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Pam Bondi's 'dirty laundry' will come out followng DOJ arrest of judge: ex-US attorney

Attorney General Pam Bondi may come to regret approving and then boasting about the arrest of a Wisconsin judge on Friday for allegedly trying to shield an immigrant from being scooped up by United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) outside her courtroom.

That is the opinion of ex-U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance who appeared on MSNBC Saturday morning to poke holes in the DOJ's case against Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan, with Vance calling the arrest outrageous and unlikely to lead to a conviction.

Speaking with the hosts of MSNBC's "The Weekend," Vance lambasted Bondi for running to Fox News to hype up the arrest where she told hosts, "We are going to prosecute you, and we are prosecuting you. I found out about this the day it happened. We could not believe, actually, that a judge really did that. We looked into the facts in great depth… You cannot obstruct a criminal case. And really, shame on her. It was a domestic violence case of all cases, and she's protecting a criminal defendant over victims of crime."

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According to Vance, the arrest, with the judge photographed being taken into custody in handcuffs had little to do with "protecting a criminal defendant" than it did as a warning to other judges to not buck Donald Trump's policies.

Noting that the DOJ report on the arrest was at odds with what Bondi was claiming, the former prosecutor claimed it will likely come back to haunt the attorney general doing Trump's dirty work.

"This is all in violation of very clear DOJ policy," Vance accused. "You're not permitted in a case of an indictment or a complaint to go to the press and talk about anything that's not in the four corners of the document, because it prejudices the defendant's rights."

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'It was a joke!' Trump melts down over NYT report in tirade after pope funeral

Following his appearance at the funeral of Pope Francis on Saturday, where he was called out in a homily, Donald Trump jumped onto Truth Social to lash out at the New York Times and, in particular, reporter Peter Baker.

In his long tirade, the president took extreme exception to a Saturday report by Baker about negotiations involving Ukraine where the status of Crimea has become a sticking point.

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'He's rounding up': MSNBC panel bursts out laughing at new Trump 'deal' boast

A Saturday morning discussion on the devastating impact of Donald Trump's tariffs on American consumers spiraled into laughter on MSNBC after "The Weekend" co-host Symone Sanders Townsend read on-air a boast the president made in an interview this past week.

The co-hosts of the popular MSNBC show were peppering guest Bharat Ramamurti, a former deputy director of the National Economic Council, with questions about the long-term effects of the president's trade war, when Sanders Townsend directed their attention to an interview Trump did with Time magazine.

"I just want to ask because the president says he's making all these deals, okay?" the MSNBC co-host prompted her panel.

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"He's in this Time interview on Friday saying, 'I've made all the deals.' Time is like, 'When are you going to announce them?' Trump? 'I've made 200 deals.' Time said, 'You've made 200 deals?' Trump '100 percent,'" Sanders Townsend read.

"He also, in that interview, he also said --," she continued, but co-host Alicia Menendez exclaimed, "There are 193 UN members!" which led to an outburst of laughter.

"So he's rounding up there?" Menendez joked.

"They're rounded up," Sander replied before quipping, "I don't know who the extra seven are now."

You can watch below or at the link.

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Trump gets front row seat to humiliation as attacked in Pope's homily

Donald Trump got a front row seat to his own humiliation Saturday as he was verbally attacked in a homily at Pope Francis’ funeral.

Trump, who traveled to Rome Friday, sat with world leaders at the service as his signature policy was rebuked to an audience of millions watching live around the world.

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Threat of 'terrible things' covered up by fancy dress party in Trump's Cabinet: report

An obsession with dressing up among Donald Trump’s most senior Cabinet members is reminiscent of a 6-year-old kid desperate to be a spy, an Atlantic columnist wrote Saturday.

And it’s covering up a grossly disturbing ineptitude for their jobs, she added.

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'Can we stop pretending?' Ex-RNC official snaps at report on Trump negotiations

Following a report that Donald Trump is claiming he is making headway in negotiations with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy after they met in Rome where they are both attending the burial of Pope Francis, former RNC chair Michael Steele wasn't having it.

On MSNBC's "The Weekend," Steele, as co-host, noted the report that Trump "expressed optimism about ending the war in Ukraine. Posting online that negotiations are, quote, 'going smoothly and that success seems to be in the future,'" before adding, "Color me skeptical."

"You know, Trump doesn't engage in diplomacy, alright?" he exclaimed, "So can we stop pretending he does? He doesn't. This, you know, the social media posts on all of that is just because –– the bottom line is his design has been drawn up by Russia. The plan he's pushing is a Russian plan."

