Author: Kaelan Deese
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New Senate investigation into who was running the country for Biden
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Senate Republicans will hold the first full congressional hearing next month to investigate what they say was a coordinated effort to conceal the cognitive decline of former President Joe Biden and whether anyone else was pulling the strings behind his presidency. Sens. Eric Schmitt (R-MO) and John Cornyn (R-TX) announced Thursday that the Senate Judiciary Committee would convene a…
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Deadline looms for ex-Biden aides to comply with GOP autopen investigation
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Five former aides to President Joe Biden are facing the threat of subpoena ahead of a Thursday evening deadline to comply with a widening autopen investigation launched by House Republicans. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) is leading the investigation into whether Biden personally approved controversial last-minute executive actions, especially a series of preemptive…
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Trump administration seeks to dismiss lawsuit over Abrego Garcia’s deportation
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The Trump administration asked a federal court late Tuesday to dismiss a lawsuit filed by Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national and suspected MS-13 gang member deported earlier this year under disputed circumstances, arguing the court has no jurisdiction to force his return to the United States. Abrego Garcia and his family sued after he…
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Trump’s third-country deportations facing judicial overreach, experts say
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Legal experts and allies of President Donald Trump are accusing a federal judge of overstepping his authority by halting the deportation of eight criminally convicted illegal migrants to war-torn South Sudan, a flashpoint in the administration’s efforts to expedite U.S. immigration enforcement through third-country removals. In a scathing ruling on Monday, U.S. District Judge Brian…
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What Republicans have found in their investigation of Biden’s autopen so far
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President Donald Trump and top House Republicans are ramping up a sweeping investigation into former President Joe Biden’s use of a mechanical signature device known as the autopen, raising questions about the legitimacy of executive actions taken during Biden’s presidency — especially a wave of last-minute pardons signed with the device. The investigation, led by…
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Supreme Court uncertain about solution to nationwide injunction ‘epidemic’
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The Supreme Court on Thursday signaled deep uncertainty over how, or whether, to rein in the growing use of nationwide injunctions, a legal tool that has repeatedly stymied President Donald Trump’s agenda. During nearly three hours of oral arguments, justices across the ideological spectrum appeared divided on the best path forward. Some expressed skepticism over…
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Trump’s birthright citizenship ban could spur Supreme Court to curb nationwide injunctions
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The Supreme Court on Thursday will hear arguments in a rare yet also high-stakes dispute over President Donald Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrants and temporary visa holders. But the justices will not decide that constitutional question directly — at least, not yet. Instead, the legal focus will be whether…
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Trump DOJ draws frustration from GOP over stalled document releases
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President Donald Trump promised to declassify and release thousands of pages of documents related to the hottest topics in the MAGA online world: Jeffrey Epstein files, JFK assassination secrets, Russiagate smoking guns, and more. Months later, most of the records remain snarled in layers of bureaucracy, and the few that have been released have notably…
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A new team guides Trump 2.0 as he begins to fill judicial vacancies
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President Donald Trump is entering his second term facing a starkly different judicial landscape after transforming the federal judiciary in his first term — but with no less ambition to leave his mark. On Thursday, Trump announced the first judicial nominee of his second term: Whitney Hermandorfer, a top lawyer in the Tennessee attorney general’s…
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Supreme Court to decide if FBI can be sued for raiding wrong house
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The Supreme Court will hear arguments Tuesday in a case testing whether the federal government can be held liable after FBI agents mistakenly raided the wrong house in Atlanta in 2017. Trina Martin, 46, filed a lawsuit after FBI agents broke down her door before dawn and stormed her bedroom with guns drawn while her…

