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WWE continues to pay tribute to one of its icons, Hulk Hogan.

The wrestling company honored Hogan at the start of Monday Night Raw on July 28 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, four days after his death.

The Raw roster came out in the arena to kick off the show, with WWE chief content officer Paul ‘Triple H’ Levesque speaking about Hogan’s impact of wrestling.

‘We lost one of the biggest and most globally recognized icons in the world. A man I grew up watching was fortunate enough to share the ring with and like so many of us were honored to call a friend,’ Levesque said. ‘He captivated millions of people and inspired them around the globe. We would not be standing here right now, all of us together, if it was not for him.’

The honorary 10-bell salute then rang as people in the crowd held up signs and chanted Hogan.

Also with the roster was Hogan’s son, Nick, and longtime friend and WCW collaborator Eric Bischoff.

A tribute video also played highlighting the biggest moments of his Hogan’s career, along with other moments outside of the ring.

It was the second tribute for Hogan after one was done at Friday Night SmackDown on July 25, the day after his death.

Hogan died at the age of 71 after he suffered a cardiac arrest at his home in Clearwater, Florida. Considered one of the biggest wrestling stars in history, he was a six-time WWE Champion and inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame twice, in 2005 for himself and in 2020 as part of the New World Order.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Trump administration is reportedly blocking Taiwan’s president from stopping over in New York City, en route to a diplomatic meeting in Central America, following pressure from China.

The Financial Times reported Monday that the administration has denied Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te the opportunity to stop over in New York City during a planned trip to Paraguay, Guatemala and Belize — all countries that recognize Taiwan as its own independent country.

However, on Monday, the office of the president in Taiwan released a statement indicating that Lai ‘currently has no plans to go on an overseas visit,’ according to Taiwan-state media. A source familiar with the matter at the State Department confirmed that no formal travel plans for President Lai have been announced.

‘In consideration of the ongoing rehabilitation efforts in southern Taiwan following a recent typhoon and regional developments including the United States’ tariffs, the president currently has no plans to go on an overseas visit,’ the statement from President Lai said.

According to the Financial Times, which spoke with unnamed sources said to be intimately familiar with the alleged trip, Lai’s decision not to travel came after he was informed that he would not be able to stop in New York City on his way to Central America. 

Lai’s trip was also reportedly supposed to include a stop in Dallas, but it is unclear if the Trump administration was also planning to bar Lai from stopping there as well, according to the Financial Times.

The White House did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. However, a State Department source familiar with the matter indicated that the Trump administration continues to be committed to the government’s long-standing one China policy, rooted in the Taiwan Relations Act, joint diplomatic agreements with China and longstanding pledges crafted by the government in regard to Taiwan and China.

Despite being in line with longstanding government policy, the move still garnered criticism from some Asia policy experts and critics of Trump. 

Lyle Morris, a senior fellow on foreign policy and national security at the Asia Society’s Center for China Analysis, said the ‘first concrete move’ under Trump’s second term regarding Taiwan is ‘a cause for concern.’ 

‘The assumption is this decision was made in the context of ongoing US-China trade negotiations and a possible Trump-Xi meeting,’ Morris said on X. ‘Still, not a good sign for enduring US-Taiwan relations.’

‘Denying President Lai a transit is a deeply concerning break with bipartisan precedent and sends a reckless signal to Beijing that our partnership with Taiwan is on the negotiating table,’ added Democrat Sen. Andy Kim, D-N.J., in a post on X following the news about President Lai’s alleged travel. 

‘American leadership is now seen as deeply unreliable, with Trump’s fits and starts with Ukraine, NATO allies, and other key partners. I urge President Trump to reverse course and do what presidents of both parties have done and allow a transit, and ask my colleagues in Congress to join me in that call.’

News of the Trump administration’s decision to prohibit the Taiwanese president from stopping in New York City comes as the president is reportedly feeling out a potential trip to Beijing himself, alongside major U.S. CEOs. Nothing so far has been set in stone regarding Trump’s trip, however.

