New court filings reveal that the Trump administration is threatening to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Uganda โ a move his attorneys describe as coercive. Abrego, a Salvadoran man mistakenly deported to El Salvador earlier this year, declined a plea deal tied to human smuggling charges. In response, prosecutors withdrew an offer that would have allowed him to enter Costa Rica โ a safe, Spanish-speaking country where he’d face no detention after serving time โ and instead pursued deportation to Uganda.
His attorneys argue immigration authorities are essentially offering a forced choice: accept guilt and a path to Costa Rica, or refuse and risk being sent to Uganda, where his safety โ and legal protections โ are uncertain at best.
Federal prosecutors on Thursday offered Abrego Garcia the option to โlive freelyโ with refugee or residency status in Costa Rica after serving prison time forย federal human smuggling chargesย in exchange for a guilty plea, per his lawyers in the Saturday filings.
Abrego Garcia, who wasย mistakenly deportedย to a notorious prison in his native El Salvador, declined the offer on Fridayย to instead returnย to his family in Maryland. He had been imprisoned in a Tennessee jail.
After his return to Maryland, Abrego Garciaโs attorneys were notified later in the day that he must report to an Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) field office in Baltimore on Monday โ and that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) intends to deport him to Uganda.
…
โThe only thing that happened between ThursdayโCosta Ricaโand FridayโUgandaโ was Mr. Abregoโs exercise of his legal entitlement to release under the Bail Reform Act and the Fifth Amendmentโฆ,โ Abrego Garciaโs defense team wrote.
Saturday’s revelations mark a significant escalation, as Uganda recently entered into a U.S. agreement to accept third-country deporteesโ but explicitly excluding individuals with criminal records or unaccompanied minors. Abregoโs legal team contends that his criminal charges make such deportation both inappropriate and potentially dangerous.
By David Shankbone - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3937757
TV personality Rosie OโDonnell is appealing for prayers as her daughter Chelsea faces what she calls a โscary future.โ
OโDonnell posted on Instagram: โMy child Chelsea Belle โ before addiction took over her life โ I loved her then, I love her now as she faces a scary future โ prayers welcomed. #addiction awareness #love #family.โ
According to court documents reviewed by Fox News Digital, Chelsea had her probation revoked on October 22 and was sentenced to serve time in prison.
In a written statement, OโDonnell said, โI have compassion for those struggling with addiction โ Chelsea was born into addiction and it has been a painful journey for her and her four young children. We continue to love and support her through these horrible times. Prayers welcomed.โ
Last year, authorities charged Chelsea with two counts of felony possession of methamphetamine and felony possession of narcotic drugs, along with two counts of possession/illegally obtaining prescription drugs and resisting or obstructing an officer. Her arrest followed a traffic stop in Niagara, Wisconsin, where officers pulled over a vehicle for loud exhaust โ they recovered a clear smoking device on Chelseaโs person that tested positive for methamphetamine, and a prescription pill bottle containing a handful of pills and a crystal-like substance was found in her possession. At the time, Chelsea was out on bond for separate charges including child neglect and drug possession.
OโDonnellโs Instagram post on December 3 responding to Chelseaโs earlier arrest read: โSo yes this is true โ after being bailed out by her birth mother โ Chelsea was arrested again โ and is facing many charges related to her drug addiction โ we all hope she is able to get the help she needs to turn her life around.โ
Bring in the Trump context
Itโs worth noting that Rosie OโDonnell has for years been a vocal critic of Donald Trump, and the public feud between them has become almost legendary. Back in December 2006, while hosting the daytime talk show The View, OโDonnell called Trump out over his handling of the Miss USA controversy and mocked him as no moral authority for young people โ saying, โThis is not a self-made manโฆ left the first wife, had an affair, left the second wife, had an affairโฆโ People.com+2The List+2
Trump responded with scorn, calling OโDonnell โa woman out of controlโ and a โloser,โ threatening legal action though he never followed through. People.com+1 Over the years he repeatedly used her name as a punchline โ during the 2016 Republican primary debate when asked about his language toward women he quipped, โOnly Rosie OโDonnell.โ The New Daily+1
In recent years their feud escalated further: After OโDonnell announced she had moved to Ireland following Trumpโs second inauguration (January 2025), Trump publicly floated the idea of revoking her U.S. citizenship, calling her โa Threat to Humanityโ and saying โshe should remain in the wonderful country of Ireland, if they want her.โ
Former Rep.ย George Santosย (R-N.Y.), whoย faces more than seven yearsย behind bars afterย pleading guiltyย to wire fraud and identity theft, is seeking clemency from President Trump.
