud what many officers apparently think in private.
The open questions are straightforward. Will the NYPD apply this speech standard consistently, or only when the speech targets the current mayor? Will Wilson face formal charges, or will the transfer itself serve as the punishment? And does the department's swift action reflect a principled commitment to political neutrality, or a political commitment dressed up as principle?
When a city punishes a cop faster for criticizing the mayor than it processes cases against the nine people arrested at the same protest, the priorities are hard to miss.
A three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit pressed the Justice Department this week over whether the Supreme Court has already, in effect, decided the legality of the Trump administration’s policy requiring passports to list biological sex.
The hearing, covered by Newsmax’s account of the 1st Circuit arguments over the passport sex policy, centered on whether to overturn a lower-court injunction that blocked the policy, and what weight to give the Supreme Court’s earlier emergency-docket action letting the policy continue while the case moves forward.
It matters because the courts are being asked to do two things at once: unwind an injunction and, at the same time, send signals about who should win later. The panel’s questions showed real discomfort with that second part, especially when it starts to look like an advisory opinion, something federal courts are barred from providing under the Constitution.
The result is a familiar problem in high-stakes policy fights: activists and agencies rush to court, judges try to keep order, and the executive branch is left defending basic administrative rules in an emergency posture, while the country gets more uncertainty instead of clear, stable governance.
The Justice Department’s posture was blunt. DOJ lawyer Michael Velchik told the panel that the Supreme Court’s language last year wasn’t just a temporary, procedural move, it amounted to a legal conclusion that should box in the challengers going forward.
Velchik pointed to the Supreme Court’s unsigned opinion, which stated: “Displaying passport holders' sex at birth no more offends equal protection principles than displaying their country of birth, in both cases, the Government is merely attesting to a historical fact without subjecting anyone to differential treatment,” as quoted in Breitbart’s coverage of the Supreme Court allowing enforcement of the passport policy.
That language is doing a lot of work. It doesn’t read like a casual aside. It reads like a statement about what the Constitution allows.
Velchik framed it that way for the appeals court. He said, “We read that language as making a legal determination that would foreclose their ability to succeed on that on the merits, the Supreme Court has already decided in this case, which is now the law of the case, but is also a precedent that there is no discrimination,” calling the Supreme Court’s position “unequivocal.”
Whether the 1st Circuit agrees is the point of the current fight. A lower court had blocked the policy, but the Supreme Court allowed it to remain in effect while the litigation continues, in a 6-3 emergency-docket order.
The challengers, for their part, did not ask the panel to keep the injunction in place at all costs. Both sides asked the 1st Circuit to vacate the lower-court injunction and return the case to the district court, so long as the appeals court added guidance about the legal merits.
But the challengers also urged the court to make clear that vacating the injunction would not undermine their claims against the policy.
Several judges raised a basic constitutional guardrail: if the court issues guidance untethered from a final decision, it can start to look like an advisory opinion. Federal courts are barred from offering advisory opinions, which is why judges often resist requests to “clarify” big merits questions while a case is still being teed up.
This tension, between what lawyers want for leverage and what courts can properly do, is not academic. It decides whether Americans get stable rules or a long stretch of limbo. That’s also why the Supreme Court’s emergency docket keeps drawing political attention, as in our prior coverage of debates over Trump-related emergency appeals at the Supreme Court.
The underlying policy question is straightforward: the Trump administration requires passports to list biological sex. The litigation tries to force a different federal approach.
The Associated Press described the practical effects for people who want a passport that reflects gender identity rather than sex at birth, reporting that after President Trump’s Jan. 20 executive order defining people strictly as male or female, the State Department stopped issuing passports with an “X” gender marker and stopped allowing applicants to change the sex listed on passports to reflect gender identity. AP also reported that a federal lawsuit was filed in Boston by affected transgender plaintiffs and ACLU lawyers challenging the passport policy as discriminatory and unlawful, and that the administration said existing unexpired passports would not be affected while pending applications seeking gender-marker changes were placed on hold. See AP’s account of people affected by the passport gender-marker change policy.
That’s the human side the challengers emphasize. It’s real, and it’s also why this issue keeps landing in federal court instead of being handled by elected branches through clear statutory rules.
The administration’s legal position, though, is also clear: the government should not be forced to issue what it sees as inaccurate identification documents. Fox News summarized the administration’s argument in its Supreme Court filing this way: “Private citizens cannot force the government to use inaccurate sex designations on identification documents that fail to reflect the person’s biological sex,” as quoted by Fox News in its report on the administration asking the Supreme Court to allow enforcement.
Step back and the bigger pattern comes into focus: policy by injunction, policy by emergency order, and policy by semantic warfare. Each round invites another round. And the public is left to wonder what the law is from one month to the next.
For conservatives, this isn’t just about one passport line. It’s about whether basic government records can stay grounded in objective categories, or whether the administrative state must constantly update identity documents to match contested political demands.
It’s also about whether lower courts can effectively override elected administrations nationwide through sweeping orders, then force the Supreme Court to referee the mess on an emergency track. The fact that the Supreme Court’s last-year order let the policy remain in effect while litigation continues is not a small detail; it shapes everything downstream.
At the 1st Circuit, the judges gave no indication how they might rule, and they did not say when a decision might come.
That lack of clarity is its own kind of outcome. It means more waiting, more litigation costs, and more pressure on agencies to “pause” decisions rather than make them, exactly the sort of soft governance conservatives have watched spread across institutions.
Readers tracking how often the Supreme Court is being pulled into national policy fights may also want to see our coverage of political fallout from landmark Supreme Court rulings.
The immediate question is narrow: whether the 1st Circuit will overturn the injunction that blocked the passport policy, and on what terms.