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COOPERSTOWN, NY — Dusty Baker, the future Hall of Fame manager who retired two years ago, is returning back to the dugout to manage Nicaragua in the 2026 World Baseball Classic, he told USA TODAY Sports.

‘I’m excited,’ said Baker, a two-time All-Star and Gold Glove winner, who played 19 years and managed 26 years in Major League Baseball. ‘When they asked me, I thought about Roberto Clemente going there to help the country. I thought about Marcus Garvey. I know baseball is trying to get going in Nicaragua, and I want to help.’

Baker, who was approached about managing the U.S. team in 2023, said he didn’t want to leave the Houston Astros after winning the 2022 World Series. Now that he’s retired as MLB manager – working as a special advisor for the San Franciso Giants – he feels the time is right.

‘I considered managing in the WBC back then, but I just couldn’t leave my team,’ Baker said. “I didn’t think it was right to leave my team for two weeks in spring training. I was trying to win two World Series in a row.

‘So, now, the timing works great.’

Baker was contacted in December by Nicaragua general manager George Santiago and former Nicaragua manager Marvin Bernard. He consulted with his wife, Melissa, and son, Darren, who plays in the Washington Nationals organization, before accepting the position.

“It should be cool,” said Baker, the only manager in MLB history to lead five different franchises to division titles. “I know it will be a great life experience. I hope I can add to theirs, and they can add to mine.

“I’ve never been a part of the WBC, but everyone seems to enjoy it. I will as well. But let’s make it clear. I’m here to win.’

Baker, 76, is expected to be formally introduced as manager at a press conference in Nicaragua in August. He plans to include several of his former coaches, including Gary Pettis, Jacque Jones and Dan Firova. He also will have Bernard and Randall Simon on his staff. Benard, who will be the bench coach, is the sixth Nicaraguan-born player to reach the Major Leagues, and only the second position player.

Despite Baker returning to manage Nicaragua, he has no interest in coming out of retirement as a major league manager. Baker, who has won the seventh-most games in baseball history (2,183), is eligible to be on the Hall of Fame’s contemporary era ballot in December 2026, with the induction ceremony in July, 2027.

“I miss the camaraderie and the game,’’ Baker said, “but I don’t miss the verbal dodgeball twice a day. I don’t miss the travel and bickering between old school and new school and sabermetrics against experience.

“Besides, I don’t have to train for a long-distance race managing in the WBC. This will be a sprint. I can handle that. Now, I just have to brush up on my Spanish.’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Charles Barkley heard from the co-workers who don’t appear on screen during TNT’s ‘Inside the NBA’ as its future was in flux over the past year ‒ about how they were worried about paying their mortgage or for their children’s education if they were to lose this job.

The lingering uncertainty bothered the former NBA star, and it still bothers him now that TNT lost the broadcast rights to the NBA and ‘Inside the NBA’ is being licensed to ESPN beginning with the 2025-26 season.

Barkley blasted his bosses at TNT during an interview on Barstool Sports’ ‘Pardon My Take’ podcast released Monday because ‘they did an awful job keeping us abreast.’

‘We were playing golf in the middle of the playoffs and we were reading the internet to find out if we were going to get fired or not,’ Barkley said. ‘And I was like TNT, our bosses, they suck, plain and simple. Yo man, just tell us. Shoot us straight because these are real people. … And TNT never came to us like grown folks and said, ‘Hey guys, we’re probably going to lose the NBA,’ which we could have understood. But I thought they sucked. I told them they sucked because there’s a way you treat people.’

Barkley went on to reveal he found out TNT had licensed ‘Inside the NBA’ to ESPN through congratulatory text messages from current ESPN hosts and analysts like Scott Van Pelt, Elle Duncan, Brian Windhorst and former Golden State Warriors GM Bob Myers as the news broke. Barkley said he only received a call from TNT executives about 90 minutes later.

