Latest news with #PermanentSubcommitteeonInvestigations


New York Post
12-07-2025
- Politics
- New York Post
GOP senator subpoenas FBI for records related to Trump assassination attempt
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) subpoenaed the FBI on Friday for records related to assassination attempt against President Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, last July. Johnson, the chairman of the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, is demanding security camera footage that may show would-be assassin Thomas Matthew Crooks' movements prior to the shooting, as well as ballistics, bullet trajectory and drone analysis reports the bureau may have on file. Sen. Ron Johnson speaking to reporters at the Capitol on June 5, 2025. AP 'One year following the assassination attempt of President Trump, the American people still do not have answers to all of their questions about the breakdown of security at the Butler campaign rally and detailed information about the would-be assassin, Thomas Crooks,' Johnson said in a statement. Johnson is also looking to obtain records related to Crooks' social media and email accounts, his internet search history, and call logs. Donald Trump being escorted by Secret Service agents in Butler, Pa. on July 13, 2024. AFP via Getty Images 'I had expected the FBI to be more forthcoming with the public and provide my office with the records we have been seeking for months,' the senator said. 'I am issuing the subpoena to help prompt transparency and I look forward to [FBI Director Kash Patel's] full cooperation.'


Time of India
08-07-2025
- Health
- Time of India
COVID vaccine causing myocarditis epidemic? US' most published Cardiologist reveals chilling 'TRUTH'
The U.S. Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations held a crucial hearing titled "The Corruption of Science and Federal Health Agencies: How Health Officials Downplayed and Hid Myocarditis and Other Adverse Events Associated with the COVID-19 Vaccines." Top medical experts and legal voices testified, including Dr Peter McCullough, Dr Jordan Vaughn, Dr James Thorp, Dr Joel Wallskog, Attorney Aaron Siri and Hawaii Governor Josh Green. Dr McCullough presented findings from a large autopsy series, stating that in 73.9% of examined post-vaccine deaths, mRNA COVID vaccines were considered the likely cause, a claim that has sparked intense debate in the medical community. Show more Show less


Time of India
01-07-2025
- Health
- Time of India
COVID 19: 'Biden officials knew of COVID vax's health risks': Dr McCullough's chilling testimony at Senate - The Economic Times Video
On May 21, the U.S. Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations held a crucial hearing titled "The Corruption of Science and Federal Health Agencies: How Health Officials Downplayed and Hid Myocarditis and Other Adverse Events Associated with the COVID-19 Vaccines." Top medical experts and legal voices testified, including Dr. Peter McCullough, Dr. Jordan Vaughn, Dr. James Thorp, Dr. Joel Wallskog, Attorney Aaron Siri and Hawaii Governor Josh Green. Dr. McCullough presented findings from a large autopsy series, stating that in 73.9% of examined post-vaccine deaths, mRNA COVID vaccines were considered the likely cause—a claim that has sparked intense debate in the medical community.


Boston Globe
01-07-2025
- Politics
- Boston Globe
A lesson from RFK to Gov. Mills to run against Senator Collins
Advertisement Governor Janet Mills, on the other hand, has Mills, however, misses RFK's real lesson: The best way to change national policies is to seek national office like Kennedy did in 1964, when he challenged a middle-of-the-road US Senate incumbent much like Collins. So how about it, governor: Will you run against Collins next year if she continues to waffle about standing up to Trump? Crossing swords with the president is hardly easy, of course. Trump has demonstrated his readiness to eviscerate his opponents, even ones from his own party. But it wasn't easy for Smith to go up against McCarthy at the start of his red-baiting crusade in 1950, when no other Republican would. What's more, she was the Senate's only woman. It would be her proudest moment in the chamber, and one for which she would pay dearly. Advertisement On June 1, 1950, Smith It was a 15-minute act of sheer courage, one that McCarthy listened to silently from his desk two rows behind Smith's. The counterattack was as fast as it was furious. Columnist and McCarthy friend Westbrook Pegler derided Smith as 'a Moses in nylons' who 'took advantage … of her sex.' Others suggested that she and McCarthy had been romantically involved, or she'd wanted to be, and that the speech was personal revenge. McCarthy had the most belittling quip, dismissing Smith and the half-dozen Republican co-signatories to her Declaration of Conscience as 'Snow White and the Six Dwarfs.' His words were reinforced by splenetic action. Using his authority as ranking Republican, in 1951 he dumped Smith from the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations that he'd named her to, replacing her with the more hawklike Richard Nixon. Advertisement Kennedy's challenge in taking on Senator Kenneth Keating of New York was even more daunting. The silver-haired incumbent, a born and bred New Yorker, had won all seven elections he had contested. Kennedy, a carpetbagger from Massachusetts, sent a young aide across the state to assess his chances, and the news wasn't good: Keating would trounce Kennedy by 650,000 votes. Yet on Aug. 25, 1964, the US attorney general announced to New York and the world that he was running and meant to win. 'There may be some who believe that where a candidate voted in the past is more important than his capacity to serve the state,' Even with his family money and connections, it wasn't easy for RFK. Through early October it looked like he might lose, but that prospect propelled him to break out of his shell, let the public see his wit and spunk and focus on issues that mattered, like ending poverty and the war in Vietnam. In the end he won by 719,693 votes, the biggest margin a New York Democrat had managed, for senator or governor, since 1934. Are you listening, Governor Mills? At 77, and after 35 years of public service, you might be too tired to run for Senate even if it would help your fellow Democrats retake that chamber and restrain the president. But as you recently wrote in a Globe Opinion essay, channeling RFK's call to arms 60 years earlier, 'Each of us can send forth that tiny ripple of hope; we can restore the rule of law, we can revive our rights, recharge our nation, and rewrite the history of our world.' Advertisement


Time of India
13-06-2025
- Health
- Time of India
'74% of COVID deaths linked to mRNA vaccines': Dr. McCullough stuns Senate in explosive testimony
On May 21, the US Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations held a powerful hearing titled: "The Corruption of Science and Federal Health Agencies." The session spotlighted testimonies from top medical professionals and legal experts who raised serious concerns about the safety of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. Show more Show less