โIโll take a commutation, clemency, whatever the president is willing to give me,โ Santos told British media personality Piers Morgan in an episode of Morganโs YouTube show โUncensoredโ on Thursday.
โSeven years and three months in prison for a first-time offender over campaign matters just screams โover the top,โ and I would appreciate if the president would consider,โ he added.
Theย disgraced former lawmakerย also noted he is filling out paperwork to formally seek intervention from the White House before he reports to prison in July.
By U.S. House Office of Photography – https://santos.house.gov/sites/evo-subsites/santos.house.gov/files/evo-media-image/rep_santos_george_official.jpg, Public Domain,
In his interview with Morgan, Santos blasted former Biden administration Attorney General Merrick Garland, whom Trump and other conservative alliesย have criticizedย and accused of weaponizing the Department of Justice against the president and his allies.
โI do believe this is an unfair judgment handed down to me,โ he said Thursday. โI think there was a lot of politicization over the process.โ
โMerrick Garlandย was by far the most disgraceful and disgraced political [attorney general] to ever serve in that capacity of the United States,โ Santos said.
Santos was elected to represent New Yorkโs affluent Long Island-centered 3rd District in 2022, becoming the first openly gay Republican to win a House seat as a nonincumbent before his fall from grace.ย The Houseย expelled Santosย from the chamber in a 311โ114 vote in 2023, as ethics charges mounted against him.
A former Democrat candidate for the Virginia legislature, whose X-rated movies with her husband were exposed before the election, was charged with domestic violence this week.
Susanna Gibson Payne, 42, was arrested on September 22 for โassault and batteryโ against a family member. Payne claimed that her husband, 44-year-oldย John David Gibson, has been harassing her amid their divorce since last year.
โAfter my estranged husband, arrested three times since I filed for divorce, assaulted me during a June 2025 custody exchange while I protected our son, he filed a retaliatory criminal complaint against me,โ she said.
After my estranged husband, arrested three times since I filed for divorce, assaulted me during a June 2025 custody exchange while I protected our son, he filed a retaliatory criminal complaint against me.
Payne said she turned herself in after a misdemeanor warrant was issued.
The Democratโs husband denied ever assaulting his wife. Mediaite reported that Gibson was arrested in December for violating a protection order and using threatening language with his wife. He said the incident stemmed from a tense argument with his wifeโs new boyfriend.
Payneย and Gibson grabbed headlines in 2023 when Payne was running for office, and videos the couple hadย postedย on the porn site Chaturbate were discovered and exposed.
The couple was accused of making the videos for โtips,โ though they denied that the videos were for profit. At the time, Payne said she was determined to stay in the race.
โMy political opponents and their Republican allies have proven theyโre willing to commit a sex crime to attack me and my family because thereโs no line they wonโt cross to silence women when they speak up,โ she said.
Iโm a private citizen and domestic violence survivor navigating a system that too often punishes those who seek safety.
President Donald Trumpโs controversial settlement with the IRS is drawing mounting criticism after reports revealed the agreement may shield Trump, his family, and affiliated business entities from certain future tax scrutiny while dramatically expanding the administrationโs new โAnti-Weaponization Fund.โ
According to multiple reports, the Justice Department quietly added language to the deal that would permanently bar the IRS from pursuing certain examinations involving Trump family tax filings submitted before the agreement was finalized. The protections reportedly extend beyond Trump himself to related family members, trusts, businesses, and affiliated entities.
The additional language surfaced after Trump agreed to withdraw his $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS over the disclosure of his tax returns. In return, the administration established an approximately $1.8 billion โAnti-Weaponization Fundโ designed to compensate people who claim they were targeted through politically motivated government actions.
As Politicoreported, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche approved the broad addendum โ a move that appears aimed at ending Trumpโs long-running conflicts with the IRS.
But questions surrounding the agreement have quickly followed.
The document reportedly does not include signatures from any IRS official or any attorney currently representing Trump. Metadata embedded in the file indicates it was created or scanned at roughly 7:50 a.m. Tuesday.
Blanche also was not among the officials who signed the original settlement agreement, which instead included signatures from Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward, IRS CEO Frank Bisignano, and Trump attorney Daniel Epstein.