‘I get a text from Scott Van Pelt, Brian Windhorst, Elle Duncan and Bob Myers welcoming me to the family. I’m like, ‘What family?’ ‘ Barkley recalled. ‘Then, about an hour and a half later, I get a call from TNT that the story broke. I said, ‘Well, you probably could have given us a head’s up. You’ve traded us to ESPN. We have to hear about it on the internet.’ I said, ‘That’s just not the way you do business.’ Ernie Johnson deserves, because he’s the godfather, Ernie Johnson should not hear he got traded from ESPN people or the internet.’

TNT officially lost its NBA rights in July 2024. The NBA announced a new 11-year, $76 billion media rights deal with ABC/ESPN, NBC and Amazon that goes into effect beginning with the 2025-26 season.

Warner Bros. Discovery, the parent company of TNT, agreed to a licensing deal in November 2024 that will allow ‘Inside the NBA’ to be broadcast on ESPN. The talent on the show ‒ Barkley, Johnson, Shaquille O’Neal and Kenny Smith ‒ will remain employees of TNT. Barkley has been on ‘Inside the NBA’ since 2000, 10 years after it debuted with Johnson as host and two years after Smith joined the show. O’Neal joined the regular cast in 2011.

ESPN, in its statement announcing the licensing agreement, said ‘the legendary Inside the NBA studio team will appear on ESPN and ABC surrounding high-profile live events, including ESPN’s pregame, halftime and postgame coverage of the NBA Finals on ABC, Conference Finals, NBA Playoffs, all ABC games after January 1, Christmas Day, opening week, the final week of the season and other marquee live events.’

Barkley, however, remains skeptical about how ESPN will handle the Emmy-winning show.

‘I’m happy it’s going on but it’s going to be interesting,’ Barkley said on the podcast about ‘Inside the NBA’ moving to ESPN. ‘It’s going to be different, but you know that’s the bad thing about it. We don’t know how it’s going to be different.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Colorado football coach Deion Sanders offered an update on his health July 28, noting he’s looking forward to the 2025 season after a scare with bladder cancer.

Sanders, heading into his third season with the Buffaloes, missed notable time throughout spring practices due for an undisclosed health-related reason, which was revealed to be the bladder cancer. Sanders’ bladder was then removed and replaced, curing his cancer, he and his doctors said at a press conference.

Sanders said he ‘can’t pee like I used to pee,’ but is grateful to be continuing his coaching career, also noting he ‘always knew I was going to coach again.’

“I depend on Depend if you know what I mean,’ Sanders said. ‘I cannot control my bladder. So, I get up to go to the bathroom already 4-5 times a night. And I’m sitting there waking up like my grandson. We in the same thing. We got the same problem right now. We’re going through the same trials and tribulations.”

Sanders was accompanied by his doctor, Janet Kukreja, the director of urological oncology at University of Colorado Cancer Center, and Colorado football assistant athletic trainer Lauren Askevold at his news conference on Monday. His new bladder was constructed with parts of his intestine, he said Monday.

Sanders said Colorado’s sideline will also look a bit different in 2025 as he recovers from his health scare, with portable toilets being nearby.

‘I’ve built myself back up to where I’m able, I’m strong, I’m ready,’ Sanders said Monday. ‘I’m still probably about 12 pounds down, but I’m going to get that right and fill these overalls up like no other.’

Kukreja said the only difference for Sanders moving forward will be adjusting to ‘a new way of life,’ but that his outlook looks good as he continues coaching. Sanders said not returning to coaching wasn’t a thought during his cancer battle.

‘I was always going to coach,’ he said. ‘It was never in my spirit, in my heart, that god wouldn’t allow me to coach again. (I) never thought like that. It’s just that, I didn’t want to be running down to the hospital once a week when I got all this on my plate. … I was even like, ‘can they bring on the machines and put them in the office?”

Sanders has quite the challenge entering his third season at Colorado, as he must replace reigning Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter Jr., who was the No. 2 overall pick of the 2025 NFL Draft. He also has a new quarterback in either Liberty transfer Kaidon Salter or true freshman Julian Lewis, after his son, Shedeur Sanders, was selected in the fifth round of the NFL draft by the Cleveland Browns in April.

