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'Cyber Ninjas' ensnared in Arizona fake electors investigation: report

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes' office is reportedly investigating attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election in the state.

Sources told The Arizona Republic an investigation focused on two slates of fake electors for then-President Donald Trump. It was also said to be looking into an audit led by Cyber Ninjas CEO Doug Logan.

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'Israel is an apartheid state': progressives explain decision to boycott Israeli President's speech

Two U.S. House progressives on Tuesday made clear that their decision to stand up against the violent apartheid policies of the Israeli government is not viewed as controversial by international human rights experts and that the facts are on their side, even as the vast majority of Democratic lawmakers joined Republicans in welcoming Israel's president to deliver a joint address to Congress.

Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), the first Palestinian-American to be elected to Congress, was joined by Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) in explaining the position of several progressive lawmakers who boycotted President Isaac Herzog's speech on Wednesday.

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Biden whistleblowers have already debunked core of GOP's claims: Raskin

A pair of whistleblowers that House Republicans intend to testify against President Joe Biden and his family have serious credibility issues and have already “undermined this Republican narrative in their depositions,” Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) stated in a memo to colleagues, reported The New Republic on Wednesday.

The two people, an IRS agent named Gary Shapley and a person identified only as "Mr. X," have alleged that the Justice Department interfered in the tax investigation against Hunter Biden. But according to the memo, their own writings contradict this idea.

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'Worst answer I've ever heard': Republican buries DeSantis' response to question about Trump crimes

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis this week gave a rambling and evasive response when CNN's Jake Tapper asked him if former President Donald Trump should face charges if there is compelling evidence that he committed crimes.

Instead of addressing the issue directly, DeSantis accused Democrats of "criminalizing political differences" and of weaponizing the Department of Justice, ranted about special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign's contacts with Russian agents, and finished off by saying it was time to look forward and not back to what happened in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election.

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'Our Democracy demands it': Rights groups cheer as Dems revive Freedom to Vote act

Democracy defenders on Tuesday applauded as Democratic leaders from both chambers of Congress came together to reintroduce the Freedom to Vote Act, which aims to improve voter access and electoral administration, boost election integrity, and increase civic participation and empowerment.

"Today’s introduction of the Freedom to Vote Act is the first step to injecting a renewed commitment to democratic principles," said Christine Wood and Allison Pulliam, co-directors of the Declaration for American Democracy coalition. "We believe every eligible voter should have their vote counted, every candidate should be able to run without caving in to big influence and big money, and every elected official should be beholden to constituents first."

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‘Not worried’: Lauren Boebert says Democrats’ big-money plan to ‘buy’ her congressional seat will fail

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) and the Republican Party have a problem on their hands: The congresswoman’s offensively headline-grabbing ways in Washington have turned her safe Republican seat into a toss-up that promises to be one of the most expensive House races in 2024 — if not in history.

In 2022, Boebert beat local businessman Adam Frisch by a mere 546 votes, but Frisch — who is angling for a rematch — continues to lap her in fundraising for the 2024 cycle.

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Trump has been strategizing with GOP leaders to plan how lawmakers will defend him in public

Donald Trump spent part of Tuesday on the phone with top House GOP leaders, including Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Conference Chair Elise Stefanik, mapping out ways Republican lawmakers can publicly, including using the power of their taxpayer-funded government offices, defend him. The former president announced Tuesday morning he has been told he is a target of the Special Counsel's investigation into efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

Trump "has reached out to some of his top allies on Capitol Hill to strategize how they’re going to defend Trump & go on offense against the special counsel probe," CNN Capitol Hill reporter Melanie Zanona said on social media Tuesday afternoon.

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GOP operative says Trump rivals won't attack him over third indictment: 'Jan. 6 just gins up the base'

Despite the fact that former President Donald Trump is facing a potential third indictment in just six months, his GOP rivals are still walking on eggshells criticizing a candidate who could be a convicted felon by the time voters head to the polls in the 2024 election.

One Republican operative working for a rival presidential campaign tells Politico that candidates are going to be especially wary of criticizing Trump for any charges related to his effort to illegally remain in power after losing the 2020 election to President Joe Biden.

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Texas investigating claim troopers were told to push migrants back into the Rio Grande and deny them water

A state trooper’s claims that superiors ordered officers at the border in Eagle Pass to push migrants back into the Rio Grande and deny them water has sparked a state investigation, the Texas Department of Public Safety said Tuesday.