The Justice Department did not immediately explain why the new waiver language was absent from the agreement publicly released earlier or why different signatories appear on the updated document.
Former IRS officials are warning the arrangement could establish a major precedent.
John Koskinen, IRS commissioner from 2013 through 2017, argued that exempting a sitting president from future scrutiny raises significant concerns.
โIt makes you wonder what the President has to hide in those tax returns,โ Koskinen said in a statement. โNot auditing his returns is the same as giving him an easy way to, in effect, receive money from the government.โ
Danny Werfel, who served as IRS commissioner from 2023 to 2025, said he was unaware of any precedent in which the IRS had โagreed in advance to permanently forgo examination of previously filed tax returns for a specific person or business.โ
Critics say the controversy extends beyond tax policy itself. Because Trump reached the agreement while leading the executive branch, opponents argue he was effectively negotiating with agencies operating under his own administration โ a dynamic they say creates an extraordinary appearance of conflict.
Some opponents have also described the new Anti-Weaponization Fund as a taxpayer-funded โslush fundโ that could disproportionately benefit Trump allies and politically connected figures.
The administration has defended the settlement as a lawful response to improper disclosures of confidential taxpayer information and broader allegations that federal agencies had been politically weaponized. Legal analysts, however, continue debating whether portions of the agreement โ particularly the reported audit restrictions โ could face future constitutional or legal challenges.
Authorities arrested a government employee in Virginia on Thursday over accusations he shared classified information with an officer or agent of a foreign government.
Nathan Vilas Laatsch, a 28-year-old IT specialist employed by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) since 2019, has been arrested and charged with attempting to transmit classified national defense information to a foreign government, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
Laatsch, who held a Top Secret security clearance and worked in the DIA’s Insider Threat Division, was apprehended in northern Virginia after an undercover FBI operation. The investigation after the FBI received a tip that someone was offering to provide classified information to a friendly foreign government. Subsequent communications revealed that Laatsch expressed ideological disagreements with the current U.S. administration and a willingness to share sensitive materials.
Over several weeks, Laatsch engaged with an FBI agent posing as a foreign government representative. He allegedly transcribed classified information onto a notepad and, on May 1, deposited a thumb drive containing documents marked as Secret and Top Secret at a prearranged location in a northern Virginia park. The drive also included a message indicating his intent to provide a sample of the information he could access.
Following the initial drop, Laatsch communicated his desire for citizenship in the foreign country, citing concerns about the long-term trajectory of the United States. He also indicated openness to other forms of compensation. Between May 15 and May 27, he continued to transcribe and remove classified information, concealing notes in his clothing. On May 29, at another prearranged drop-off, Laatsch was arrested by the FBI upon delivering additional classified materials.
FBI Director Kash Patel emphasized the persistent risk of insider threats, stating, “The FBI remains steadfast in protecting our national security and thanks our law enforcement partners for their critical support.”
Laatsch is scheduled to appear in court in Alexandria, Virginia on Friday.
On Tuesday morning, President Donald Trump accused former impeachment leader Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif) of committing mortgage fraud.
โI have always suspected Shifty Adam Shiff (sic) was a scam artist,โ Trump wrote. He then claimed that Fannie Maeโs Financial Crimes Division had determined that Schiff had improperly declared a Maryland home as his primary residence to secure better mortgage terms, despite representing California in Congress.
โAdam Schiff said that his primary residence was in MARYLAND to get a cheaper mortgage and rip off America, when he must LIVE in CALIFORNIA,โ Trump alleged, before outlining what he described as a fraudulent timeline beginning in 2009 and ending in 2020.
According to Trumpโs post, the alleged โfraudโ began on February 6, 2009, with the refinancing of a property in Maryland, and continued โthrough multiple transactionsโ until October 13, 2020, when the property was finally โcorrectly designated as a second home.โ He concluded the post with a familiar refrain: โCrooked Adam Schiff (now a Senator) needs to be brought to justice.โ
As of Tuesday morning, no independent confirmation of such an investigation has been reported.
Schiffโs ownership of the Maryland property was reported on during his Senate campaign by CNN, which at the time reported that the then-House member wasnโt likely to face any legal repercussions because the law at issue is ambiguous when it comes to the definition of a primary residence.