The judges’ pushback on advisory opinions suggests they may be reluctant to issue the kind of merits “guidance” both sides asked for. Yet the Justice Department is plainly asking the court to treat the Supreme Court’s earlier language as more than procedural, closer to a legal destination than a pit stop.
Big gaps remain in public view from this hearing alone, including who the challengers are by name, which judges sat on the panel, the specific lower court involved, and the precise text of the injunction being appealed. Those details matter because they shape how broadly any eventual ruling will apply.
And as the Supreme Court continues to be the place where major disputes end up, whether on passports or something as foundational as citizenship, readers will recognize the same institutional strain we discussed in our coverage of Trump’s comments on high-stakes Supreme Court cases.
In the end, a country that can’t settle basic questions through legislation will keep outsourcing them to judges. That’s not “progress.” It’s paralysis dressed up as policy.
A South African police diver was lowered by helicopter rope into the Komati River last week to retrieve a massive crocodile suspected of swallowing a missing businessman, and when authorities cut the animal open, they found human remains inside its intestines.
The grim recovery operation unfolded in the crocodile-heavy waters of South Africa's northeast, not far from Kruger National Park, after a man's vehicle was found stranded and empty at a flooded low-water bridge. What followed was a multi-day search involving police divers, helicopters, and drones, and a retrieval that authorities later called a "highly dangerous and complex operation."
Captain Johant "Pottie" Potgieter, commander of a police diving unit, told the Daily Mail that years of field experience led him and his team to suspect one of the crocodiles basking on a small river island had recently fed. The animal, roughly 4.5 metres long and weighing around 500 kilograms, gave itself away by its own stillness.
"Besides having a massively full tummy, he didn't move around or try to slip into the river despite the noise of the drones and the chopper."
That observation set the entire operation in motion.
The New York Post identified the missing man as Gabriel Batista, a 59-year-old hotel owner who was swept away in floodwaters while attempting to cross the low-water bridge over the Komati River. Batista's vehicle was found stranded at the crossing, but there was no sign of him.
Authorities launched a full-scale search. Police deployed divers into the murky, crocodile-infested water. Drones scanned the riverbanks and surrounding bush. Helicopters circled overhead. Officers eventually spotted several crocodiles sunning themselves on a small island in the river, and one stood out.
The 15-foot animal, weighing more than 1,000 pounds, showed unmistakable signs of recent feeding. It barely moved despite the roar of the helicopter and the buzz of drones overhead. Potgieter, a veteran of dangerous water recoveries, recognized what that meant.
The crocodile was killed before Potgieter made his descent. Then, secured by rope, the diving unit commander was lowered from the helicopter toward the animal. He had to approach it on the ground, rig it for airlift, and get it off the island, all while other crocodiles remained nearby.
Potgieter did not sugarcoat the risk. As he told News24:
"The sharp end of a crocodile is not the best place to approach it."
The animal was secured and airlifted to nearby Kruger National Park. There, investigators opened the crocodile and discovered severed human remains inside its intestines. They also found a ring believed to belong to Batista.
Missing-person cases that end with a body recovered from water are among the most difficult for families and investigators alike, as seen in the recent recovery of a missing woman from a Scottsdale canal. In this case, the circumstances were even more harrowing.
What investigators found inside the crocodile went beyond one man's remains. Potgieter revealed that six different types of shoes were discovered in the animal's gut.
"A crocodile will eat or swallow anything."
That detail raises an obvious and disturbing question: how many people has this crocodile consumed? South African authorities have not publicly linked the shoes to any identified individuals. DNA testing is now underway to confirm whether the human remains belong to Batista.
The forensic identification process in cases like these can stretch for weeks. In the United States, the discovery of a missing USF doctoral student's body similarly required careful forensic work before authorities could confirm the victim's identity and move forward.
South Africa's acting police chief, Lt-Gen Puleng Dimpane, praised the officers involved in the operation. No direct quote from Dimpane was published, but the commendation signals official recognition of the extreme risk Potgieter and his team accepted.
The Komati River runs through South Africa's northeast, a region where crocodiles are a known and constant threat. The river's proximity to Kruger National Park means large predators are never far from human activity. Flooding, the kind that stranded Batista's vehicle at the low-water bridge, only increases the danger by pushing crocodiles into areas where people cross.
This is not a freak occurrence. It is the predictable result of humans and apex predators sharing the same waterways, compounded by infrastructure that forces drivers to attempt low-water crossings during flood conditions.
High-profile disappearances often generate intense public attention and pressure on law enforcement to deliver answers quickly. The ongoing search for Nancy Guthrie, which has drawn national media coverage and a million-dollar reward offer, illustrates how families and communities rally when someone vanishes without explanation.
In Batista's case, the explanation appears to be nature at its most brutal. But confirmation still depends on DNA results that have not yet been released.
Several questions remain open. Authorities have not disclosed the exact location on the Komati River where the operation took place, nor which specific police agency led the mission. No one has publicly explained under what legal authority the crocodile was killed, a relevant question given South Africa's wildlife protection laws and the animal's proximity to a national park.
The six types of shoes found inside the crocodile have not been linked to any known missing persons beyond Batista. Whether South African authorities intend to investigate those items further is unclear.
Forensic evidence handling in disappearance cases has drawn scrutiny elsewhere. A recent dispute over evidence in the Nancy Guthrie case highlighted how chain-of-custody decisions can shape, or complicate, an investigation's outcome.
For now, the Batista family waits for DNA confirmation. The officers who carried out the retrieval have received official praise. And the Komati River flows on, indifferent to the lives it claims.
When the men and women who wear a badge are willing to be lowered by rope into a river full of predators to bring someone home, the least the rest of us can do is remember the name of the man they went in after.
Alina Habba sat down Wednesday on ABC's "The View" and did something few Trump allies bother to do anymore: she took the fight straight to a panel that wanted no part of her answers. The two-part interview turned combative fast, with audience gasps, crosstalk, and at least one host cutting Habba off mid-sentence to send the show to commercial.