The trooper also reported that razor wire deployed by troopers has injured people — including a woman who had a miscarriage while entangled in the wire.

Travis Considine, a DPS spokesperson, said in an email that the Office of the Inspector General, which investigates claims of misconduct by state employees, “is investigating the allegations made in the email in question.”

“There is not a directive or policy that instructs Troopers to withhold water from migrants or push them back into the river,” Considine said.

The allegations made by the trooper were first reported by the Houston Chronicle.

The trooper, who works as a medic, sent the email to a sergeant on July 3 detailing some of the things he witnessed while on patrol in Eagle Pass — where Gov. Greg Abbott recently ordered the deployment of a floating barrier in the Rio Grande to deter migrant crossings.

“I believe we a have stepped over a line into the in humane. We need to operate it correctly in the eyes of God,” the trooper wrote in the email, which DPS provided to The Texas Tribune. “We need to recognize that these are people who are made in the image of God and need to be treated as such.”

The trooper said in the email that he was out on patrol around 10 p.m. June 25 when he and other troopers came across a group of about 120 people, including small children and nursing babies, who were “exhausted, hungry and tired” along a fence line on the U.S. side.

“We called the shift officer in command, and we were given orders to push the people back into the water to go to Mexico. We decided that this was not the correct thing to do. With the very real potential of exhausted people drowning. We made contact with command again and expressed our concerns and we were given the order to tell them to go to Mexico.”

The trooper wrote in the email that five days later, a 4-year-old girl who attempted to cross the razor wire “was pressed back by Texas Guard soldiers due to the orders given to them.” The temperature “was well over 100 degrees” and the girl passed out, the email said, adding that she had received medical treatment.

That same day, a man rescued his child who got stuck on a barrel in the water covered with razor wire, according to the trooper’s email. During the rescue, the man got a “significant” cut on his left leg, the trooper wrote. A 15-year-old boy also broke his leg trying to walk around the wire in the river and his father had to carry him across to the U.S. side, the trooper wrote.

Later that night, troopers found a 19-year-old woman stuck in the razor wire having a miscarriage, the trooper’s email said.

On the afternoon of July 1, Border Patrol reported that a mother and her two children were struggling to cross the river, the email said. A DPS boat team found the mother and one child, who later died at the hospital. The body of the second child “was never found,” the trooper wrote.

The trooper told the sergeant the razor wire is an “inhumane trap” that should be removed because it “forces people to cross in other areas that are deeper and not as safe for people carrying kids and bags.”

A pecan farm owner in Eagle Pass told the Chronicle that officials working for Abbott’s border security operation refused to take down razor wire on his property, despite his multiple requests. The farmer, Hugo Urbina, said many people, including a pregnant teenager,have been injured by the wire that the state installed against his wishes. DPS told the Chronicle that under a border-related disaster declaration the governor signed in 2021, the state can use private property without the owner’s permission.

In 2021, Abbott announced Operation Lone Star, a series of border security measures that includes sending state troopers and National Guard members to the Texas-Mexico border to deter or arrest migrants attempting to cross the Rio Grande. Abbott has also ordered shipping containers and concertina wire to be placed on the riverbank to serve as barriers.

The Legislature has allocated nearly $10 billion for Abbott’s border security efforts, which include the construction of border walls. The Department of Justice began investigating whether troopers or National Guard members have violated the civil rights of migrants during Operation Lone Star, according to emails obtained last year by the Tribune and ProPublica.

At a media briefing Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said she condemned the troopers' actions "if they are true."

“It is abhorrent. It is despicable. It is dangerous,” she said.

U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, said the details outlined in the trooper’s email are an “absolutely monstrous, inhumane policy” and added that he urged the Biden administration to intervene and “remove the death traps Abbott has installed, for the sake of human rights.”

Considine, the DPS spokesperson, said in a tweet on Monday that “Troopers give migrants water. They treat their wounds. They save them from drowning. They also do everything possible to deter them from risking their lives in the first place.”

Considine also attached some emails from DPS Director Steven McCraw to his chain of command. In an email sent on July 15, McCraw calls for an audit of DPS’ protocols “to determine if more can be done to minimize the risk to migrants.

“The smugglers care not if the migrants are injured, but we do, and we must take all necessary measures to mitigate the risk to them including injuries from trying cross over the concertina wire, drownings and dehydration,” McCraw wrote.