The Buffaloes will look to build on their 9-4 finish last season, with their coach healthy and back in the saddle following his extended absence from the program.

‘I’m so thankful to be back in Boulder, you have no idea,’ Sanders said. ‘But I never doubted, one bit, that I wouldn’t be.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Colorado football coach Deion Sanders once was one of the fastest players in professional sports and even had his own line of Nike footwear to cash in on it.

But after 14 seasons in the NFL — and another nine in Major League Baseball — the mileage eventually caught up with his fleet feet, along with a serious rash of blood clots in his legs. On Monday June 28, Sanders and his medical team also revealed he suffered from bladder cancer before he recovered at his estate in Canton, Texas, in May and June. He elected to have the bladder removed in May and is now planning to begin his third season in Boulder at age 57.

‘I am pleased to report that the results from the surgery are that he is cured from the cancer,’ said Janet Kukreja, the director of urologic oncology at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.

Here is a timeline of how his health issues have progressed through years after he got into coaching college football at Jackson State in Mississippi in 2020. They reached their lowest point during a 23-day hospital stay in the fall of 2021, when Sanders said he nearly died. Sanders said he’s had 14 surgeries since 2021.

“I had more surgeries out of the game than I did in the game,’ Sanders said Monday. ‘Like what is going on?”

September 2021: Deion Sanders undergoes foot surgery

As coach at Jackson State, Deion Sanders experienced throbbing pain in his left foot and limped. He had a bunion, an inflamed nerve and a hammertoe, which is a toe bent downward. He has attributed some of these issues to fallout from his playing career.

“My foot is shot, and I can’t take it,” he said as he prepared to undergo surgery on it, as documented by the Barstool Sports documentary series “Coach Prime.”

After surgery, he returned to the field with some help – using crutches, a golf cart and a scooter.

October 2021: Deion Sanders hospitalized for 23 days

Jackson State athletic trainer Lauren Askevold was changing Sanders’ bandages when she notices toes on his left foot had turned dark black. His team was 5-1 at the time, but she encouraged him to get his foot examined. He was admitted to the hospital and spent 23 days there while he endured a crisis over blood clots in his leg. The clots in his arteries were cutting off circulation to his foot. Two toes were amputated – the big one on his left foot and the one next to it. He also suffered from compartment syndrome and had the sides of his left calf removed in surgery.

Sanders has said he nearly died during this time as he underwent eight surgeries during his hospital stay, which stretched into November 2021.

November 2021: Deion Sanders returns in wheelchair

After missing three games while in the hospital, Sanders returned to the sideline in a motorized wheelchair. His team beat Southern Nov. 13, 21-17. Jackson State finished the season 11-2, including the three games Sanders missed, all wins.

March 2022: Deion Sanders details his prior health crisis

A documentary series entitled “Coach Prime” debuts on Barstool Sports. Sanders discusses his health crisis from the previous fall and said blood clots have been an issue in his family, including an uncle who died, another uncle who nearly died and his mother. The series also revealed that he was going to lose his left leg if they didn’t do emergency surgery.

December 2022: Sanders hired at Colorado

Sanders recovered from surgery and helped lead Jackson State to a 12-1 season before getting hired at Colorado in early December 2022. He walked slowly and with a slight limp because of ongoing discomfort in his left foot.

June 2023: Deion Sanders undergoes another surgery

Sanders permitted his doctors to be filmed on video talking to him about his condition. The footage was published on Thee Pregame Show on YouTube, with one doctor saying Sanders “could lose the foot.”

Sanders said he had no feeling in the bottom of the foot. Another doctor said the blood pressure near his ankle has worsened since 2022 and was 66% of the blood pressure measured in his arm.

He underwent surgery later that month to remove blood clots in his left leg.

July 2023: Deion Sanders misses Pac-12 media event

Sanders announced he would undergo his second surgery in the summer of 2023 and would miss his scheduled appearance at the Pac-12 Conference media day event in Las Vegas. He underwent two surgeries – one to remove a clot and another to fix a hammertoe. That added up to 12 surgeries since 2021.