The former White House counselor and personal attorney to President Trump sparred with Sunny Hostin, Whoopi Goldberg, and Joy Behar over the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey, the cost of living under Trump's agenda, and whether Habba herself is qualified for higher office. What the hosts got was not the defensive, stammering guest they may have expected.
The sharpest exchange came early, when Hostin pressed Habba on whether Comey's now-infamous social media post, a photo of seashells arranged to read "86 47", truly rose to the level of a criminal threat against the president. Habba told the panel she believed it did.
"This is an FBI director. We have responsibilities."
That line drew audible reactions from the studio audience. Habba pressed further, pointing out that the Department of Justice had also indicted another man for posting something similar on X directed at her personally. Her argument was plain: if a private citizen faces charges for that kind of post, a former FBI director should face at least the same scrutiny.
Hostin pushed back, telling Habba, "The dictionary disagrees with you on that." But Habba didn't retreat. She pivoted to what she framed as a glaring inconsistency in how media figures treat threats and incitement depending on who the target is.
"Nobody has condemned Jimmy Kimmel for his comments. Those were despicable!"
The specific Kimmel remarks Habba referenced were not detailed during the segment. But her broader point, that the entertainment and media establishment applies one standard to rhetoric aimed at Trump and another to rhetoric aimed at everyone else, landed with the kind of clarity that tends to make "View" hosts uncomfortable.
Habba also drew a sharp line between the current DOJ and the prosecutors she believes targeted Trump for political reasons. "But you have to remember something, the Department of Justice brings real cases," she said. "We are not Jack Smith, we're not Letitia James, we bring real cases against people." That distinction, between what she characterized as politically motivated prosecutions and legitimate law enforcement, is one the Trump administration has made repeatedly, and Habba delivered it without hedging.
The second half of the interview shifted to domestic policy. Alyssa Farah Griffin asked whether Trump was delivering on his promise to lower the cost of living. Habba cited falling prices for eggs, prescription medications, and oil as evidence the president's agenda was working for what she called "normal Americans."
Goldberg wasn't buying it. "For who?" she demanded. When Habba urged the hosts to examine the details of Trump's Big Beautiful Bill, Goldberg fired back: "I am looking at it, and a lot of people lost their healthcare."
Habba tried to respond. Goldberg cut her off. "No, babe, I'm talking about your Big Beautiful Bill," Goldberg said, before steering the show to a commercial break. The pattern was familiar to anyone who has watched "The View" handle a conservative guest: ask a question, interrupt the answer, then move on before the guest can finish. It is a format that rewards the hosts and punishes the visitor, which is precisely why Habba's willingness to show up at all is worth noting.
This is the same show where Joy Behar once warned Attorney General Pam Bondi that she was "looking at some prison time." The panel's comfort with that kind of reckless commentary makes its pearl-clutching over Habba's policy defense all the more telling.
Behar raised the question of whether Habba's name had been "floated" as a possible replacement for Bondi as attorney general. Hostin followed up directly: "Do you think you're qualified to be Attorney General of the United States?"
Habba said she had "never had a conversation with the president or anybody in the administration to become the attorney general." She added: "I serve at the pleasure of the president. I think it's the greatest honor to serve your country in any capacity."
That answer was measured and direct, a contrast to the gotcha framing of the question. Hostin's query carried an unmistakable implication: that Habba lacks the credentials for such a role. But Habba's record of service to the administration is not thin. Trump appointed her as his personal counselor in December 2024. He later tapped her to become the United States attorney for New Jersey.
Just The News reported that Habba was sworn in on March 28, 2025, as interim U.S. attorney for New Jersey by Attorney General Bondi herself. Trump said at the time that "as U.S. attorney for New Jersey, Alina will work tirelessly to weed out corruption and crime and restore law and order to the Garden State." Habba had previously served as Trump's personal lawyer and became a spokesperson for him in 2021.
CNN later reported that a court found the Trump administration violated the law by appointing Habba to the U.S. attorney position, and she was subsequently forced to resign. The specifics of that ruling, which court issued it, and on what grounds, were not detailed during the interview. But the legal setback did not stop Habba from defending the administration's record or from showing up on hostile ground to do it.
The broader pattern of legal and political challenges to Trump appointees is nothing new. Courts have repeatedly been used as a venue to challenge or constrain the president's personnel decisions, and Habba's case fits that mold.
One moment in the interview stood apart from the political back-and-forth. Habba referenced being present for a shooting that took place at the White House Correspondents Dinner "this past weekend." She said the experience gave her a "completely new perspective." The details of the incident were not explored further on the show, but Habba's mention of it carried weight, a reminder that the people who serve in and around this administration face real-world risks that extend well beyond cable-news arguments.
The segment ended with Goldberg telling Habba, "You'll have to come back." The show then moved on to its next interview, with former late-night host Craig Ferguson. Whether Goldberg's invitation was sincere or performative is anyone's guess. But the fact that "The View" gave Habba two segments, and that the exchanges were tense enough to draw gasps, suggests the hosts understood they had a guest who would not fold under pressure.
Trump himself has yet to pay a visit to "The View," and given the reception his allies receive, that decision looks less like avoidance and more like sound judgment. The show's format is built to ambush, not to inform. Habba walked into that setup and held her ground.
It is worth remembering what the broader media landscape looks like right now. Even CNN's own polling has shown strong public support for the direction Trump is steering the country. The disconnect between that reality and the daily hostility on shows like "The View" tells you everything about who these programs are designed to serve, and it isn't the audience at home.
Meanwhile, the administration continues to pursue accountability on multiple fronts. Recent criminal referrals to the DOJ over figures tied to Trump's first impeachment reflect the same posture Habba articulated on air: that the current Department of Justice intends to bring real cases, not political ones.