Andrew Mahaleris, a spokesperson for Abbott, didn’t address the claims made by the trooper, instead blaming President Joe Biden’s immigration policies.

“The absence of razor wire and other deterrence strategies encourages migrants to make unsafe and illegal crossings between ports of entry, while making the job of Texas National Guard soldiers and DPS troopers more dangerous and difficult,” Mahaleris said in a statement. “President Biden has unleashed a chaos on the border that’s unsustainable, and we have a constitutional duty to respond to this unprecedented crisis.”

State Rep. Victoria Neave Criado, D-Dallas, chair of the Mexican American Legislative Caucus, said state lawmakers plan to investigate the claims.

“The treatment of our fellow humans on the Texas-Mexico border by DPS is unconscionable and unacceptable,” she said in a statement. “The Mexican American Legislative Caucus calls on Gov. Abbott and those of good conscience to denounce DPS’ directives, and we will use every legislative tool to investigate these injustices.”

Domingo Garcia, president of the League of United Latin American Citizens, a Latino civil rights organization, condemned Texas “inhumane treatment of innocent people.”

“These are Christian refugees, and they deserve to be treated with dignity and respect,” Garcia added. “Operation Lone Star is utterly barbaric, and Governor Abbott and all those supporting him must answer for their actions. What would Jesus say about such treatment of the most vulnerable in society?”

Adriana Martinez, an associate professor of geography at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville who studies the effects of border barriers on the Rio Grande, said that immigrant rights advocates have been warning Abbott that his deterrence policies would not work and in some cases would make things worse.

“How many layers do you have to put before you realize they’re not working and it’s just putting people’s life in danger?” she said.

State Rep. Matt Schaefer, R-Tyler, whose Twitter bio says, “God is sovereign. Jesus saves,” said in a tweet on Tuesday that he supports Abbott’s efforts.

“If in fact @GregAbbott_TX is taking a bolder approach to border security by directing DPS troopers to repel illegal crossers, he has my full support,” he tweeted. “Every Republican legislator should be speaking up as Dems and the media try to shame Abbott into backing down.”

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Trump claims election investigations are themselves ‘election interference’

Former President Donald Trump — who might face criminal charges for attempting to interfere with the outcome of the 2020 presidential election — claimed Tuesday afternoon in Iowa that he is the victim of election interference by federal prosecutors.

Trump announced earlier Tuesday he has received a letter from Special Counsel Jack Smith saying he is a target of the federal investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Typically, such a notice precedes an indictment.

There is also pending investigation in Georgia into Trump’s alleged attempt to alter the results of the 2020 election. Trump asked Georgia’s secretary of state to “find” 11,780 votes — one more than his slim deficit to Democrat Joe Biden — according to a recording of a phone call between the two men.

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‘A lousy attorney’: Marjorie Taylor Greene slams Jack Smith after Trump target letter

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) on Tuesday called the special counsel’s target letter to Donald Trump in connection with efforts to overturn the 2020 election “outrageous” and suggested the so-called deep state represents the “most dangerous thing happening in our country.”

Greene during an appearance on Fox News’ “The Ingraham Angle” responded to Trump’s announcement that he received a target letter from special counsel Jack Smith.

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Trump's lawyers ask judge in documents case to consider campaign timing

By Andrew Goudsward FORT PIERCE, Florida (Reuters) -Donald Trump's lawyers asked a U.S. federal judge on Tuesday not to treat the former president the same as any other criminal defendant in setting the timing for his trial on charges of mishandling classified documents, citing his presidential campaign. Trump, the front-runner for the Republican nomination to face Democratic President Joe Biden in the 2024 election, has pleaded not guilty to charges of unlawfully retaining national defense documents after he left office in 2021 and conspiring to obstruct government efforts to retrieve them. T...

Marjorie Taylor Greene's attacks repurposed as newest Biden ad

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) attempted to attack President Joe Biden at the Turning Points Action conference over the weekend by saying he wants to finish the work of FDR and LBJ. So, he turned it into a positive campaign ad to promote his beliefs and accomplishments.

In her speech, Greene began by cautioning the crowd that Biden is trying to "finish what FDR started" by trying to address problems related to "education, medical care, urban problems, rural poverty, transportation, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps and welfare."

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