‘Now the blood flow is great,’ Sanders told USA TODAY Sports in August 2023. ‘I was hurting so bad because I wasn’t getting any blood flow down there over the last year. That’s why I was hurting … and walking crazy.’

September 2023: Deion Sanders runs onto the field

Sanders achieved his goal of running onto the field with his team before the season opener at TCU. The Buffaloes stunned the nation by winning 45-42. They started the season 3-0 before finishing the season 4-8.

May/June 2025: Deion Sanders suffers new setback

Sanders went though the 2024 season without any public health interruptions and finished his second season in Boulder with a 9-4 record. But then in late May, he said in a podcast with former NFL cornerback Asanta Samuel that he had suffered a health issue and lost 14 pounds. He didn’t disclose the issue.

He recuperated at his estate in Texas and missed several events, including Colorado’s annual youth and high school football camps in June and a speaking appearance in Florida June 8. Football recruits who visited campus were told he was out sick.

July 2025: Sanders returns to Colorado

Sanders spoke at a Big 12 Conference media days event in Frisco, Texas, July 9 but declined to discuss his health. He was seen there leaning on a chair while standing. He then returned to his estate in east Texas where he said he was “still going through something.” He returned to Colorado July 25, two days before his players were due to report for preseason football camp. He held a news conference to discuss his condition July 28.

He said he ‘depends on Depend’ underwear and has had issues with urination but never considered retiring from coaching.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Senate confirmed its first nominee of the week ahead of what is expected to be a jam-packed schedule to ram through as many of President Donald Trump’s picks as possible.

David A. Wright, Trump’s pick to lead the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for a five-year term, was confirmed in the upper chamber on a 50to 39 vote on Monday. It’s not Wright’s first time as chair of the commission, having first served in the role beginning in 2020.

Trump had previously tapped Wright during his first term, and again selected him to lead the NRC earlier this year. His new term is set to end in 2030.

The NRC is an independent regulatory agency tasked with regulating commercial nuclear power plants, reactor licensing and renewal and other elements related to protecting public health and safety when it comes to nuclear energy. Wright’s confirmation comes on the heels of Trump’s announcement that the U.S. and European Union were entering a trade deal that would see the bloc purchase $750 billion of U.S. energy over the next three years. 

While the commission is independent from other arms of the government, Senate Democrats have balked at recent attempts to make the regulatory body, in their view, more partisan.

Earlier this year, Trump signed an executive order that demanded the agency consider making its safety standards less stringent, shortening the timelines for environmental reviews and a quadrupling of the nation’s nuclear power capacity by 2050: all part of the president’s quest to ensure America’s energy dominance. 

Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chair Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.V., argued that over the last seven years that Wright has been a part of the commission, first as a commissioner beginning in 2018 and then as chair, he would fulfill the president’s wishes. 

‘Achieving this will require experienced and highly qualified Commissioners who are empowered to lead the Agency through a period of high expectations,’ she said in a statement. ‘Well, David Wright meets that mark.’

Then Trump fired a Democratic member of the commission last month, and a staffer from the president’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was reportedly detailed from the Department of Energy to the regulatory agency.  

That prompted Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, the top Democrat on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, to warn of a ‘hostile takeover’ of the commission by the Energy Department.

The move hurt what began as bipartisan support for Wright’s nomination — Whitehouse initially backed him but changed his position.

‘I hoped to see Chairman Wright rise to the occasion, but circumstances right now at the NRC continue to deteriorate,’ he said in a statement. ‘I cannot presently support his renomination.’

Still, Wright’s confirmation is a win for both Senate Republicans and the White House after Trump called on the Senate GOP to ram his nominees through blockades set up by Senate Democrats.

There are now over 140 pending ‘civilian’ nominations for positions across the gauntlet of federal agencies, ambassadorships and judgeships. The Senate has moved at a blistering clip over the last six months to confirm nominees—they’ve clocked nearly 100 so far — the president has called on Senate Republicans to consider canceling the forthcoming August break to get more done. 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., warned that if his colleagues across the aisle continued to slow walk the process in the upper chamber for the slew of remaining ‘uncontroversial’ nominees, or be prepared to stick around Washington. 