The gasps from the studio audience were real. So was the crosstalk, the interruptions, and the visible frustration on the faces of hosts who are accustomed to controlling the conversation. What they got from Habba was someone who came prepared, stayed composed, and refused to accept the premise of every loaded question thrown her way.
"The View" airs weekdays at 11/10c on ABC. Its audience is largely sympathetic to the hosts' progressive worldview. That makes the audible reactions to Habba's remarks all the more significant. Even in a room stacked against her, the facts she cited and the double standards she exposed were hard to dismiss.
Conservative leaders who want to win the argument, not just preach to the choir, have to be willing to walk into rooms like that one. Habba did. And the hosts spent the rest of the segment trying to change the subject.
That tells you who had the better case.
A tip led Philadelphia investigators to a crumbling, long-abandoned cemetery in Southwest Philadelphia in April 2020, and inside a pried-open family vault dating to 1884, they found the remains of Keith Palumbo, a 36-year-old musician and tattoo artist from Delaware County, Pennsylvania, who had vanished two months earlier. His longtime friend, a member of the Warlocks Motorcycle Club, later pleaded guilty to killing him.
The grim discovery at Mount Moriah Cemetery did not end there. Investigators also unearthed the remains of a second man, 33-year-old David Rossillo Jr., a prospective Warlocks member, in the same crypt. Both deaths have since been prosecuted, with convictions and prison sentences for the killers and guilty pleas from three additional accomplices who helped dispose of the bodies.
The case, reported in detail by Fox News Digital, is now the subject of a new episode of Oxygen's "Philly Homicide," hosted by retired detective Chris McMullin. The episode, titled "Metal and Mayhem," airs May 2, 2026, at 8 p.m. But the facts of the case deserve attention well beyond a television hour. They expose what happens when violent criminal organizations operate in the shadows of a city's neglected corners, and when betrayal, real or imagined, becomes a death sentence inside outlaw gang culture.
Keith Palumbo was a heavy metal guitarist and tattoo artist. In February 2020, he was driving his mother's car with two other men when he received a phone call from Michael DeLuca, a Warlocks member who went by the nickname "Kaos." DeLuca told Palumbo to come to his Southwest Philadelphia home. Palumbo went.
He never came back. His family immediately knew something was wrong.
The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that DeLuca pulled a handgun and pointed it at Palumbo. A witness later told investigators that DeLuca shot Palumbo in the face. That same witness told police DeLuca said he had killed Palumbo and needed help disposing of the body.
Retired detective McMullin told Fox News Digital the case hit him hard from the start. "When I learned that he had gone missing, it just gave me an ominous feeling," McMullin said. A relative of Palumbo's stated he was not a member of the Warlocks, making the betrayal by his supposed best friend all the more stark.
Investigators built the case through cooperating witnesses, physical evidence, and cellphone data. The trail led to Mount Moriah Cemetery, a sprawling burial ground in Southwest Philadelphia that had long since fallen into disrepair.
McMullin described the scene in blunt terms:
"Mount Moriah Cemetery had gone out of business years ago. I've been there. There was a time when I worked part-time in the funeral business and I was there. It's something like out of a post-apocalyptic film when you go there. There are headstones that are knocked over and vines growing all over mausoleums. It's very sad because this was a cemetery where people were laid to rest. Typically, you expect it to be cared for perpetually."
He added that the cemetery was so neglected it had become a dumping ground for stolen cars. "I even say in the episode, if you wanted to hide a body, that's probably a good place to do it," McMullin said.
On April 3, 2020, investigators walking the grounds noticed one crypt that appeared recently disturbed. It was the family vault of Capt. A.H. Cain, who had died in 1884. Inside, they found Palumbo's body, and the remains of David Rossillo Jr., who had been missing far longer. In cases like these, where victims' bodies are concealed for years, the discovery often comes down to a single break.
DNA testing confirmed the identities of both men by August 2020.
DeLuca and fellow Warlocks member Michael DiMauro were arrested in September 2020. Their cases proceeded on separate tracks, but both ended in conviction.
DiMauro was found guilty in 2023 of first-degree murder and abuse of a corpse in the death of Rossillo Jr. Prosecutors said DiMauro shot Rossillo, tied a rope around his neck, and dragged his body to the crypt before prying it open and dumping the remains inside. The New York Post reported that the killing took place at Mount Moriah Cemetery itself in 2017, meaning Rossillo's body had lain hidden for roughly three years before investigators found it. DiMauro was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
DeLuca pleaded guilty to third-degree murder in Palumbo's death. He was later sentenced to 15 to 35 years in prison. Three other individuals also pleaded guilty to helping dispose of the victims' bodies, as FOX 29 Philadelphia reported.
Assistant District Attorney Robert Wainwright issued a statement after the case concluded:
"I want to thank now-retired Philadelphia Police Detective Joe Bamberski for his diligent and tireless work on this case. I'm very pleased that we are able to bring some measure of justice and peace to the loved ones of these two victims."
The motive behind Palumbo's murder remains murky. McMullin said investigators never got a clear answer from DeLuca. Authorities and witnesses suggested DeLuca may have suspected Palumbo of cooperating with law enforcement, but no evidence was presented to support that claim.
McMullin offered his own assessment: "It was speculated that he may have done it to set an example not to cross him. This victim was his lifelong best friend. Was he trying to make an example for the other members? It certainly seemed like they were afraid of him."
Retired ATF Special Agent in Charge Bernard Zapor, who spoke to Fox News Digital about outlaw motorcycle gang culture more broadly, described the Warlocks as deliberately low-profile compared to larger organizations. "Some gangs are purposely more low-key," Zapor said. "They're not interested in all the publicity and notoriety."
