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Ghislaine Maxwell forms 'highly secretive' prison crew as rumors swirl behind bars: report

Ghislaine Maxwell has reportedly assembled a "highly secretive" prison group behind bars as more details behind her incarceration at a minimum security facility have been revealed, The Daily Mail reported on Tuesday.

The former partner and co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein has befriended three women and allegedly sees them as the "finest and best educated" among the population at Federal Prison Camp Bryan in Texas, according to The Mail. These friends include Bethany Cataldi, 54, "a disgraced doctor serving eight years for charging the government for non-existent procedures." Another is former CFO Antonietta Nguyen, 58, "who plundered $9 million from company funds to splurge on purses and luxury vacations."

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Iranians say addressing Trump’s 'mental illness' head on helped secure deal: journalist

The United States and Iran reached a tentative agreement Sunday to bring about an end to the war, which one Iranian official involved in the negotiations credited, in part, to Tehran’s unorthodox approach to addressing what they considered to be President Donald Trump’s “mental illness.”

Investigative reporter Jeremy Scahill shared a startling revelation last week that Iranian negotiators had recruited psychologists to help navigate what they believed was Trump’s “impaired mental state.” And on Monday, Scahill provided an update on Iran’s unique approach to the negotiations, which he said Tehran partially credited for Sunday’s success.

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Supreme Court has a 'self-serving' interest in helping the GOP win the midterms: expert

A Supreme Court expert warned on Sunday that the Court has a "self-serving" interest in helping Republicans hold their majority in Congress after the midterm election, and that this could influence how the court rules in a major upcoming case.

Lisa Graves, executive director of True North Research and co-host of the "Legal AF" podcast, argued during a recent episode that the Supreme Court has already signaled to Republicans that it is willing to help them during the midterms. She noted that the court previously operated under the dictum that it would not interfere in the election process during election years, but threw that principle out when it decided to allow Louisiana to redraw its congressional map in Louisiana v. Callais.

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'Huge setback' threatens to 'torpedo' Trump's coveted peace deal: report

A peace deal between Washington and Tehran – one that President Donald Trump has shown a “strange insistence” on being finalized Sunday, his 80th birthday – is at risk of collapse after a key Iranian demand was violated Sunday morning, Al Jazeera reported.

Iran has demanded that Israel halt its bombardment of Lebanon as a non-negotiable condition to ending the war, a demand that Israel has largely ignored, despite Trump’s insistence that Israel halts its attacks on its northern neighbor. And on Sunday, Israel launched airstrikes on suburbs in Beirut, Lebanon’s capital and largest city, killing at least two and wounding four.

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Trump met with wave of mockery as details of his $1 million-per-person dinner leak

A flier for a fundraiser headlined by President Donald Trump set off a round of online ridicule this weekend once it revealed the price of admission: $1 million per person.

The invitation, shared on X by Wall Street Journal reporter Alex Leary, advertised a "candlelight dinner" featuring Trump as the "special guest speaker" at Trump National Golf Club outside Washington, D.C. The event is a fundraiser for MAGA Inc., the Trump-aligned super PAC, and the flier notes that space is "very limited."

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Growing rebellion exposed as Trump's Great American State Fair dealt another big blow

President Donald Trump's birthday bash for America is hitting fresh trouble, with at least six states publicly saying they will not officially participate in his Great American State Fair, NOTUS reported Wednesday.

Officials from Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, North Carolina and Oregon told the outlet they will not send official delegations to the 16-day fair on the National Mall, set to open June 25. Three other states — Maryland, Pennsylvania and Washington — remain uncommitted just two weeks out.

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Trump White House hunting for insider who leaked details about Epstein freakout: report

The Trump administration is launching a "massive leak hunt" to find out who spilled details on a panicked conversation inside the White House.

A new book by journalists Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan has the Trump White House scrambling to find out who leaked details about the Trump administration's "freakout" over the release of the Epstein files, according to reporting by CNN. The New York Times published an excerpt of the book, "Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump," on Wednesday.

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Trump insiders in 'Epstein War Room' feared 'surreal' accusation against president: report

According to excerpts from the forthcoming book "Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump" by New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan, Vice President JD Vance and senior White House officials engaged in an extraordinary debate over whether to publicly release an uncorroborated allegation of sexual assault involving the president.