‘Or they can rein in their reflexive anti-Trump sentiment and allow some of his rank-and-file nominees to proceed by unanimous consent or voice vote — just as Republicans did when the roles were reversed,’ he said. ‘And I’d remind my colleagues about the dangerous and ugly precedent that they’re setting here. But the choice is theirs. But whether it’s the slow way or the fast way, we’re getting President Trump’s nominees confirmed.’

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The Department of Justice has filed an official complaint alleging misconduct by US District Court Chief Judge James Boasberg. Fox News has reviewed the complaint which was written by Attorney General Pam Bondi’s Chief of Staff Chad Mizelle and addressed to the Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Sri Srinivasan.

Fox News has learned that the complaint was written and filed at the direction of Attorney General Pam Bondi.

‘The Department of Justice respectfully submits this complaint alleging misconduct by U.S. District Court Chief Judge James E. Boasberg for making improper public comments about President Donald J. Trump to the Chief Justice of the United States and other federal judges that have undermined the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary,’ says Mr. Mizelle.

Judge Boasberg is presiding over a high-profile case involving the deportation of several migrants to El Salvador and has talked about holding DOJ lawyers in contempt because of his assertion that his order to turn airborne planes around was not followed. President Trump has also made critical comments about Judge Boasberg.

The complaint details two occasions on which Judge Boasberg made comments the Justice Department alleges undermine the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.

‘On March 11, 2025, Judge Boasberg attended a session of the Judicial Conference of the United States, which exists to discuss administrative matters like budgets, security, and facilities. While there, Judge Boasberg attempted to improperly influence Chief Justice Roberts and roughly two dozen other federal judges by straying from the traditional topics to express his belief that the Trump Administration would ‘disregard rulings of federal courts’ and trigger ‘a constitutional crisis.’ Although his comments would be inappropriate even if they had some basis, they were even worse because Judge Boasberg had no basis—the Trump Administration has always complied with all court orders. Nor did Judge Boasberg identify any purported violations of court orders to justify his unprecedented predictions.’

‘Within days of those statements, Judge Boasberg began acting on his preconceived belief that the Trump Administration would not follow court orders. First, although he lacked authority to do so, he issued a temporary restraining order preventing the Government from removing violent Tren de Aragua terrorists, which the Supreme Court summarily vacated.

Taken together, Judge Boasberg’s words and deeds violate Canons of the Code of Conduct for United States Judges, and, erode public confidence in judicial neutrality, and warrant a formal investigation.’ 

The DOJ is asking Chief Judge Srinivasan to refer the complaint to a special investigative committee as an inquiry is essential to determine whether Judge Boasberg’s conduct constitutes ‘conduct prejudicial to the effective and expeditious administration of the business of the courts.’ The complaint also asks that Judge Boasberg be taken off the case involving Venezuelan migrants who were deported to El Salvador, ‘to prevent further erosion of public confidence while the investigation proceeds.’

The case in question is J.G.G. v Trump.

This is the second time the Bondi DOJ has filed an official complaint against a federal judge. In late February, the DOJ filed a complaint about US District Judge Ana Reyes, concerning what the DOJ calls Judge Reyes’ ‘misconduct’ during the proceedings in Nicolas Talbott et al. v. Donald J. Trump et al., which is a case brought by two LGBTQ groups challenging the Trump Administration’s Executive Orders barring transgender individuals from serving in the US military.

News of the complaint comes at a time when the Trump administration has excoriated dozens of so-called ‘activist’ judges who have blocked or paused some of Trump’s sweeping executive orders from taking force in his second White House term.

Judge Boasberg in particular found himself at the center of Trump’s ire and attacks on so-called ‘activist’ judges this year, following his March 15 temporary restraining order that sought to block Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act to quickly deport hundreds of Venezuelan nationals to El Salvador.

Boasberg had ordered all planes bound for El Salvador to be ‘immediately’ returned to U.S. soil, which did not happen.