But the code inside, Zapor explained, is the same everywhere:
"They all have a similarity in that betrayal of the organization is a death sentence. You have allegiance to the club first, and then your family comes after that. It's club before family, club before self. And the suspicion of being an informant is dangerous and unfortunate."
Zapor was even more direct about what that suspicion means in practice: "If you're suspected of being a police informant, the only outcome is death. It's a death sentence if they can get to you." Authorities have long identified the Warlocks as a serious outlaw motorcycle gang and have tied members to violent crimes including murder, assault, and drug trafficking. The pattern of trusted associates turning killer is grimly familiar in cases like these.
McMullin said the Palumbo case left a mark. "All the cases we explore in this series are tragic, but this was such a case of betrayal," he said. He described DeLuca's act as calculated: "I do think that this was calculated and planned. They more than likely took [Palumbo] to the clubhouse with the intention of doing that to him."
He also noted the role fear played among those around DeLuca. "They were all afraid of [DeLuca]," McMullin said. But when it came time to face prosecution, self-preservation won out. "When push came to shove, they didn't want to lie and possibly risk taking a prosecution to protect him," McMullin said. "I just think there's no honor among thieves. Loyalty is something made very clear that's expected. But I also think that people are also out for themselves, especially people who are committing a lot of crimes, heinous crimes at that."
Palumbo's friends and loved ones, including Michael Davvocato, Lierin Buckley, and Matthew Sondermann, sat down for the Oxygen episode to speak about his life and the toll his murder has taken over the years. Retired detectives John Taggart and Joe Bamberski also described how the cold case was built and solved. Stories like this one, where a missing person's loved ones are left waiting for answers, are a reminder that behind every case file is a family in limbo.
McMullin summed up what made this case different from the dozens of homicides he has worked: "There's the relationship between the killer and the victim. Although sadly, more people are killed by people they know than people they don't know. And outlaw biker gangs are notoriously violent. Michael DeLuca, in my opinion, did an evil act."
The recovery and identification of remains can take months or years, but the work of Philadelphia detectives and prosecutors ensured that Palumbo and Rossillo did not stay nameless forever, and that the men responsible did not walk free.
Keith Palumbo's only crime, by all available accounts, was trusting the wrong friend. In the world of outlaw gangs, that trust cost him everything, and the abandoned crypt where his body was hidden says as much about the decay of accountability as it does about the decay of the cemetery itself.
Attorneys for Rep. Max Miller have acknowledged that the Ohio congressman fabricated testimony about a key witness in court proceedings where he sought a protection order against his ex-wife, Emily Moreno, the daughter of Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio). The admission, first reported by the New York Post, has triggered a sanctions motion from Moreno's legal team and cast serious doubt on Miller's credibility in an already bitter custody fight.
The concession is not a matter of interpretation. Miller's own legal team sent an email to opposing counsel stating they had "learned that [the girlfriend] was in fact not likely present at Max's home during the time of the child exchange." That directly contradicts a notarized statement Miller signed and testimony he gave under oath, both on the same day.
For conservatives who believe in the rule of law, accountability, and honest dealing in court, this is not a story to wave away because Miller has an "R" next to his name. Fabricating testimony in a domestic violence proceeding is a serious matter, no matter who does it.
The sequence of events is damning in its specificity. On February 1, Moreno alleged that Miller grabbed her by the arm and shoved her against a wall during a custody exchange at his home. Her legal team has claimed this was the second time Miller assaulted her during such an exchange.
Miller denied the allegation. In February, his attorneys submitted a statement from the 37-year-old congressman in support of obtaining a protection order against Moreno. On February 27, Miller signed a notarized statement making a very particular claim: that his girlfriend, identified only as "J.A.," was inside his home during the entire custody exchange.
The statement was emphatic. Miller declared that J.A. "makes it a practice to remain out of sight at my home during custody exchanges" due to what he called Moreno's "unpredictable, irrational, unhinged, and confrontational behavior." He further stated that J.A. had "provided statements to DCFS [Department of Children and Family Services] and a private investigator confirming that she was present at my home on February 1 during the custody exchange" and that "she did not hear any commotion."
That same day, February 27, Miller appeared at a court hearing. When asked whether footage showed that his "girlfriend was present immediately preceding the custody exchange," Miller answered: "Yes."
A judge agreed to issue a protection order for Miller against Moreno, though the court found no evidence "to issue an order to protect the minor child at this time."
Then, nearly two weeks later, Miller's attorneys reversed course. In an email to Moreno's lawyers, they acknowledged that J.A. was "in fact not likely present" at Miller's home during the exchange. The email tried to soften the blow, adding: "We still, however, feel the video-recorded exchange demonstrates no altercation between Max and Emily."
That hedge does not erase the problem. Miller made specific, notarized claims about a witness who, by his own lawyers' later admission, was not there. He then affirmed those claims under oath. The entire foundation of his corroboration, the girlfriend who supposedly heard nothing and saw Moreno acting normally, was fabricated.
Moreno's attorney, Andrew Zashin, moved swiftly. On Monday, he demanded that Miller's legal team drop or amend the request for a protection order against Emily Moreno. When that apparently did not resolve the matter, Zashin filed a motion on Wednesday demanding that the court sanction Miller's lawyers and award Moreno attorney fees.
Zashin did not mince words in his public comments. He told the Post:
"Max Miller is trying to weaponize the law to avoid having his parenting rights reduced or terminated. He believes the best defense is a good offense. Max Miller will fail."
Zashin also characterized the broader legal strategy in blunt terms:
"The congressman's civil domestic violence claims are meritless and only designed to use as leverage against his ex-wife in their contested custody case."
