Farrah Abraham is ‘seeking justice’ and has ‘legal counsel’ after she claims she was expelled from school over her support of Charlie Kirk.
Farrah Abraham is ‘seeking justice’ and has ‘legal counsel’ after she claims she was expelled from school over her support of Charlie Kirk.
(The Center Square) As Colorado’s prison population has declined over the past few years, the state has seen an increase in violent crime. This is according to a report released this week by the Common Sense Institute of Colorado, titled “The Reform Paradox.” The report stated that criminal justice reforms have “swung too far in one direction.” [.].
Former special counsel Jack Smith is calling Republicans’ bluff, turning the tables Thursday by requesting to testify publicly in open hearings before the House and Senate Judiciary Committees. Smith’s attorneys made the request this week in a letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA). “As described by various Senators, the toll data collection was narrowly tailored and limited to the four days from January 4, 2021 to January 7, 2021, with a focus on telephonic activity during the period immediately surrounding the January 6 riots at the U. S. Capitol,” Smith’s lawyers wrote. Grassley has accused Smith of improperly spying on Republican lawmakers during the Department of Justice investigation and prosecution of President Donald Trump.”I think it’s important that he’s speaking up in a way to kind of demystify what has been grossly misrepresented to the American people by the senators,” former FBI Deputy Director and CNN senior law enforcement analyst Andrew McCabe said Thursday on CNN’s The Arena with anchor Kasie Hunt. “In that testimony we saw a few weeks ago, as you mentioned, Kasie, toll records are a very rudimentary kind of first step investigative technique in many, many, many, almost all investigations,” McCabe explained. “And it’s typically done early in an investigation when you have an allegation and you’re trying to determine you’re trying to vet an allegation to even see if there’s something worth investigating. So if someone comes to you, let’s say a situation like this, if someone makes an allegation that they have information that the president contacted a particular senator in the process of trying to stall the Congress’s work on certifying the election, one way to vet that information would be to get toll records, to see if there was actually telephonic contact between those people.” Smith’s public testimony could shed light and clarify what happened in the investigation and the methods behind it, he said. “And after you’ve proved that if there’s no contact, then you know, not to go down that investigative avenue. If there is contact, then there are, of course, more techniques that you can use to get to the bottom of it,” McCabe added. “I should also say that it takes a grand jury subpoena to acquire those records. This is not something that a prosecutor, an FBI agent, just dream up off the top of their heads and, you know, call up the phone company and say, ‘Hey, send us everything you have.’ This is a there is a process. These records are accessed lawfully under the purview of the grand jury. So it’s as I said, I think it was grossly misrepresented in that hearing.”.
Sen. Deb Fischer has some “deep concerns” over Trump’s plan to import Argentine beef to lower costs for Americans. (It won’t, but Trump will pretend it will.) Since Fischer is beholden to the agribusiness sector (just behind AIPAC and Finance/Real Estate among donors), it was a given that she’d be against this move. What is slightly unusual is how vocal she is in her opposition. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee, says she has “deep concerns” over the Trump administration’s plan to import Argentine beef to bring prices down in the U. S. something that has sparked an angry backlash from American ranchers. “Since hearing the president’s comments suggesting the U. S. would buy beef from Argentina, I’ve been in touch with his administration and my colleagues to seek clarity and express my deep concerns,” Fischer wrote Tuesday in a social media post. “Bottom line: if the goal is addressing beef prices at the grocery store, this isn’t the way,” she argued. “Right now, government intervention in the beef market will hurt our cattle ranchers.” Fischer added that the U. S. has “safe, reliable beef” and warned “Nebraska’s ranchers cannot afford to have the rug pulled out from under them when they’re just getting ahead or simply breaking even.”read more.
Does the UN need to be run like a business? IKEA CEO Jesper Brodin may get the chance
One of the bigger topics in the NFL this year that’s not going anywhere any time soon is the mess that is the Miami Dolphins. Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa and head coach Mike McDaniel are currently a headlining duet Tua Wrongs Don’t Make a Right on the 2025 Test Stephen’s Patience Tour. You should [.] The post NFL Insider Says Changes are Coming to Miami Dolphins appeared first on Heavy Sports.
Republican senators hope that President Trump can step in and help end the 22-day government shutdown by beginning talks with Democrats on enhanced health insurance premiums, which would give Democrats confidence about having a path to an eventual deal. Several Republican senators say it would be helpful if Trump were to become more involved in…
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has rattled academia and legal experts with his open declaration that his state is “targeting professors” over their personal beliefs. While Republican governors have increasingly seen classrooms as ideological battlegrounds, Abbott’s stated position that a Texas educator should have lost his job over “ideological differences” is raising greater concern among […]
King Charles exploded in frustration, wishing Prince Andrew would drop his title and disappear, according to sources.
A new display honors a historic time in South Florida. The City of Miami unveiled a new mural that pays tribute to the more than.