However, Schiffโs spokesperson during the campaign and his current press secretary, told CNN last year that he has claimed both his properties as primary residences for mortgage purposes โbecause they are both occupied throughout the year and to distinguish them from a vacation property.โ
The animosity between Trump and Schiff has been swirling for year and dates back to at least 2017, when the California lawmaker emerged as one of Trumpโs most vocal critics during the House Intelligence Committeeโs investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Schiff later served as the lead impeachment manager during Trumpโs first impeachment trial in 2020, drawing attacks from the former president, who routinely referred to him as “Pencil Neck” and โShifty Schiff.โ
Deputies in Los Angeles stopped what could have turned into a far more dangerous situation near a Trump-owned golf course.
Authorities arrested a 36-year-old Arizona man after he was spotted running through traffic near Trump National Golf Course in Rancho Palos Verdes while armed with multiple weapons, including a loaded rifle painted to resemble a toy.
According to the Los Angeles County Sheriffโs Department, the suspect โ identified as Sean Steiner of Glendale, Arizona โ had been seen earlier hiking in the area with a duffel bag, step stool, and rifle before entering traffic along Palos Verdes Drive South around 5 p.m. on March 29.
When deputies arrived, they found the rifle had been painted green and purple and marked with the phrases โHA HA HA HAโ and โWhy so serious?โ โ a reference to the Joker character from Batman. The tip had also been painted orange, โresembling a toy gun,โ according to authorities.
What may have looked theatrical was anything but harmless.
โNot only was the rifle loaded with a round in the chamber and a full magazine insertedโฆ he admitted he had just fired one of the pistols near the landslide area to โget some anger out,โโ the sheriffโs Lomita Station said in a statement.
Deputies also discovered two loaded handguns, high-capacity magazines, and additional ammunition. Steiner was wearing a ballistic vest capable of stopping rifle rounds.
โLet that sink in,โ authorities wrote. โAn armed individual, firing a weapon, walking through traffic and trailsโฆ in a populated area.โ
Sean Steiner, right, is accused of multiple firearm-related felonies after Los Angeles deputies say they arrested him near a Trump-owned golf course with a semiautomatic rifle painted to look like a toy. He is also accused of firing a handgun in the brush nearby before running into traffic. (Lomita Sheriff’s Station via Fox News)
The situation underscores how quickly a volatile scenario can escalate โ and how critical early reporting can be. Officials credited witnesses who called in the suspicious behavior before anyone was injured, emphasizing the importance of the public safety mantra: โif you see something, say something.โ
Steiner now faces multiple felony firearm charges. He was booked March 29 and released on bond April 1.
While investigators say Steiner had little prior criminal history beyond minor offenses, the incident raises broader concerns about armed individuals near high-profile locations โ particularly those associated with President Donald Trump.
It also echoes another alarming case: Ryan Routh, who was previously arrested after allegedly hiding in bushes near a Trump golf course while armed. That case, like this one, highlighted the persistent security risks surrounding prominent political figures and the critical role of vigilant law enforcement.
Former Congressman Madison Cawthorn was briefly arrested this week in Cape Coral, Florida โ yet the setback may not slow what many believe is a mounting effort to reenter national politics.
Authorities took Cawthorn into custody on a warrant stemming from an August 19 citation for driving without a valid license in Naples. He was released shortly thereafter on a $2,000 bond and is expected to appear in court to resolve the matter. Supporters have dismissed the incident as a minor technicality, unlikely to derail his ambitions.
From Conservative Trailblazer to Political Lightning Rod
Cawthorn burst onto the national stage in 2020 as one of the youngest Republicans ever elected to Congress, winning his North Carolina seat at just 25 years old. He quickly became a symbol of youthful conservative energy and unapologetic defiance of the Washington establishment.
But his meteoric rise ran into turbulence during his lone term. In early 2022, he alleged that some D.C. elites had invited him to a cocaine-fueled โorgy,โ a claim that drew sharp criticism from GOP leadership. Weeks later, police body camera footage showed him being pulled over while driving a car he mistakenly believed he owned, and he was also cited for bringing a firearm through airport security โ his second such incident in less than a year.
Republican leadership, once supportive, gradually distanced themselves. The controversies overshadowed his legislative work and contributed to his loss in the 2022 Republican primary.
Florida Could Offer a Second Act
Now, Cawthorn may be plotting a political revival โ this time from Floridaโs 19th Congressional District, where Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) is expected to step down to run for governor. Axios recently reported that Cawthorn has been exploring a run to fill the soon-to-be-open seat, potentially offering him a clean slate and new political base in one of the countryโs most Republican-leaning regions.