The accusation is that Miller, facing allegations of domestic violence himself, filed a counter-claim against his ex-wife to gain tactical advantage in their custody dispute over their 2-year-old daughter. If Zashin's characterization is accurate, the fabricated witness testimony was part of that tactical play. The sanctions motion now asks the court to hold Miller's legal team accountable for presenting false evidence.
Congressional misconduct, whether personal or professional, has been a recurring source of tension inside the Republican caucus. The GOP has had to confront similar situations with other members facing allegations that test the party's stated commitment to accountability.
Miller's attorney, Adam Brown, has pushed back aggressively on the underlying abuse allegations, even as the witness fabrication stands uncontested. Brown told the Post that the surveillance videos in question were "from immediately after the congressman allegedly abused Ms. Moreno." He called Moreno "a liar."
Brown pointed to Ring doorbell footage as evidence that Moreno showed no signs of distress:
"You can see from this video that Ms. Moreno was under no distress whatsoever; she was in an uplifted mood, telling their child to 'say bye' and that the congressman is nothing but a loving father saying 'I love you' to both his daughter and his ex-wife on their way out of the door."
The Post reported that it reviewed some of the footage cited by Miller and his lawyers. Moreno could be heard saying "bye" on the Ring video. But the footage argument, whatever its merits, does not address the central problem: Miller told a court, under oath and in a notarized statement, that a specific witness was present and could corroborate his account. His own lawyers later said that witness was not there.
The distinction matters. You can argue about whether video shows distress. You cannot argue about whether you fabricated a witness. Miller's legal team has already conceded the point.
Democrats, of course, have their own long history of looking the other way when their members face misconduct allegations. The silence from House Democrats on cases involving their own colleagues has been well documented. But that double standard does not excuse dishonesty in court from anyone, least of all a sitting member of Congress.
Max Miller married Emily Moreno in 2022 at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in New Jersey. He was elected to the House that same year. Before entering Congress, Miller served in multiple roles during the first Trump administration, including associate director of the Presidential Personnel Office and special assistant to the president.
The couple split in 2024. Miller has agreed to pay $2,500 in monthly child support. The custody dispute has been contentious, with Moreno's legal team alleging a pattern of physical abuse during exchanges and Miller's side characterizing Moreno as unstable and dishonest.
When the Post reached Miller for comment, he responded: "This is truly exhausting. I just want what's best for my daughter. Please stop giving my previously diagnosed bipolar ex-wife so much attention. You all need to move on."
That response does not address the fabricated testimony. It redirects attention to Moreno's mental health, a tactic that may play in the court of public opinion but carries no weight in an actual courtroom where his own lawyers have already admitted the witness claim was false.
The broader pattern of internal Republican tensions in the House makes cases like this more damaging, not less. Every member who creates a credibility problem weakens the caucus at a time when the GOP majority is razor-thin and public trust in institutions is already low.
Several questions remain open. The court has not yet ruled on Zashin's sanctions motion. It is unclear what consequences, if any, Miller will face for the fabricated testimony, both in the domestic case and potentially from the House itself. The specific court handling the matter has not been publicly identified in available reporting.
It is also unclear how Miller's attorneys say they "learned" that J.A. was not present. Did the girlfriend come forward? Did new evidence surface? The email to Moreno's lawyers offers no explanation for how a notarized, sworn claim turned out to be false barely two weeks after it was made.
Questions of judicial accountability and courtroom integrity cut across party lines. When a sitting congressman submits fabricated evidence to a court, the system's response matters, not just for the parties involved, but for public confidence in the legal process itself.
The protection order against Moreno remains in place. No order was issued to protect the couple's minor child. The custody battle continues.
Conservatives rightly demand honesty from public officials and integrity in our courts. Those standards don't come with a party exemption. If Max Miller lied under oath, and his own lawyers say the claim was false, then the court should act accordingly, and his colleagues should expect better.
A federal grand jury in Alabama has charged the Southern Poverty Law Center with 11 counts of fraud and money laundering, and former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams responded by praising the organization as a force for good.
The indictment alleges the SPLC secretly routed more than $3 million in donor funds to individuals tied to the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazi organizations, and other white supremacist groups between 2014 and 2023. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said the group was "manufacturing racism to justify its existence." Abrams, speaking with Lincoln Project co-founder Steve Schmidt, offered a full-throated defense of the SPLC's mission and legacy.
The contrast tells you everything about where the Democratic establishment's loyalties lie, not with the donors who were allegedly deceived, but with the institution that spent decades branding mainstream conservative groups as hate organizations.
The charges, returned by a grand jury in the Middle District of Alabama, include six counts of wire fraud, four counts of bank fraud, and one count of conspiracy to commit concealment money laundering, as first reported by Breitbart. The Department of Justice's Office of Public Affairs released a press statement laying out the core allegations.
The indictment states that starting in the 1980s, the SPLC "began operating a covert network of individuals who were either associated with violent and extremist groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan, or who had infiltrated violent extremist groups at the SPLC's direction." The DOJ press release continued:
"Unbeknownst to donors, some of their donated money was being used to fund the leaders and organizers of racist groups at the same time that the SPLC was denouncing the same groups on its website."
Prosecutors allege the SPLC paid at least $3 million to eight individuals affiliated with extremist organizations, including the KKK, the National Socialist Movement, the United Klans of America, and the Aryan Nations-affiliated Sadistic Souls Motorcycle Club. The Washington Examiner reported that Blanche said the group used "shell entities, fictitious organizations, layered bank accounts, and prepaid cards to conceal the source and movement of funds."
Blanche did not mince words about the alleged scheme's purpose. As the New York Post reported, the acting attorney general said the SPLC "was not dismantling these groups. It was instead manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred."
That is the government's theory: an organization that built its brand, and its fundraising machine, on identifying hate groups was allegedly bankrolling the very extremists it claimed to fight. Donors gave money believing it would combat racism. The indictment says it went to Klansmen.
