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Trump's DOJ should prepare for 'contempt hearings to start soon': legal analyst

During an appearance on MSNBC on Saturday morning, attorney Kimberly Atkins Stohr predicted Donald Trump's administration can expect to face contempt hearings after infuriating a federal judge again.

Speaking with "The Weekend" co-host Jonathan Capehart, Atkins Stohr cited a demand from U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland Judge Paula Xinis to provide her with information she has been asking for in the case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, giving the DOJ's lawyers one last week.

According to attorney Stohr, she sees trouble ahead for the DOJ.

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"What I am seeing from this, you know, now we're now that state secrets has entered the chat, this seems like someone at DOJ is going through a book and saying 'What possible defense? Okay, what have we done yet? Let's try state secrets.'"

"I mean, they seem to be throwing anything at the wall and seeing if it will stick in an effort to obstruct the orders from district court judges writ large," she added. "What I'm concerned about, beyond the safety of Mr. Abrego Garcia at this point, is the fact that when it comes to trial court judges, specifically the administration seems to just be saying we don't have to do what you say, you can't stop us, which is in itself part of the constitutional crisis, right?"

"The executive is supposed to abide by the judiciary," she elaborated. "But I think the increasingly lack of patience on the part of judges like Judge Xinis, on the part of the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, which just last night slapped the administration again, saying, 'We said what we said, stop deporting people without process. We're not going to say it again,' is really building up to a point that you're going to get a showdown and I'm expecting at least contempt hearings to start soon."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Challenging situation for Trump': Marjorie Taylor Greene may run for another major office

Despite officially pulling out of Georgia's Republican U.S. Senate primary this week, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) may still seek a higher office next year — and some Republicans believe President Donald Trump may feel the need to intervene.

Semafor reported Friday that Greene may throw her hat in the ring in next year's gubernatorial race in the Peach State, as current Republican Governor Brian Kemp is term-limited and will have to leave office at the end of next year. One unnamed Republican strategist told the outlet that this "could create a challenging situation for Trump," given that he was apparently involved in making sure she didn't follow through on her talk of running for Senate.

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GOP lawmakers warned 'their careers are in jeopardy' after angering Trump

House Republicans who have not been able to cobble together a budget bill that they can send to the floor for a vote are being warned by members of Donald Trump's inner circle that they will face his wrath in the coming week.

According to a report from Politico's Rachel Bade, the president is furious with the House Budget Committee for failing to reach an agreement on his "big beautiful" bill which led to a flurry of attacks from Trump on Truth Social as returned from his trip in the Middle East on Friday.

As the report noted, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is on the spot, pointing out, "This has mostly been Johnson’s problem to solve, and he and other GOP leaders have tried to be sensitive to not pulling Trump in too early to fix their problems."

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With Bade writing, "There’s an internal understanding that they need to do most of the cleanup on their own before calling dad and tattling on the naughty kids," one White House insider texted to Bade, "Republicans on the Hill need to figure their s--t out.”

“My assumption is Trump’s going to get involved — I don’t know what that looks like yet,” said one GOP aide with the report adding Trump is not going to "be happy" that he has to twist the arms of the balking GOP lawmakers who are kept him from coming home to a win for his administration.

As one Trump insider put it, "Voters gave them a once-in-a-generation opportunity to pass a good bill. And for those who vote against, they should know their careers are in jeopardy.”

You can read more here.

'Grotesque': South African-born cleric unloads 'holy anger' at Trump

The Reverend Nontombi Naomi Tutu torched the Trump administration in a blistering op-ed Friday that denounced a decision to fast-track refugee status for white South Africans – which she blasted as a “grotesque falsification” of what it means to seek refuge.

Tutu, a South African-born Episcopal priest in Atlanta, praised the church’s decision to cut ties with a federal refugee resettlement program rather than “elevated a lie that will affect refugee resettlement for years to come.”

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NRA asks Supreme Court to strike down Florida's post-Parkland gun law

The National Rifle Association (NRA) on Friday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear its challenge to Florida’s ban on firearm purchases by adults under 21. It’s the latest move by the gun-rights group in its four-year-battle to override the 2018 Florida law that bans 18-to-20-year-olds from purchasing long guns.

