Judge revokes bond and seizes devices from defendants awaiting sentencing in neo-Nazi terror plot

A federal judge has revoked bond for two men awaiting sentencing for their role in a white supremacist terror plot to attack the national power grid.

Christopher Brenner Cook, Jonathan Allen Frost and Jackson Matthew Sawall each pleaded guilty to conspiring to provide material support for terrorists earlier this year. According to the government, the three men, who called themselves “the Front,” used encrypted apps when they hatched a plan to use powerful rifles to shoot out transformers at regional substations, with the aim of causing confusion and unrest that they hoped would give rise to a race war. Among other texts, group members circulated Siege, a text widely embraced by accelerationist neo-Nazis that advocates for societal collapse as a necessary precondition for fascist revolution.

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GOP seeks to woo Black voters by attacking the LGBTQ community

When 27-year-old Don Abram was in middle school, he dreaded going to his single mom's Chicago South Side church where he was often the only male in a sea of females overflowing the pews. Other Black teens in his neighborhood taunted him as "fruity" with "sugar in his tank." Abram dreamed of being a pastor but he had a secret that would be an obstacle: he was gay, kept it from everyone, even his mom. He dreamed of being a pastor. He comforted himself with the idea that he could at least be an usher, greeting newcomers, and distributing cardboard church fans and Kleenex.

But at 14, he debuted as a preacher in the Greater New Mount Eagle Missionary Baptist. His sermon was a smash so he kept preaching. Later, in Harvard Divinity School, Abram realized that his Mount Eagle congregation must have figured out he was gay and still loved him even if they were baffled by his sexuality.

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Congress rebukes Trump with passage of the Electoral Count Reform Act

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House of Representatives just ended their legislative year. Besides passing $1.7 trillion omnibus package to fund the government, lawmakers also tucked a measure in the package that sternly rebukes former President Donald Trump’s actions leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol, along with his 187 minutes of inaction as his supporters carried out an attempted coup on his behalf.

In 2021, the constitutional crisis was averted when former Vice President Mike Pence stood firm in the face of an intense, if petty, pressure campaign led by Trump himself and an armed mob chanting “Hang Mike Pence,” as evidenced in the newly released Jan. 6 committee report. Never again, or so Congress hopes.

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Watch: Pro-Trump pastor prays for electricity to 'turn itself off' as rancorous scene unfolds outside Knoxville drag show

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Greg Locke, a far-right Christian nationalist pastor in Tennessee who has railed against COVID-19 restrictions and supported Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election, prayed for a power outage during a protest against a drag performance in Knoxville on Thursday evening.

“I pray that when that show starts tonight, the electricity would turn itself off, and the sound would glitch, and the lights would go out, and it would be such a debacle that this theater in Tennessee would recognize we should have shut this thing down long before we even got to this point,” Locke said, as his street sermon across the street from the Tennessee Theatre reached a fevered crescendo.

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'Disgraceful': Ted Cruz denounces GOP senators negotiating bipartisan spending deal

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) voiced his strong opposition to an omnibus spending bill that has bipartisan support, saying the newly elected House majority should play a role in shaping the budget.

The Texas Republican echoed Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), who faces GOP opposition to his bid for House speaker, in criticizing his colleagues for negotiating with Democrats on the $1.65 trillion spending bill, which he told The Raw Story was "disgraceful."

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Lindsey Graham threatens to go after Dems' taxes — but Dems say bring it on

WASHINGTON — The House Ways and Means Committee voted 24-16 to release Donald Trump's taxes during an hours-long Tuesday meeting.

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) told Raw Story at the Capitol Wednesday that he would rather have seen the committee release a summary instead of revealing all of the documents.

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'Extraordinary measures' were justified to overcome Trump's 'unprecedented' refusal to release taxes: House Dem

In an interview with Raw Story, Rep. Dan Kildee (D-MI) defended the House Ways and Means Committee's vote to release redacted information on former President Donald Trump's taxes.

In response to criticism from Republicans that Democrats were using "unprecedented" measures to release information on the former president's taxes, Kildee argued that such measures were needed given Trump's total refusal to provide the American public with any information about his finances.

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GOP's John Cornyn shreds Republican Kevin McCarthy after his threat against Senate legislation

WASHINGTON — GOP leaders sent a letter to the Republicans in the Senate on Monday threatening to kill every bill that comes to the House from a Republican that supports the omnibus spending bill that will keep the government funded through Sept. 2023. House Republicans had threatened to shut down the government ahead of the holidays.

Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Senate Whip John Cornyn (R-TX) said that their problem is that the GOP is in the minority. Even in the House, the GOP is so split that they'll likely struggle to bring conservatives together with the far right.

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Adam Schiff says the conflicting statements from Jan. 6 witnesses is something the DOJ can handle

WASHINGTON — One of the many things noted throughout the course of the Select Committee on the Jan. 6 attack on Congress is that those still with the good graces of Donald Trump were giving conflicting statements to those who were not still being supported by Trump.

It was something that was evident in the final meeting Monday in which Hope Hicks gave a different account than White House lawyer Eric Herschmann and text messages exchanged between Hicks and another press aide about Trump refusing to promote peaceful behavior on Jan. 6. Herschman had approached the president about the potential for violence and put out a statement to encourage non-violent protest. Hicks was told that Trump refused the idea.

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Raskin: There are other names and evidence in the Jan. 6 report the DOJ could prosecute

WASHINGTON — Speaking to reporters after the final meeting of the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on Congress, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) explained that there may have only been the referrals named specifically, but that there were plenty of names and evidence that will be handed over to the Justice Department that could be used for additional prosecutions.

Raw Story asked Raskin about the officers that have continued to be in the committee room as observed the evidence presented against [Donald] Trump and others who aided in the attacks against them. Raskin agreed that those men deserve justice for what they experienced beyond just the attackers themselves, but those who promoted the attack.

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Jan. 6 chair indicates there could have been more criminal referrals for Trump

WASHINGTON — The House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on Congress and the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election met for the final time on Monday, approving its report and the criminal referrals to the Justice Department. Thus far just the executive summary has been published.

Speaking to reporters after the hearing, Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-MS) said “we felt very strongly about the four [referrals], so we went with that…it was just something that the committee didn’t come to agreement on."

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Swastika spray-painted on senior center ahead of Pride celebration in North Carolina

APEX, N.C. — Vandals spray-painted a swastika on the outside wall of the senior center in this suburban community outside of Raleigh on the eve of a holiday Pride celebration featuring a drag queen story hour, which took place today.

The event went off without incident, drawing about 150 attendees, according to an organizer. Apex police officers patrolled the hallway outside the meeting room where the Pride celebration was held while a mahjong tournament in the adjacent room, with Santas making appearances at both gatherings.

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'Hand-to-hand combat': DC Dems weigh in on 'eyebrow-raising' Kyrsten Sinema's future

WASHINGTON—Democrats are divided. And not over policy, this time. In between cursing, grumbling, and complaining, the party's debating Kyrsten Sinema. The debate's already sizzling. It's only going to get hotter over the next two years.

"It's going to be hand-to-hand combat," Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-AZ) told Raw Story while puffing a cigarette outside the Capitol. "She's going to do what it takes to take care of Sinema, and if that's selfish, that's selfish. But, politically speaking, she's always been like that."

Sinema's peak Washington. She's despised by (most) progressives for the very reason corporations flood her campaign accounts: She's now Queen of the Hill (at least in her mind, or so critics say). In this narrowly divided Senate, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer either needs her support or that of conservative West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin to pass most any of the party's priorities.

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