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Trump touts 'professional' Pentagon briefing as administration pledges to charge leaker

Trump touts 'professional' Pentagon briefing as administration pledges to charge leaker

Fox News26-06-2025
All times eastern Making Money with Charles Payne FOX News Radio Live Channel Coverage WATCH LIVE: State Department holds briefing amid increased threat to Americans overseas
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Trump, Noem blame NYC border patrol agent shooting on sanctuary city policy, bail reform
Trump, Noem blame NYC border patrol agent shooting on sanctuary city policy, bail reform

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump, Noem blame NYC border patrol agent shooting on sanctuary city policy, bail reform

NEW YORK — President Donald Trump and his administration Monday sought to use the shooting of an off-duty Customs and Border Patrol agent in a Washington Heights park to bolster his hard-line stance on crime and immigration. As officials charged Miguel Mora Nunez, 21, an undocumented Dominican immigrant with a long rap sheet, Trump blamed the botched robbery on what he called New York's bail reform laws. He denounced 'cashless bail' and blamed the practice for setting 'the worst criminals flooding on our streets.' 'Crime in American cities started to significantly rise when they went to cashless bail,' he wrote on his social media site. 'It is a complete disaster, and must be ended, immediately.' Contrary to Trump's claim, big-city crime has been declining for several years since a COVID pandemic-era spike and is close to multidecade lows. Although Trump didn't specifically mention the Saturday night Washington Heights shooting in his latest post, he earlier called the attack an indictment of lax border enforcement policies. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem took dead aim at immigration in a Manhattan news conference about the shooting, which left the unidentified 42-year-old victim recovering from gunshot wounds. 'There is absolutely zero reason that someone who is scum of the earth like this should be running loose on the streets of New York City,' Noem said. Noem blamed New York's immigrant-friendly sanctuary city policies with allowing Mora to stay out of jail and avoid potential deportation despite his repeated brushes with law enforcement. She called on Mayor Eric Adams and the City Council to reverse the sanctuary city policies, which restrict city police and law enforcement from fully cooperating with federal immigration authorities. 'Make no mistake, this officer is in the hospital today, fighting for his life, because of the policies of the mayor of the city and the City Council and the people that were in charge of keeping the public safe refused to do so,' she added. Border czar Tom Homan said the shooting illustrates the danger facing immigration enforcement agents, even though authorities say there is no evidence the attacker knew the victim was an off-duty border patrol agent. 'Thank God we're not burying one today,' Homan said. Mora, who was born in the Dominican Republic, entered the country illegally through Arizona in 2023, authorities said. He had two prior arrests for domestic violence in New York and was also wanted to face accusations of robbery and felony assault. He was also wanted in Massachusetts over a stolen weapons case, NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said. A second man, said to be a 22-year-old friend of Mora from the Bronx, was arrested in connection with the attack Monday. _____

Nick Offerman Was So Upset About This "Huge Mistake" Trump Made That He Stopped By "The Daily Show" To Give An Emotional Speech
Nick Offerman Was So Upset About This "Huge Mistake" Trump Made That He Stopped By "The Daily Show" To Give An Emotional Speech

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Nick Offerman Was So Upset About This "Huge Mistake" Trump Made That He Stopped By "The Daily Show" To Give An Emotional Speech

Nick Offerman has called out President Donald Trump after his 'big, beautiful bill' — which he signed into law earlier this month — slashed hundreds of millions of dollars in funding to America's national parks. Related: 'Let me get this straight, Mr. President. You cut $267 million to get back $90 million. Now, I'm no mathematician but I believe that's called shitting the bed,' said Offerman in an appearance on Tuesday's episode of The Daily Show. 'But then again, I didn't go to Wharton Business College.' The Parks & Recreation star — who portrayed libertarian official Ron Swanson — turned to several news reports detailing how America's 'pastoral gifts' are 'under attack' as staffing levels have seen a notable dip across the National Park System since January, per the National Parks Conservation Association. One clip noted that park scientists, in some cases, have been forced to help clean toilets due to staffing shortages. Related: Offerman — who quipped that the situation is like "Good Will Hunting but in reverse" — stressed that the cuts are a 'huge mistake.' 'No scientist has the strength to clean the skid marks of a man who's been eating beans and campfire hot dogs for the past three days! They're weak,' he joked. Related: He went on to refer to Trump 'shaking down foreigners' after he issued an executive order earlier this month that calls for foreign tourists to face higher park entry fees, a move that the administration expects to generate more than $90 million annually. After highlighting how national parks contributed a record $55.6 billion to the U.S. economy and supported over 415,000 jobs just two years ago, Offerman explained why the parks are a 'true miracle.' 'It is an affordable vacation that everyone can take inside our own borders, whether you're traveling with your family or abandoning your constituents during a crisis,' quipped the actor as a photo of Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) amid his Cancun controversy appeared on screen. Offerman, who recently revealed why Ron Swanson would've 'despised' Trump, then mocked the president for speaking so 'fondly' of national parks in years past. Related: He turned to a 2020 clip of Trump who, when referencing sequoia trees at Yosemite National Park, appeared to pronounce the park's name as 'yo-semites.' 'It's Yosemite,' Offerman remarked. ''Yo, Semites,' is what a bad undercover cop might say to a group of Hasidic Jews.' Watch Nick on The Daily Show below: This article originally appeared on HuffPost. Also in In the News: Also in In the News: Also in In the News:

Sources: Memphis proposing lucrative offer to join Big 12, but it lacks support from conference leadership
Sources: Memphis proposing lucrative offer to join Big 12, but it lacks support from conference leadership

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Sources: Memphis proposing lucrative offer to join Big 12, but it lacks support from conference leadership

Memphis has proposed to the Big 12 a lucrative membership proposal — a serious enough endeavor that league presidents met Monday about the offer — but the proposition is not believed to have the necessary support, for now. The proposal from Memphis — one of the most aggressive membership propositions in college athletics history — features hundreds of millions of dollars in sponsorship commitments to the Big 12 from UM-affiliated corporate partners, as well as the school eschewing revenue distribution from the league for at least five years. Multiple sources spoke to Yahoo Sports under condition of anonymity about the proposal, which is the latest and most serious chapter in the school's effort to move out of the American and into one of the four power leagues. This particular effort began more than a year ago. Memphis president Bill Hardgrave has spent at least 14 months visiting with the presidents and top athletic administrators of many Big 12 schools in individual, on-campus meetings that have culminated in a membership offer to the league that is expected to be as high as $200 million over the next five years. Big 12 officials are in the midst of exploring the proposal, but league-wide support is not there, multiple conference officials told Yahoo Sports.. Any expansion move needs the support of a super majority of the league's presidents and chancellors, or 12 of the 16. A more finalized copy of the Memphis proposal was disseminated among conference athletic administrators in the last few days. Over the last 18 months, the conference seriously explored two expansion proposals, from Gonzaga and UConn, only for each to fail to gain the necessary support. This effort is much more lucrative, but hurdles remain. 'I'm not certain it has enough support,' one Big 12 leader told Yahoo Sports over the weekend. 'We vetted Memphis when we added the other four (Cincinnati, UCF, Houston and BYU) and chose not to add them,' said another Big 12 administrator. 'What's changed now?' However, the proposal was attractive enough to garner weeks of exploration from the conference. It comes at a financially stressful time as Big 12 leaders work to compete against the Big Ten and SEC, both with more lucrative television contracts and revenue distributions. The timing is important. On July 1, college athletics launched into a new era in which schools can directly compensate athletes in a capped revenue-sharing system. The industry has never been in a more money-hungry time. Already, Big 12 schools are receiving roughly $1 million in additional revenue from a sponsorship with PayPal. Memphis' proposal would have increased that by at least $2 million with sponsorship commitments from UM partners. The school is notoriously aligned with partners such as FedEx, Lowe's and AutoZone. Memphis' proposal is described as a 'no-risk' concept, according to some in the Big 12, and it also sets a standard, perhaps, of expansion fees to enter a league. The school would (1) take zero distribution for the final five years of the league's new television deal with ESPN and FOX; (2) add the sponsorships in excess of $150 million over five years; and (3) subject itself to expulsion after 2030-31 if Big 12 deems it is not adding value. The sizable offer represents a historic moment in college sports of a school quite literally purchasing their way into a conference — a move that further expounds upon a precedent set by SMU's entrance into the ACC. While SMU agreed to take no league revenue for a stretch of time in the ACC, the school did not arrange millions in sponsorships for the league. The pricy nature of Memphis' offer speaks to its unwavering desire to elevate to a power conference — something the program attempted to do years ago with the ACC. Under Hardgrave and new athletic director Ed Scott, the school has increased investment significantly over the last several years, with financial help from sponsors like FedEx and Lowe's. In fact, with a massive gift from FedEx coming, the UM officials expect to share the full $20.5 million in rev-share with athletes by next year, they have told Big 12 leaders. Any move out of the American would come with another steep price tag. The American exit fee is expected to be at least $25 million - a similar fee that SMU paid the conference upon its departure last year.

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