If he enters the race, Cawthorn could return to Washington older, more seasoned, and still armed with the anti-establishment instincts that made him a grassroots favorite. For many conservatives, his resilience โ and willingness to challenge entrenched power โ could be the very qualities the GOP needs in its next generation of leadership. for the second time in nine months.
David B. Gleason from Chicago, IL, CC BY-SA 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
President Trumpโs Cabinet is scheduled to meet at 11:30 a.m. today, with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth expected to face fresh questions over allegations that he helped direct โ or enabled โ a follow-up U.S. strike that killed survivors of an earlier attack on an alleged drug-smuggling boat in the Caribbean.
The controversy reignited after The Washington Post reported Friday that Hegseth verbally ordered that a Sept. 2 attack โkill everyoneโ on board a vessel the administration has described as a narcotics-smuggling threat. The report also said a second strike was carried out to eliminate people who survived the first hit โ a claim that has fueled bipartisan demands for oversight and raised the specter of potential war-crimes exposure if investigators conclude the targets no longer posed an imminent threat.
By Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America – Pete Hegseth, CC BY-SA 2.0
White House: strike was lawful โ and โin self-defenseโ
The Pentagon has pushed back on key elements of the reporting. But at the White House briefing Monday, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt did not deny that a follow-up strike occurred. Instead, she framed the Sept. 2 operation as lawful and defensive, saying it was conducted โin self-defenseโ in international waters and โin accordance with the law of armed conflict.โ
Leavitt said: “On September 2nd, Secretary Hegseth authorized Admiral Bradley to conduct these kinetic strikes,” adding: “Admiral Bradley worked well within his authority and the law, directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated.”
Pressed on whether the admiral ordered a second strike because survivors remained after the first, Leavitt declined to discuss operational specifics โ while emphasizing the admiralโs discretion. She also disputed the most incendiary allegation about Hegsethโs initial guidance, saying: “I would reject that the secretary of War ever said that,” before adding: “However, the president has made it quite clear that if narco-terrorists, again, are trafficking illegal drugs toward the United States, he has the authority to kill them.”
Why lawmakers are calling it a possible war-crimes issue
The allegations matter not just politically, but legally. Under the law of armed conflict, the permissibility of using lethal force often turns on whether a person remains a legitimate military target โ for example, whether they pose an active threat or are otherwise directly participating in hostilities. If survivors were incapacitated and no longer threatening U.S. forces, critics argue a follow-up strike could violate established protections. That legal question is now central to the pressure campaign Congress is building around Hegseth and the Pentagonโs evidence.
The dispute has also exposed an ongoing split on Capitol Hill. Democrats โ and some Republicans โ have questioned both the proof that targeted boats were actually carrying drugs and the legal theory supporting repeated strikes without explicit congressional authorization.
Venezuela tensions raise the stakes for the meeting
The Cabinet session comes as U.S.-Venezuela tensions intensify, with the administration accusing President Nicolรกs Maduro of enabling drug trafficking. Reports indicate the White House is weighing broader options, and the strikes have become part of a larger argument about whether the U.S. is drifting toward a more direct confrontation.
Against that backdrop, todayโs meeting is expected to put Hegseth โin the hot seatโ internally as well as publicly: Cabinet gatherings are often where presidents and senior advisers test whether a controversy is containable โ or whether itโs beginning to endanger other priorities.
The โSignalโ scandal: why Hegseth is back under a familiar microscope
This is the most sustained scrutiny Hegseth has faced in months โ and it echoes the Signal scandal that shook the Pentagon earlier this year.
In late March and early April 2025, reporting revealed that senior national security officials were discussing impending military operations in a Signal group chat, an encrypted but commercial messaging app not intended for classified coordination. Coverage described officials sharing sensitive operational details tied to strikes against Houthi targets in Yemen, and the episode triggered alarms about both national security risk and records retention.
The controversy escalated when additional reporting described a second Signal chat that allegedly included Hegsethโs wife, brother, and others in his circle โ prompting the Pentagonโs watchdog to open a review into his Signal use and related compliance concerns.
Now, with allegations of a second strike and potential violations of the laws of war, critics argue the pattern is the same: discretion and aggressiveness first, oversight and guardrails later.