The White House converted the secure Situation Room—"the same facility where President Obama's team monitored the raid that killed Osama bin Laden"—into an Epstein "war room" to manage fallout from a DOJ memo claiming no "client list" of Epstein's associates existed. The memo "backfired spectacularly," triggering loud backlash among the MAGA base and prompting the Wall Street Journal to prepare a damaging article about Trump's relationship with Epstein.

Trump's senior officials gathered repeatedly in the Situation Room without the president, attempting to manage public fury over the administration's refusal to release Epstein files. The secure space, traditionally used to assess foreign threats, became instead a political bunker for managing a domestic crisis involving Trump's long friendship with Epstein who died while in custody under suspicious circumstances, the report notes.

According to the report, at an August meeting, the administration's desperation boiled over after a senior aide raised an uncorroborated, secondhand allegation from nearly a decade earlier—a claim that Trump had aggressively flicked and sucked a young woman's n-----s until they "looked incredibly painful."

The allegation had surfaced in 2024 in unsealed court filings from a civil suit unrelated to Trump. When another official raised the matter, Vance argued strenuously for including this and numerous other accusations on the Justice Department's website, framing it as an exercise in "maximum transparency." Vance contended Trump wouldn't object, having been accused of worse.

Haberman and Swan are reporting that White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles shut down the proposal immediately, telling Vance that the president would emphatically not be fine with releasing the allegation. One official later described the moment as "surreal"—debating explicit sexual assault allegations in the nation's most secure meeting space.

Ann Coulter decries Trump's 'absolute worst' act of 'selfishness' seen yet: 'Narcissistic'

Prominent conservative commentator Ann Coulter hammered President Donald Trump Sunday night over what she labeled as his “absolute worst” act of selfishness she’d witnessed yet, one that’s expected to inconvenience thousands of Americans.

On Friday, Trump confirmed that he planned to attend the NBA Finals game in New York between the San Antonio Spurs and the New York Knicks, scheduled to kick off Monday night. As such, the thousands of attendees will have to adhere to a “strict-no bag policy” and be subjected to “TSA-style screening procedures,” CNBC reported.

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Dem strategist floored by ex-MAGA podcaster's blistering rebuke of Trump

A Democratic strategist was floored on Sunday after hearing a former Make America Great Again podcaster's blistering rebuke of President Donald Trump.

Tim Dillon, a popular comedian who boosted Trump on his podcast during the 2024 general election, claimed during a recent episode of his podcast that Trump's schtick is "not cute anymore" as Americans struggle to afford basic necessities and the Trump administration "sells the government for parts."

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Major issue flagged as new Epstein investigation kicks off: 'Fox guarding the henhouse'

While a New Mexico legislative committee began its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein’s sprawling compound known as Zorro Ranch last week, one veteran journalist warned that the effort is analogous to “the fox guarding the henhouse,” flagging what they described as a major “conflict of interest.”

Established in February by the New Mexico Legislature, the New Mexico Truth Commission was afforded $2 million in spending and granted subpoena power to investigate the potential criminal activity at Epstein’s New Mexico property, the site of which multiple women have claimed to have been sexually abused as minors.

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Damning new details emerge about would-be Trump assassin Thomas Crooks

FBI records obtained through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit reveal that a Butler County Sheriff's deputy exchanged two emails with Thomas Matthew Crooks — the gunman who shot and wounded President Donald Trump at his Butler, Pennsylvania rally on July 13, 2024 — prior to the attack. The content of those emails remains unknown. The records are heavily redacted.

Judicial Watch announced it had forced the release of 48 pages of FBI records through a federal lawsuit. An FBI interview summary from July 17, 2024 shows a deputy telling investigators she had checked her records and found two email communications from Crooks — both "in regard to [redacted]." She told investigators she did not personally interact with Crooks and did not recognize him when news of the shooting broke, only learning of the connection when a New York Times reporter emailed her Sunday night asking questions.

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GOP senator revolts over Hegseth’s ‘unacceptable’ religious decree

Sen. John Curtis (R-UT) lashed out Saturday at Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s office over a “significant change” it instituted regarding the classifications of religions, one he argued was “unacceptable” and that he was actively working to correct.

This week, the Department of Defense announced that it had significantly reduced the number of recognized religions within the agency, down from more than 200 to 31. The change, according to Sean Parnell, Hegseth’s assistant for public affairs, was to allow “religious support personnel" to better provide "spiritual care to our warfighters.”

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