His emergency order touched off a complex legal saga that ultimately spawned dozens of federal court challenges across the country – though the one brought before his court on March 15 was the very first – and later prompted the Supreme Court to rule, on two separate occasions, that the hurried removals had violated migrants’ due process protections under the U.S. Constitution.

Boasberg, as a result, emerged as the man at the center of the legal fallout. 

Trump administration officials have repeatedly excoriated Boasberg both for his order and his attempt to determine whether they acted in good faith to comply with his orders, and Trump himself has floated the idea that Boasberg could be impeached earlier this year – prompting Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts to issue a rare public warning. 

The complaint, focused on months-old behavior and allegations surrounding Judge Boasberg— first tapped as a judge by then-President George W. Bush in 2002, comes at a time when he could again have a say in a major class action case brought by lawyers representing the former CECOT migrants. 

Lawyers for the ACLU and others in the class asked Judge Boasberg earlier this month to reopen discovery in the case, citing allegations from a United Nations report regarding custodial status of migrants at CECOT, and the recent decision to remove the 252 migrants sent from the U.S. to El Salvador to Venezuela under the prisoner exchange.

Asked at a status hearing in court last week whether the Justice Department would comply with the court’s orders, DOJ lawyer Tiberius Davis said they would, ‘if it was a lawful order.’

They also said they would likely seek an appeal from a higher court.

In April, Judge Boasberg also ruled that the court had found ‘probable cause’ to hold the Trump administration in contempt for failing to return the planes to U.S. soil, in accordance with his March 15 emergency order, and said the court had determined that the Trump administration demonstrated a ‘willful disregard’ for his order.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit stayed his original motion in April, and has yet to move on the matter.

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When the ambulance arrived in the Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia two years ago, an angry EMT got out and barked at the crowd, ‘Who called this in?’ 

Standing next to my cameraman and above the prone body of a shirtless soul bedecked in boils and not moving, I said, ‘I did.’ He didn’t say a word, he looked at me, then down the street at the dozens of strung out bodies, then back at me as if to say, ‘Look at all this, what do you want me to do?’

I had no answer.

Last week, President Donald Trump did answer that question with a much-welcome executive order (EO) intended to bring back civil commitment, in other words, the ability to put people who are a danger to themselves or others in institutions, even against their will.

Civil libertarians are in a tizzy over the EO. They insist this is an abuse of due process and harkens to the bad old days, when hundreds of thousands of Americans were committed to mental institutions, sometimes for dubious reasons.

But in examining and judging Trump’s proposed policy here, it is important to understand and accept what the status quo on the ground is right now, and it is nothing short of horrific.

I’ve traveled to homeless encampments all over America, from tucked-away Manhattan underpasses to the sprawling chaos of San Francisco’s Tenderloin, a place you literally smell a block before you enter.

In these encampments, your gag reflex is challenged by needles sticking out of necks and mountains of human detritus, but the real soul-crushing, existential sadness comes from knowing that these human beings are just being left to die.

For decades now, Democrats have spent endless dollars on fruitless efforts to fix the homeless problem. In California alone, Gov. Gavin Newsom has spent $20 billion on failing to fix it, and only recently admitted the encampments have to go.

In these encampments, your gag reflex is challenged by needles sticking out of necks and mountains of human detritus, but the real soul-crushing, existential sadness comes from knowing that these human beings are just being left to die.

What the Trump administration realizes is that Democrats refuse to accept is that homelessness is, actually, two very distinct problems. One is financial, the other is a matter of addiction and mental health.

Financial homelessness is fairly easy to address. The evicted mother living in her car can be given temporary housing and job assistance. She really does just need a hand up.

Homelessness related to mental illness and addiction, however, isn’t really a homelessness problem at all, it’s an addiction and mental illness problem, and shockingly, just letting people in tents shoot up in what was once a thriving commercial district doesn’t solve it.

As I have wandered the streets of these hellscapes in city after city, my question hasn’t really been if these people would be better off in an institution, but rather, if they weren’t in a de facto open-air institution already.