The full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit denied the legal challenge by the NRA in March, two years after a three-judge panel similarly ruled against the organization. The Florida Legislature passed and then-Gov. Rick Scott signed the law shortly after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland that killed 17 people.

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The Supreme Court has spoken — but Trump still refuses to bring deported man home

GREENBELT, MARYLAND — A federal judge said Friday the Trump administration has “pretty broadly” invoked the state secrets privilege to withhold information on its efforts — or, the judge indicated, a possible lack of effort — to return a wrongly deported Maryland man from a prison in El Salvador.

President Donald Trump’s administration moved last month to invoke the so-called state secrets privilege to shield information about its process to facilitate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia to the United States after a top immigration official admitted his removal to a prison in El Salvador was an “administrative error.”

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House GOP chair James Comer vows to probe Biden staffers: 'We think we've ID'd them'

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) on Friday ramped up his scrutiny over Joe Biden’s mental capabilities while in office, as he promised a new probe into the former president’s use of the auto pen.

“Joe Biden wasn’t capable of making decisions, he wasn’t coherent,” Comer said. “We want to find out who was making the decisions in the last nine months of the Biden White House.”

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Trump roasted after bizarre brag to Fox's Bret Baier: 'Need a dementia word salad decoder'

President Donald Trump made a bizarre claim during his interview with Fox News' Bret Baier released on Friday, regarding the value of the "deals" he has inked with Middle Eastern countries in his tour of the region.

“Think of it, this trip, I made 12 times the money that we're talking about," Trump told Baier. "I made that money in a few days. I've always been good with money. I make money. In four days, I made 12 times what we spent in Ukraine."

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Leaked Biden audio sends internet into frenzy as critics say that’s not the real scandal

Outrage erupted across social media Friday after Axios published newly obtained audio of former President Joe Biden appearing to struggle with memory lapses during a special counsel interview, which quickly triggered criticism of the outlet itself.

The audio, obtained by Axios, captures Biden occasionally slurring his words and losing his train of thought during questioning by special counsel Robert Hur, who infuriated the Biden White House when he concluded that the Democrat was “a well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

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Trump's 'wounded statement' proves he's hurting: legal expert

A former prosecutor said President Donald Trump's social media outburst shows the Supreme Court "wounded" him Friday.

The high court blocked Trump from moving forward with deporting Venezuelan migrants under a rarely used 1700s-era law known as the Alien Enemies Act. The court extended its previous order temporarily blocking Trump's administration from deporting dozens of Venezuelan men held in North Texas.

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ICE accused of faking 'alien harboring' allegations to snatch activists

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents lied to federal judges about the reasons they needed warrants to enter the homes of Columbia University students and arrest them, according to attorneys investigating the matter.

Per The Guardian, "a recently unsealed search warrant application shows that ICE told a judge it needed a warrant because the agency was investigating Columbia University for 'harboring aliens.'" However, according to the allegation, the warrant application was a "pretext" so they could "try to arrest two students, including one green card holder, in order to deport them."

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Trump team fiercely denies ordering analyst to 'rethink' intelligence that undermined him

The White House is lashing out at a New York Times report that a top Trump appointee ordered a career analyst to “rethink” findings that undercut Donald Trump’s use of wartime powers to deport Venezuelan migrants.

A political appointee to Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, ordered senior analyst Michael Collins to redo a classified assessment surrounding the notorious Tren de Aragua gang and its ties to the Venezuelan government, according to the report. A previous intelligence gathering found that the gang was not acting on behalf of Venezuela’s government as Trump and top administration officials have repeatedly claimed, the Times reported.

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Meghan McCain compares CNN's Jake Tapper to OJ Simpson as she tears into explosive book

Meghan McCain, former co-host of "The View" and daughter of the late Sen. John McCain, compared CNN anchor Jake Tapper to O.J. Simpson this week.

The comment came during an episode of "Next Up with Mark Halperin" on Thursday, in which she was asked her view on Tapper's explosive new book, "Original Sin," which accused former President Joe Biden's circle of shielding the president and covering up cognitive decline, leading to sweeping losses for Democrats in the 2024 election.

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