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"The reality of it is, and I appreciate President Zelenskyy's optimism of a good meeting, what what else is he going to say? It sucked?" he added. "But the reality of it is that you're dealing with someone who's not a good faith partner and someone who does not want to see you survive this."

"So why are we sitting down and pretending that this is all now going to shift in a direction in which a fair deal, in which the sovereignty of Ukraine remains intact and Russia backs the hell up and gets out," he asked.

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Drop in the bucket': Texas slammed as misleading health figures demonize immigrants

"Experts cast doubt on state’s report that undocumented immigrants cost Texas hospitals $122M in a month" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

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Pentagon leak investigation threatens to expose new turmoil under Hegseth: report

An investigation of leaks at the Pentagon since Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth assumed control has set off fears that a civil war among competing factions will be exposed and further complicate his already troubled tenure.

According to a report from the Guardian's Hugo Lowell, the firings of multiple close aides to the embattled former Fox News personality for allegedly revealing the inner workings of new policies under the Donald Trump appointee has already clouded the investigation with questions being raised over who is telling the truth or lying to win favor for their side.

As Lowell notes, Hegseth is "consumed" by the investigation in the Pentagon which has been "marked for weeks by ugly internal politics" as his now-ousted chief of staff Joe Kasper points fingers at the departed Dan Caldwell, deputy chief Darin Selnick and chief to the deputy defense secretary Colin Carroll.

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According to the report, there are growing fears that what will be uncovered will expose even more dysfunction under Hegseth with growing calls for his resignation or firing.

Lowell wrote, "...the fraught background to the leak investigation of vicious interpersonal conflicts among Hegseth’s senior aides has left them unable to decipher who and what to believe," adding, "the pressures of running an $800bn-plus agency that oversees more than 2 million troops started to catch up, the officials said, and a series of leaks intensified his distrust of career employees, whom defense officials once hoped could guide him to efficiently run the Pentagon."

The Guardian report notes that further revelations may come to light as Carroll ponders "filing a defamation suit against Kasper and started making calls on the Monday after he was fired, asking people whether Kasper had ever been seen doing cocaine in a previous job."

You can read more here.

'He's not the same person': Voters crucial to Trump's win share dismay after 4 months

The bloc of Donald Trump voters that was vital to getting him over the election line in first place last November were asked just four months after his inauguration for their reactions.

Their answer was far from exuberant. “Ummmm,” said one.

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Busted: Video contradicts Trump official's apology for praising Nazi sympathizer

President Donald Trump’s pick to serve as Washington, D.C.’s top federal prosecutor is facing fresh scrutiny after newly surfaced videos and podcasts appear to contradict his public apology for praising a Capitol riot defendant with known Nazi sympathies, the Washington Post reported Friday.

Interim U.S. Attorney for D.C. Ed Martin has apologized this week for defending Timothy Hale-Cusanelli, a white supremacist who once photographed himself posing as Adolf Hitler and has a documented history of anti-Semitic statements. Martin claimed he was unaware of Hale-Cussanelli’s extremist views when he publicly praised him.

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'It's bad' MSNBC's Rachel Maddow slams Trump for 'killing miracle' drug

MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow sharply criticized President Donald Trump on Friday, who she accused of turning his back on a life-saving drug that the host said has spared the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans.

“It's not like we didn't know it was going to be terrible,” Maddow said in the opening minutes of her show. “And it is terrible,” she added as she laid into the litany of federal programs Trump has axed in his first three months after returning to the White House.

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'Disbelief': Top CIA official's son killed fighting with Russian army

The CIA on Friday broke its silence over the death of Michael Gloss, the son of a senior national security official and an Iraq War veteran, who was killed last April while fighting with Russian forces in Ukraine – one of the few Americans known to have done so, the Washington Post reported.

While Gloss, 21, was killed in Donetsk on April 4, 2024, of “massive blood loss” in an artillery barrage, that he was killed on the battlefield in Ukraine fighting alongside the Russian army was not publicly revealed until Friday, according to the Post, which described Gloss as “a Dylan-loving peacenik who wanted to save the environment.”

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'Strong suspicion': Judge warns 2-year-old with US citizenship likely deported to Honduras

A judge said a 2-year-old girl with U.S. citizenship appears to have been deported along with her mother to Honduras with "no meaningful process" — despite her father's efforts to keep her in the country.

According to Politico, "U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty, a Trump appointee, said the child — identified in court papers by the initials 'V.M.L.' — appeared to have been released in Honduras earlier Friday, along with her Honduran-born mother and sister, who had been detained by immigration officials earlier in the week."

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