What does it matter if these places lack walls and locks? They are cages nonetheless, cruel prisons whether voluntary or not.

As I have wandered the streets of these hellscapes in city after city, my question hasn’t really been if these people would be better off in an institution, but rather, if they weren’t in a de facto open-air institution already.

Opponents of civil commitment insist you cannot take away people’s freedom! But freedom to do what? Shoot fentanyl every day until they die on a curbside, pockets rifled by another desperate junkie?

If it was your child on these broken and brutal streets of death, would you want them to be left in freedom to waste away, or would you want them taken somewhere where they could be protected and helped?

Opponents will say that civil commitment can be abused. They will point to the 1950s when homosexuals were sent to institutions, but it’s not 1950. We aren’t going to institutionalize gay people, and we cannot be paralyzed by a bigoted past when trying to save lives today.

Could there be abuses or mistakes made regarding civil commitment? Sure, but people are dying in the streets right now, and we must trust ourselves to actively help them, without stepping over the line.

Annoyed with me, or not, that day in Kensington, the EMT revived the man at my feet, who, it turns out, wasn’t dead, after all. Instead, he was angry, because the Narcan that woke him up also negated the high he had paid for.

There are really only two sides to be on here: the side that says we are going to do everything we can to save that man’s life, even against his will, or the side that condemns him to an open-air prison of his own making.

President Trump has chosen wisely, and if local governments take heed, it is going to save a lot of lives across America.

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President Donald Trump’s new deadline for Russia to end the conflict with Ukraine is an additional ‘step towards war,’ according to former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.  

Medvedev, now the deputy chairman of the Security Council of Russia, cautioned that Trump’s announcement Monday that Russia must end the conflict with Ukraine in 10 to 12 days would not end well for the U.S. 

‘Trump’s playing the ultimatum game with Russia: 50 days or 10… He should remember 2 things: 1. Russia isn’t Israel or even Iran. 2. Each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war. Not between Russia and Ukraine, but with his own country,’ Medvedev said in a post on X on Monday. ‘Don’t go down the Sleepy Joe road!’

While Trump announced on July 14 that he would sign off on ‘severe tariffs’ against Russia if Moscow failed to agree to a peace deal within 50 days, Trump said Monday that waiting that period of time was futile amid stalled negotiations. 

‘I’m going to make a new deadline, of about 10 — 10 or 12 days from today,’ Trump told reporters from Scotland. ‘There’s no reason for waiting. It was 50 days. I wanted to be generous, but we just don’t see any progress being made.’

Trump’s remarks come as his frustration with Putin has grown in recent weeks amid no progress toward peace between Russia and Ukraine, and just a day after Russia launched more than 300 drones, four cruise missiles and three ballistic missiles into Ukraine, according to the Ukrainian air force.

 

Trump called out Putin for providing lip service during their discussions while not taking proactive steps to end the war. As a result, Trump said he’s grown ‘disappointed’ in the Russian leader and that he’s ‘not so interested in talking anymore’ with Putin. 

‘He talks — we have such nice conversations, such respectful and nice conversation. And then, people die the following night,’ Trump said Monday. 

Following Trump’s announcement about whittling down the deadline for a peace deal, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked Trump for his ‘clear stance and expressed determination’ to resolve the conflict.

‘I thank President Trump for his focus on saving lives and stopping this horrible war,’ Zelenskyy said in a post on X on Monday. ‘Ukraine remains committed to peace and will work tirelessly with the U.S. to make both our countries safer, stronger, and more prosperous.’

Zelenskyy previously came under scrutiny from Vice President JD Vance in February during an Oval Office meeting for not voicing more gratitude for U.S. support for Kyiv as it battles Moscow.

Although Trump has historically boasted about having a solid relationship with Putin, he has publicly voiced increased frustration with Putin in recent weeks as the war rages on between Russia and Ukraine. 

‘We get a lot of bulls— thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth,’ Trump said during a Cabinet meeting on July 8. ‘He’s very nice to us all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless.’

Fox News Digital’s Caitlin McFall contributed to this report.

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