Against that backdrop, Abrams chose to defend the SPLC publicly. In a conversation with Schmidt, she cast the organization as a necessary force against Southern authoritarianism, with no apparent acknowledgment of the federal charges.
Abrams told Schmidt that the South has long been the incubator for national threats:
"Often what you see on the national stage got incubated in the south, and so we know, in the south, we've always needed, for example, litigation as one of the tools to fight back against authoritarianism. Whether that was Jim Crow, the KKK, the antisemitic behaviors that were manifest in the deep south."
She went further, crediting the SPLC with broad community investment. "It recognizes what hate groups are and says we're not going to let you get away with it, we're gonna tell people about you," Abrams said. "It invests in communities and says we're not just going to say this is wrong, we're going to help invest in what makes it right."
The DOJ indictment, of course, alleges the opposite, that the SPLC was investing in what made hate groups operational, not what made communities safer. Abrams did not address the specific fraud charges or the allegation that donor money went to extremist-linked individuals. She framed the SPLC's work as fighting "the anti-Asian, anti-Latino" hatred that "probably had some genesis in the South."
For a former candidate who built her political brand on accountability and justice, the selective silence on the substance of the charges is notable. The DOJ's 11-count indictment is not a policy disagreement or a political talking point. It is a federal criminal case alleging that donors were systematically deceived.
While Abrams was praising the SPLC, organizations that have spent years on the receiving end of the group's "hate map" designations offered a very different reaction. Fox News reported that groups including the Family Research Council, Moms for Liberty, PragerU, ACT for America, Awake Illinois, and the Center for Immigration Studies all responded to the indictment by calling it vindication.
Moms for Liberty co-founder Tina Descovich said the SPLC's designations had real-world consequences far beyond reputation. "The SPLC's hate map has been weaponized against us countless times, including by law enforcement where training manuals labeled us as an extremist group by citing the SPLC," Descovich said.
The Family Research Council pointed to the 2012 attack on its Washington, D.C. headquarters, arguing that the SPLC's designation helped legitimize the targeting of its organization. That attack, in which a gunman entered the building and shot a security guard, was carried out by a man who later told the FBI he had used the SPLC's hate map to select his target.
These are not abstract policy grievances. Parents' groups, immigration-policy organizations, and faith-based nonprofits have argued for years that the SPLC's labeling system functions less as a public-interest tool and more as a political weapon, one that treats mainstream conservative positions on immigration, family, and religious liberty as equivalent to white supremacy. The indictment now raises the question of whether the organization's entire model was built on a fraud.
The pattern of criminal referrals and DOJ investigations targeting politically connected institutions has accelerated in recent months, and the SPLC case may prove to be among the most consequential.
Just The News reported that the SPLC has acknowledged using paid informants to infiltrate extremist groups and share intelligence with local and federal law enforcement. SPLC CEO Bryan Fair said the organization "will vigorously defend themselves." The organization has denied wrongdoing.
The Washington Examiner noted that the investigation was long-running, had been paused during the Biden administration, and could expand to include individual defendants. That detail raises its own questions. If federal prosecutors had enough evidence to pursue the case years ago, why did the prior administration let it sit?
The SPLC's defense, that it was running legitimate intelligence-gathering operations against hate groups, will be tested in court. But the indictment's core allegation is not about whether informants were used. It is about whether donors were told the truth about where their money was going. Blanche put it bluntly: "At no point did they tell donors they were giving money to these organizations or their leadership. That's the fraud."
Georgia's political landscape has seen its share of scrutiny over questionable funding arrangements tied to political figures and institutions. The SPLC case now adds a federal dimension to the broader question of how left-leaning nonprofits handle donor money and public trust.
Abrams's choice to defend the SPLC at this moment is not accidental. The SPLC has been a cornerstone of the progressive infrastructure for decades. Its hate-group designations have been cited by media outlets, tech platforms, government agencies, and corporate diversity programs as authoritative. If the indictment's allegations hold up, that entire ecosystem of credibility collapses.
That is what makes Abrams's defense so revealing. She did not say the charges were false. She did not address the $3 million allegedly funneled to extremists. She did not mention the wire fraud, the bank fraud, or the money laundering conspiracy. She talked about Jim Crow and the KKK, the very groups the SPLC is now accused of funding.
The federal grand jury's decision to return an 11-count indictment means a panel of citizens found probable cause that crimes were committed. That is not a political opinion. It is a legal finding.
Abrams is free to admire the SPLC's stated mission. But when a federal indictment alleges that the mission was a cover for fraud, that donors were deceived, that extremists were paid, and that the organization profited from the very hatred it claimed to oppose, defending the brand without addressing the charges is not courage. It is evasion.
The donors who gave money to fight hate deserve better than a politician who won't even acknowledge the possibility they were cheated. But then, accountability has never been the progressive establishment's strong suit, especially when one of its own institutions is the one in the dock.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor pressed the Trump administration's top Supreme Court lawyer Wednesday, arguing that the president's years-old comments about Haiti amount to evidence of racial discrimination, and should prevent the Department of Homeland Security from ending Temporary Protected Status for hundreds of thousands of Haitian migrants living in the United States.
The exchange came during oral arguments in two consolidated cases, Mullin v. Doe and Trump v. Miot, which challenge the administration's decision to revoke TPS protections. DHS announced last year that it would end TPS for hundreds of thousands of Haitian migrants and thousands of Syrian migrants. Left-wing groups sued, and the dispute has now landed at the nation's highest court.
At issue is whether a president's political rhetoric, delivered outside any formal policy process, can be used to second-guess an executive branch decision that falls squarely within its statutory authority. Sotomayor's line of questioning suggests she believes it can.
During her exchange with Solicitor General D. John Sauer, who represented the Trump administration, Sotomayor reached back to Trump's widely reported 2018 comments about Haiti and other nations. As Breitbart News reported, Sotomayor told Sauer from the bench:
"Now, we have a president saying, at one point, that Haiti is a 'filthy, dirty, and disgusting s-hole country,' and that he complained that the United States takes people from such countries instead of people from Norway, Sweden, or Denmark, where he declared illegal immigrants, which he associated with TPS, as 'poisoning the blood of America.'"
She then invoked the Supreme Court's own Arlington Heights framework, a legal test used to determine whether a government action was motivated by discriminatory intent, and declared the connection plain:
"I don't see how that one statement is not a prime example of the Arlington example at work and showing that a discriminatory purpose may have played a part in this decision."
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson followed up by citing Trump's 2024 radio-show remarks about illegal immigrants who commit murder. In those comments, Trump said: "How about allowing people to come to an open border, 13,000 of which were murderers, many of them murdered far more than one person, and they're now happily living in the United States." He added: "You know, now a murderer, I believe this, it's in their genes. And we've got a lot of bad genes in our country right now."
Jackson, as the Washington Examiner reported, pressed Sauer on whether the administration's position required an "actual racial epithet" before courts could examine broader context. "The position of the United States is that we have to have an actual racial epithet, that we aren't allowed to look at all the context," Jackson said.
The administration countered that Trump's comments referred to issues such as crime, poverty, and welfare, not race. That distinction matters legally. But Sotomayor and Jackson appeared uninterested in drawing it.
The stakes are not abstract. The New York Post reported that the cases involve TPS protections for more than 6,000 Syrians and roughly 350,000 Haitians. Those are not small populations. They represent a significant share of the foreign nationals living in the United States under a program originally designed to offer short-term shelter from natural disasters or armed conflict, not permanent residency.
TPS was never meant to be a pathway to indefinite residence. The statute gives the executive branch authority to designate countries for temporary protection and to end those designations when conditions change. Yet successive administrations, particularly under Presidents Obama and Biden, renewed TPS for Haiti again and again, turning "temporary" into something that looked a lot more permanent.
The Trump administration's decision to finally end TPS for Haiti and Syria was a straightforward exercise of that statutory authority. Sotomayor's argument does not challenge the legal power itself. Instead, it attempts to nullify the exercise of that power by mining the president's public statements for evidence of bad motive. That is a remarkable standard, one that would allow courts to block virtually any executive action if a judge found the president's past rhetoric objectionable.
Sotomayor has a pattern of clashing with the Trump administration at the high court. She has previously complained about the pace of emergency appeals the administration has brought to the Court, even as the justices have repeatedly ruled in Trump's favor on those very petitions.
For all the attention Sotomayor and Jackson drew with their questioning, the broader bench appeared far less persuaded. The Washington Examiner noted that most justices seemed inclined to let the administration proceed with ending TPS for both Haiti and Syria, with only limited judicial review of the decision.
That dynamic is worth pausing on. Two liberal justices spent significant oral-argument time constructing a discrimination theory built on political statements made years before the policy decision in question. Meanwhile, the rest of the Court appeared ready to recognize what the statute plainly says: the executive branch decides when temporary protection ends.
Trump himself has acknowledged that the current Supreme Court does not always rule in his favor. He has spoken publicly about expecting losses on certain issues, including birthright citizenship. But on TPS, the administration's legal footing is strong, and the Court's apparent posture reflects that.
The broader pattern of judicial resistance to Trump administration policies has played out across the federal bench. Lower courts have blocked executive action on everything from energy policy to immigration enforcement, often on grounds that stretch well beyond the statutory text. The TPS cases could give the Supreme Court a chance to rein in that tendency, or to entrench it.
Strip away the rhetoric, and Sotomayor's position amounts to this: a president's political speech, delivered outside the formal policy process, can serve as grounds to override a lawful executive decision, indefinitely. If a president once said something unflattering about a country, the government can never change policy toward nationals of that country without a court concluding the motive was discriminatory.
That is not a legal standard. It is a political veto dressed in constitutional clothing.
The Arlington Heights framework Sotomayor cited was designed to examine whether a specific government action was taken with discriminatory purpose. It was not designed to freeze executive authority in place because a president made impolitic remarks at a meeting or on a radio show years earlier. Applying it that way would mean no future president could end TPS for Haiti, or any country a prior president had spoken about in unflattering terms, without surviving a discrimination challenge. The practical effect would be to make "temporary" protection permanent by judicial decree.
The composition of the Supreme Court itself remains a live political issue. Trump has signaled his readiness to fill future vacancies, and the ideological balance of the bench will shape how aggressively courts police executive immigration authority for years to come.
The administration, through Sauer, argued that the president's comments were about crime and public safety, not race. Whether one finds that persuasive or not, the legal question is whether courts should be in the business of psychoanalyzing presidential rhetoric to override statutory authority. Sotomayor clearly thinks they should.
Most of her colleagues, based on the tenor of Wednesday's arguments, appear to disagree.
The Court is expected to issue its ruling before the current term ends. If the majority sides with the administration, DHS will be free to proceed with ending TPS for Haitian and Syrian migrants, a move that would affect hundreds of thousands of people and mark a significant victory for the principle that "temporary" means temporary.
If the Court adopts Sotomayor's reasoning, it will have created a new and potent tool for blocking executive immigration decisions: the presidential-speech test. Any future administration seeking to tighten immigration policy would need to scrub the public record of every presidential utterance that could be characterized as hostile toward a particular nationality.
That is not how the law is supposed to work. Congress gave the executive branch the power to end TPS designations. The question before the Court is whether that power means anything, or whether a well-timed quote from a press conference can override it forever.
Temporary Protected Status was designed to be temporary. If the Supreme Court cannot enforce the plain meaning of that word, the program has become something Congress never authorized, and the American public never agreed to.
